Daring to contradict me
Osentalka said:
>Also, what happens in the meantime?
>All the children die.
Not all of them!
Yes, but King of Sartar p 162, talking about Renedali "She told my mother that the worst thing in her life was when the skies went black, and the dust kept falling down, and all the children, including her own, died."
Of course, "all the children" might mean "all the children in the area" or "all the children she knew of" or something similar, but it must have been pretty nasty because the author generally accepted the statement without comment.
Osentalka said:
>The seas dry up and then come back again.
Not as i understand it: A lot of land masses get flooded, then the seas go back to where they belong to.
King of Sartar p 162 Renedali "She was queen who ruled when the earth broke, and the water ran strangely in its riverbeds, and the oceans went away for a while." Sure they came back, and they had washed up against Kero Fin, probably another Worcha-style incident. But they went away.
Osentalka said:
>The UZ all die out.
Never heard of than one.
Where does that come from?
King of Sartar p 161, Londario travels to the ruines Blackorm Mountain and, to his surprise, finds trolls living there. I always assumed that this meant that he was surprised to find trolls as they were all dead. Perhaps it means that he was surprised to find trolls there after Cragspider had been killed.
It's all in the interpretation, I suppose.
Osentalka said:
>Everyone forgets how to read and write.
At least tempolarily (maybe also only regionally).
Sure, they learn to readn and write again and some might have been immune, but they seem to have caught a disease/illness that made them forget how to do it. It may have been a localised thing, but that's still pretty important in my book.
So, added together, this was not a nice time at all.
But, this isn't the Gloranthan Digest or World of Glorantha site, so it's not worth debating trivia, but anyone who wants to see how an age ends very messily should read King of Sartar. It may be inaccurate but gives a nice flavour of a very, very nasty time.