Glorantha 2nd age. What happens ?

Voriof said:
... Certainly not as dramatic as Dragon Pass. ;)
Jeff
It is a great thing that the Golden Horde was brought to Dragon Pass to feed the dragons, else they would have gone somewhere else.
 
kintire said:
And it just gets worse. The leader of the new Orlanth Rex subcult, Alakoring turns out to be one of the five or six people with a credible claim to the title of "Deadliest killing machine ever". He kills the Diamond Storm Dragon, and invades the EWF.
Now that's good. Please give us the top 5.
I suppose Arkat is number 1 and Jaldon Goldentooth should probably have its place somewhere there. But what about the other?
 
The King said:
kintire said:
The leader of the new Orlanth Rex subcult, Alakoring turns out to be one of the five or six people with a credible claim to the title of "Deadliest killing machine ever".
Now that's good. Please give us the top 5.
I suppose Arkat is number 1 and Jaldon Goldentooth should probably have its place somewhere there. But what about the other?

Harrek The Beserk is a bit of a no-brainer
Harsaltar, son of Salinarg, Prince of Sartar - He joins the Household of Death (fanatical Humakti) at the age of 8, taking fearsome Vows, and two years later wounds the Red Emperor (Ignifer) causing him serious injury (although doing so causes him to break a geas, and leads to his own death)
 
The King said:
kintire said:
And it just gets worse. The leader of the new Orlanth Rex subcult, Alakoring turns out to be one of the five or six people with a credible claim to the title of "Deadliest killing machine ever". He kills the Diamond Storm Dragon, and invades the EWF.
Now that's good. Please give us the top 5.
I suppose Arkat is number 1 and Jaldon Goldentooth should probably have its place somewhere there. But what about the other?

Harrek the Berserk and/or Jar-eel the Razoress. The cage pay-per-view match of them was called on account of everyone within 10 miles being dead. But hey, it was probably the best beefcake/cheesecake matchup you ever saw.

Greg's said that there are also some non-combat oriented super-heroes as well. Emale, who manages to get the humans and elves of Western Pamaltea to live together is one, apparently.

Jeff - whose summon healing spirit [strike]scotch[/strike] attempt failed
 
Voriof said:
Harrek the Berserk and/or Jar-eel the Razoress. The cage pay-per-view match of them was called on account of everyone within 10 miles being dead. But hey, it was probably the best beefcake/cheesecake matchup you ever saw.
Jeff - whose summon healing spirit [strike]scotch[/strike] attempt failed
Ah yes, I had forgotten these one. They are on the cover of the Glorantha book for Herowars.
But only Arkat killed a god.

But yes, it is also good to consider some superheroes who reached this status without war and fight.
 
The King said:
But only Arkat killed a god.
Not only did Harrek kill a god, he skinned it and wore it as a cloak, with its spirit bound into the cloak as his personal slave.

Jar-eel killed the Pharoah of the Holy Country, who I think should count as a living god.

Yanafal Tarnils defeated Humakt in single combat. (Although possibly he cheated, I don't know the details).
 
StephenT said:
The King said:
But only Arkat killed a god.
Not only did Harrek kill a god, he skinned it and wore it as a cloak, with its spirit bound into the cloak as his personal slave.

Jar-eel killed the Pharoah of the Holy Country, who I think should count as a living god.

Yanafal Tarnils defeated Humakt in single combat. (Although possibly he cheated, I don't know the details).
The bear was a minor god.
Pharoah was just some kind of Delecti
Yanafal Tarnils was already a god, wasn't he?
 
The King said:
StephenT said:
The King said:
But only Arkat killed a god.
Not only did Harrek kill a god, he skinned it and wore it as a cloak, with its spirit bound into the cloak as his personal slave.

Jar-eel killed the Pharoah of the Holy Country, who I think should count as a living god.

Yanafal Tarnils defeated Humakt in single combat. (Although possibly he cheated, I don't know the details).
The bear was a minor god.
Pharoah was just some kind of Delecti
Yanafal Tarnils was already a god, wasn't he?

FWIW, Belintar the God-King was hardly just some kind of Delecti. He was a first class heroquesting entity - a strange parallel to the Red Goddess herself (although without the moon or chaos angle). Belintar became a living manifestation of the Holy Country and was far far far far far more powerful than Delecti.

However, for sheer ass-kicking destructiveness, I have to give the award to Harrek the Berserk. Harrek was a manifestation of destruction, a living avatar of Shargash or Vadrus - or maybe even something new. Harrek was one terrifying hero (and lacked Arkat's sense of purpose, which made him far more unpredictable than Arkat).

Jeff
 
Oh geeze. We've forgotten Sheng Seleris. Both he and Harrek are avatars of destruction. Y'know, I think that Sheng and Harrek are both approaching the same thing by different directions - one is an utter self-absorbed materialist and the other is a very, very broken mystic.

