I came up with a reverse acid trip idea for the pill
As for world ending meh I think it will all go up in a flash and reboot right where it left off or… We will our lives to continue on living like Conner mccloud with all the Titans
Well, I think the idea of the Trials is that there’s the option of the Bearer and Bestower gaining immortality, which they never had the option of before. So I think we can survive either way.
the views displayed by this beta tester are not necessarily the views shared by other beta testers or the game’s creator, rohie
And yet Cronus chose to mess with nature and give the Essence a body and conscience mind; wonder if it ever occurred to him that such an action could one day bite him in the butt?
He did it because he didn’t want the Essence to be able to control him, in the first place. he’s the one who has prophesied that the Bearer will be the ultimate destroyer of the universe if they come in contact with the Titans etc.
Sounds like an action fueled by arrogance. It’s like a man saying he could build a house powerful enough to handle anything nature threw at him for eternity or tame any wild animal through a show of constant power: No one can truly do either. Wild animals won’t always cower in the face of power and the elements will always wear down even the most strongly built castles.
And prophecies tend to be pretty vaguely told and fulfilled in equally vague ways; maybe the Essence being at his side is NOT actually too good of a thing. Maybe the Bearer or Bestower (or both) makes a sacrifice to weaken Cronus’ power immensely and even prevents him from being able to influencing others, but at the cost of the one of their existence (or both). and Maybe the “death of the dove” comes from the “kismet love’s” (be it platonic love, familial love, or romantic love) desire to bring them back, even at the risk of letting Cronus’ power restored.
You never know; maybe a Bearer comes to care for him enough that they somehow find a way for Aeson to live his own life and break the bond that forces the Bestower to die if the The Bearer dies (or vice versa). Yet they don’t tell Aeson what they did for him so that he won’t stop them if the Bearer chooses to sacrifice themselves or feel guilty about what the Bearer had to do to set him free from sharing such a destiny with them in the first place.