Author Topic: Not enough salt ...  (Read 1699 times)

SystemAdminLios

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Not enough salt ...
« on: December 09, 2005, 01:23:26 am »
I read " Salt for the dead sea " , and I came upon one question in my mind while reading it , remembering a single phrase ;

   " FATE would rather destroy the Frozen Flame than let it's enemies get it " - Miguel

Now , if the theory about Branching dimensions is in place ( To me , it seemed the most logical ) , how could FATE be there ? If FATE were kept in Chonopolis , and Chronopolis ceased to be in Home world ( After the time crash and Chronopoils nullifying its own existence in home ) , FATE , by logic , could not be there .

Someone please tell me if I am missing a clue ? Or does this random string of words have some merit ?

Zaperking

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Not enough salt ...
« Reply #1 on: December 09, 2005, 05:46:02 am »
Well, You see, there are dimensional distortions in the Dead Sea that counter the ones in the Sea of Eden. Chronopolis and FATE are able to use these distortions to retrieve data from the records of fate in home world. And with that same power, FATE was able to do something to eliminate Another World, though I have no idea where it could get so much power (without being in contact with the Frozen Flame) to banish a multitude of mixed time steams back into the DBT.

ker-plop

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Not enough salt ...
« Reply #2 on: December 09, 2005, 04:13:47 pm »
Also, I believe that Home World's Frozen Flame was inside the Dead Sea... so by destroying it, Another World's FATE kept Serge from getting at it early.

SystemAdminLios

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Not enough salt ...
« Reply #3 on: December 14, 2005, 11:51:48 am »
Quote from: Zaperking
Well, You see, there are dimensional distortions in the Dead Sea that counter the ones in the Sea of Eden. Chronopolis and FATE are able to use these distortions to retrieve data from the records of fate in home world. And with that same power, FATE was able to do something to eliminate Another World, though I have no idea where it could get so much power (without being in contact with the Frozen Flame) to banish a multitude of mixed time steams back into the DBT.



Ok , I understant the counter-distortion thing , but how did FATE use them to control the FF ? FATE is a supercomputer locked in a building . Even as Lynx , FATE could not warp trans-dimensionally . Records of FATE , I will buy . But not collapsing the Tower of Gheddon .

And why in the blue hell would FATE want to eliminate AW ? Isnt that FATE's home world ?

Zaperking

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« Reply #4 on: December 14, 2005, 04:21:18 pm »
FATE didn't eliminate Another World. FATE is in Another World. It destroyed the Dead Sea in Home World.

In the game, we see a big Beam hitting the Tower of Geddon, then the ice starts to rip apart from the dimensional distortions and then is sent to the DBT. I guess FATE could have used some of it's power to send it to the DBT Oo

SystemAdminLios

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Not enough salt ...
« Reply #5 on: December 17, 2005, 02:47:56 pm »
Ya know , re-reading that , I think I caught on that , and let me see if I got this right , the Tower is a result of the time crash . Now , what doesnt make sense , is that in AW ,  Chronopolis exists just fine . Wouldnt the time crash produce similar results for both dimensions ?

Mystik3eb

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« Reply #6 on: December 17, 2005, 06:09:52 pm »
It wasn't the Time Crash that caused the Dead Sea to appear, it was the Dimensional split caused by Serge not dying in 2010. Because Home World branched away from Another, it created a new timeline, in which Lavos happened to not be destroyed by Crono and co. However, if that had been the case, Chronopolis never would've existed, and neither would the El Nido Archepelago and Serge and everyone in there, so it created a massive bulge of paradoxes and pieces of multiple discarded timelines all in one spot: where Chronopolis would normally exist if it hadn't been destroyed by Lavos in 1999.

Make sense? Yeah, it's not supposed to, but that's the basic explanation.