TH4NK YOU B3N wrote: ↑Thu Jan 09, 2020 6:32 am
There are Horrorterrors in the furthest ring, and there's the "gods of the furthest ring" and there's god tiers. Since the 48 player squiddle session is bullshit, what's up with all of that? Are they still alive?
heroes who are in the god tiers aren't paradox space's only gods. rather, much like the phrase "god tier" in common internet vernacular referring to something that is of "godlike" quality, a hero in their god tiers is a hero whose power is on par with that of a god.
in much the same way the term 'demon' is used to describe both
lord english and
jack noir despite the both of them having rather different kinds of power, the 'gods' encompass a bunch of different kind of characters in the homestuck universe. like you mentioned, there are the horrorterrors, as well as the
lower and middling gods, of which there are many more than 48. the giant frog/s worshiped by the people of prospit are
also called gods. this can be compared to the demonheads and godheads in problem sleuth, who are simply characters that achieved high levels of power and used that power for evil, destructive purposes or benevolent, creative purposes, respectively. gcat is, of course, a "god cat", but doc scratch
rejects the idea that he's a god just because of his first guardian powers. it seems to be a matter of opinion.
importantly, karkat often refers to himself and his friends as gods, even in cases where they aren't god tier. in this sense to be a "god" is also merely a role, as a creator. and just because the "squiddle session" isnt 100% true doesn't mean the horrorterrors couldn't have created a universe. the 48 signs gag exists as a subtle nod, but it's also there in the vertical symmetry of the story: jack noir, who slaughters the trolls, was created in the kids' session. lord english, who is the 8igger and 8adder reflection of noir, slaughters the horrorterrors, and was created in the trolls' session. (this might make one wonder if a few rogue horrorterrors were responsible for lord english's creation, and/or if this escalating cycle of destruction goes any higher)
an only tangentially related thought experiment: if the horrorterrors WERE all in their god tiers, would their deaths be heroic, or just? if they were just, it would imply they're evil: if they were heroic, it would imply they're good. but even with the assistance of a magic cueball rose doesn't seem to be able to figure this out - and worth noting is that the clock that decides the fate of dead god tiers seemingly incorporates the very same cueball oracle that rose asks the question with. so how could lord english be killing them? he could, of course, be using his rainbow lasers that surpass most forms of immortality: but the dead or dying horrorterrors we see are
cut into bloody chunks, not disintegrated. just food for thought!
magnanimousLad wrote: ↑Thu Jan 09, 2020 7:48 am
Why do the Rings of Life and Void exist? Like, I've gathered that they're basically the unprototyped Queens' Rings, what I'm wondering is why they have the powers they do, what benefit is it to Sburb to give them these abilities?
the simple answer is: the same reason void sessions are filled with skeletons, rather than monsters made of crude minerals. each kind of session has its own attributes designed to test players in their own ways. the black queen being able to turn in/visible/tangible would supply additional challenge to discourage players from getting anywhere in that kind of session. assuming the life and void rings are the same ring as the comic implies, the black queen having the ability to come back to life would also be consistent with skeleton underlings being able to reassemble themselves after being killed.
to read into it further: the void ring may have actually come from
caliborn's session, if its mysterious appearance on his hand during the time of his masterpiece is anything to go by. and as we all know, caliborn's session is strange in all kinds of ways that don't necessarily make sense when compared to a normal session.
to read into it even FURTHER: though
aranea says one of the rings did ONCE belong to the queen of "a" void session, she claims the other one's origins to be much more mysterious. it's entirely within the realms of possibility that the ring/s are not products of a sburb session at all, but are rather jujus, which simply have strange and unexplained powers by nature, that came to be in the possession of a black queen in a void session at some point in time.
Also, why does Sburb even have Sprites^2 as a mechanic intrinsic to itself, why are they a thing that can happen and why would Sburb give them additional abilities and awareness on top of regular sprites?
it's less that sprites^2 are a mechanic intrinsic to themselves, and more that they're a consequence of how sprites are designed to work on their own. in computer programming terms, an instance like this where the properties of two entities intended to operate individually creates an entirely new property is called "emergence".
in this case a new property is emerging from the sprite's function as a manifestation of data. a sprite essentially breaks objects down into the platonic "concept" that the object represents. this kind of goes stealth in the comic, but andrew makes it more explicit in his book commentary:
The concept of prototyping in [SBURB] was always about distilling the prototyped elements into something more symbolic, more essential, and customizing the whole game according to the merged ideals of those components. Just a bit more of this Platonic nonsense that kind of goes unspoken, that is up until these books, when I had to go and totally de-unspeak it like a friggin’ loudmouth.
so when a sprite, whose existence is as a "concept," is prototyped by another sprite, it essentially becomes a "concept of a concept". in homestuck's case, a concept of a concept seems to be analogous to the Ultimate Self, which is the culmination of every single possible version of someone; the fundamental "idea" behind all of these iterations. this is why the sprite^2 takes on some visual qualities of a dream self: the dream self is the "idea" of the self that someone has in their head,
existing on the border of all timelines.