Mordor
#681
Posted 02 May 2009 - 05:44 AM
#682
Posted 02 May 2009 - 11:05 AM
#683
Posted 02 May 2009 - 07:08 PM
#684
Posted 02 May 2009 - 07:23 PM
I also like the idea of the current black orcs being replaced with more available Black Uruk infantry.
#685
Posted 06 May 2009 - 11:25 AM
#687
Posted 07 May 2009 - 04:29 AM
#688
Posted 05 June 2009 - 04:22 PM
Give every good faction the ability to summon Tom Bombadil.
Now this may sound a little bit of topic but hear me out.
Now, the Witch king is a powerful hero, so he is a real threat, right?
You can counter him by using brute force, but there are alternatives.
Why not make it so that whenever you summon Tom Bomdadil when the Witch King is on the field, he transforms into Tom Bombadil.
This is for a set time however.
So whenever you summon Tom Bombadil, the witch King is compelled to become TB for a little while.
He loses controll of himself and will wreck havoc like a normal TB would do, except for the part where the normal TB is controllable and the WK version is not.
It's canon and fun (and if not used in the game itself it can serve as a easteregg), anyway it would be a great thing to honor Tolkien.
"Is that all there is? ... no challenge? ... no resistance?"
"Fear...fear is the mind killer!"
"Don't see it as an obstacle, see it as an chalange!"
#689
Posted 05 June 2009 - 04:24 PM
Careful. This link is DANGEROUS. Do NOT click it. This one, however, is fine.
I had the meaning of life in my signature, but it exceeded the character limit.
#691
Posted 05 June 2009 - 07:07 PM
Careful. This link is DANGEROUS. Do NOT click it. This one, however, is fine.
I had the meaning of life in my signature, but it exceeded the character limit.
#692
Posted 06 June 2009 - 12:32 AM
#693
Posted 06 June 2009 - 01:56 AM
Careful. This link is DANGEROUS. Do NOT click it. This one, however, is fine.
I had the meaning of life in my signature, but it exceeded the character limit.
#694
Posted 06 June 2009 - 06:32 AM
#695
Posted 06 June 2009 - 07:00 AM
...How is the whole WK turning TB canon?
Because, TB and WK are the same person, just read this:
The Truth about Tom Bombadil
At last, the mystery of Tom Bombadil's identity has been solved.
Ready?
Tom Bombadil and the Witch-king of Angmar are the same person.
1. We never hear of Tom at all during the whole of the First Age. The Nine Rings aren't forged until the Second Age. QED.
2. You never see the two of them together (this ones pretty obvious, but read on)
3. In the first part of Fellowship of the Ring, the Nazgul are sent to the Shire to look for the wandering Baggins. Interestingly, Tom says to Frodo at the dinner-table: "...I was waiting for you. We heard news of you, and learned that you were wandering... But Tom had an errand there, that he dared not hinder" (Fellowship p.137 hardback, emphasis mine: note the fear Tom has of his master, Sauron!).
4. In Tom's questioning of the Hobbits, JRRT notes that "there was a glint in his eyes when he heard of the Riders." (Fellowship p. 144) I think he was concerned that his double-life might have been noticed. Interestingly, Tom immediately changes the subject of conversation!
Furthermore, the One Ring had no effect on Tom - which seems consistent with Tolkien's observations about how the Nazgul would have handled the same priceless object (Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, #246): "They were... in no way deceived as to the real lordship of the Ring."
5. It's also interesting to note that Tom could see Frodo clearly while Frodo was wearing the Ring (Fellowship p. 144 hardback) - just as the Witch-king could see Frodo clearly while he was wearing the Ring at Weathertop! (Fellowship p. 208 hardback)
6. Perhaps most damning, however, is the incident with the Barrow-wights (Fellowship pp. 151-155), where Tom - with nothing more than a few simple words (p. 154) - commands the Barrow-wight to leave. And it does, without argument. Why would the Wight be so completely under Tom's control? Because in his alternate guise as the Witch-king of Angmar, Tom ordered the Wight to inhabit the barrow in the first place! Turning to Return of the King, Appendix A, p. 321, "evil spirits out of Angmar... entered into the deserted mounds and dwelt there." Obviously the Witch-king was reponsible for sending the wights there; just as obviously, the Witch-king (disguised as Tom) would be capable of ordering them to leave!
(This is related to another passage, which has since been brought to my attention. On Fellowship page 158 hardback, Tom is guiding the Hobbits back towards the Road when he gazes towards the borders of Cardolan. "Tom said that it had once been the boundary of a kingdom, but a very long time ago. He seemed to remember something sad about it, and would not say much." Since Tom, as the Witch-king, was the one who destroyed the kingdom of Cardolan, it's little wonder that he wouldn't say much about his involvement. Perhaps his remembering "something sad" reveals some remorse at being the instrument of Cardolan's destruction...?)
...It's worth noting that, after the Witch-king was dead, Gandalf said he was "going to have a long talk with Bombadil" (Return of the King, p. 275). Curiously, he never tells anyone about the meeting later... and he's right there at the Grey Havens at the end of the book, undelayed it seems by long conversation. I think we can therefore theorize that Gandalf made it to the Old Forest, but that Tom (once the so-called "Witch-king" had died) was nowhere to be found!
...Of course, all this brings up the curiosity of motive. What would make the Witch-King of Angmar sport such a double identity? I suppose that the Witch-king, once of proud Numenorean ancestry, felt trapped by the guise of evil which Sauron had tricked him into, and in the fullness of time forged this alternate identity for himself so that he could occasionally feel happy, helpful, noble, and more at one with himself and his lineage. The situation is perhaps analagous to a crossdresser who, feeling trapped in a man's body, would occasionally assume the identity of a woman. It therefore makes sense that the Witch-king's other identity would be so peculiarly enigmatic, and perhaps sheds light on JRRT's observation in Letters #144: "And even in a mythical Age there must be some enigmas, as there always are. Tom Bombadil is one (intentionally)."
...Who else would be aware of Tom's double-life, I wonder? Since Tom repeatedly claims to have been around "before the river and the trees", and indeed even claims to be older than the Ents (Fellowship p. 142), surely the eldest of the Elves would know he was lying. Elrond plays along with Tom in public, being kind enough not to reveal his secret, but also seems to know that Tom and the Witch-king are one and the same; hence his refusal to give the Ring to Tom for safekeeping (Fellowship p. 278-9): "Power to defy the Enemy is not in him."
I just thought more people were aware of this.
"Is that all there is? ... no challenge? ... no resistance?"
"Fear...fear is the mind killer!"
"Don't see it as an obstacle, see it as an chalange!"
#696
Posted 06 June 2009 - 09:01 AM
my conclusion, if he was ever a survent of either Sauron or Morgoth he most surrtenly wasn't any more.
#697
Posted 06 June 2009 - 02:20 PM
Careful. This link is DANGEROUS. Do NOT click it. This one, however, is fine.
I had the meaning of life in my signature, but it exceeded the character limit.
#699
Posted 06 June 2009 - 04:56 PM
RELAX!!!!DON'T THROW MEAT TO THE OLOG!!! This is ridiculous.
And I need the link to this thing, so I can bash it like an OLOG.
Edited by Ring of Fate, 06 June 2009 - 05:01 PM.
#700
Posted 06 June 2009 - 06:40 PM
My political compass
There's a story that the grass is so green...what did I see? Where have I been?
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