Sheng took over Kralorela, Pent, Dara Happa, and laid into pretty much everything adjacent to it.

Jeff
 
Voriof said:
Oh geeze. We've forgotten Sheng Seleris. Both he and Harrek are avatars of destruction. Y'know, I think that Sheng and Harrek are both approaching the same thing by different directions - one is an utter self-absorbed materialist and the other is a very, very broken mystic.

Sheng took over Kralorela, Pent, Dara Happa, and laid into pretty much everything adjacent to it.

Jeff

Sheng is a conquerer - and not a rampaging destroyer like Harrek. Sheng wants to rule the world, Harrek is content smashing, killing, plundering and destroying. Sheng is, as you say, a very very broken mystic. He's an antigod ruler, kind of a Kelteri manifest on earth. Harrek always seems to me to be akin to a manifestation of Vadrus on earth. Except worse.
 
Is Harrek actually as bad as he's being made out here?

After all, in the earliest materials about him he's portrayed very much as a Conan figure; a former slave of the Lunars who becomes a gladiator, bandit, pirate and eventually king of his own country (Banamba in Pamaltela) before leaving his throne to go help his friend Argrath fight the Lunar Empire.

Of course, knowing that he's loyal to his friends and honourable in his own way isn't much comfort to the people of the villages he burns and the ships he plunders... and most of what we read about him is written from their perspective. But really, is Harrek morally much different to any Orlanthi chieftain - except that he is much, much better at what he does?
 
I think he's called Harrek the Berserk for good reason.

Seems a rational kind of barbarian, until he gets his blood up...Then he's an awesome killing machine.

It makes him even more scary in my opinion
 
The King said:
StephenT said:
<snip>
Yanafal Tarnils defeated Humakt in single combat. (Although possibly he cheated, I don't know the details).
The bear was a minor god.
Pharoah was just some kind of Delecti
Yanafal Tarnils was already a god, wasn't he?

Well, it says in some of the older articles that he was a SuperHero.

The way he cheated was that the Young Elementals turned up and drew off Humakt's Companions, who chased them away to the Gates of Dusk, or somewhere, then Yanafal Tarnils and his own Companions ambushed Humakt and together they fought each other to a standstill, even though Humakt was on his own and Yanafal Tarnils had his boys with him. Actually, Humakt probably killed Yanafal Tarnils in the combat, but the cheated and came back, or perhaps that was later when he went to Hell to rescue the Red Goddess. In any case, he did cheat and survived the fight with Humakt.

He probably became a deity later on, after rescuing the Red Goddess or perhaps at Castle Blue.

But, yes, Yanafal Tarnils should be included in the list of The Well-Hard. So should Talor the Laughing Warrior, although he wasn't as nasty as Arkat.
 
richaje said:
Voriof said:
Oh geeze. We've forgotten Sheng Seleris. Both he and Harrek are avatars of destruction. Y'know, I think that Sheng and Harrek are both approaching the same thing by different directions - one is an utter self-absorbed materialist and the other is a very, very broken mystic.

Sheng took over Kralorela, Pent, Dara Happa, and laid into pretty much everything adjacent to it.

Jeff

Sheng is a conquerer - and not a rampaging destroyer like Harrek. Sheng wants to rule the world, Harrek is content smashing, killing, plundering and destroying. Sheng is, as you say, a very very broken mystic. He's an antigod ruler, kind of a Kelteri manifest on earth. Harrek always seems to me to be akin to a manifestation of Vadrus on earth. Except worse.

Oy I heard that.


Vadrus
 
StephenT said:
Is Harrek actually as bad as he's being made out here?

Yes. Yes, he is. or even worse. The problem with Harrek is his sheer selfishness coupled with his incredibe talent for destructiion. He will never become a worshipped god/spirit/essnce for he provides nothing for those who follow him save blood, loot, and gratification...

...hmm... Wakboth anyone?

Jeff
 
I thought Wakboth's parts were still trying to gather the campaign in the River of Cradles book tells of his eye stirring far far below the ground.
 
As far as 5 deadliest people goes ,Androgeus is supposed to be able to go toe to toe with both harrek and Jareel, but not much has been written about he/She /it? But then what little is know suggest Androgeus is a minor God who some how stayed on Glorantha after Godtime
Might add Androgeus unlike the other two is around during the second age.
Might be some body on Vormain that could also be added to the club but since the only thing the people of Vormain say to outsiders is "die, you scum" we would not know. Remember the Samuria of Vormain where able to keep out the Godlearner, which should tel lyou how good they are.
 
Androgeous of Jesalma
Many tales are told of Androgeous's origins. All agree that she came to Glorantha during the Great Night. He mothered five children and fathered four, and managed to save thousands of humans from death. Her children were called the Unclean Races, the Walkers of Chaos, the Eaters of Life, and the Unnatural ones. Androgeous's career of heroism resulted in his baneful attachment to this world by a web of grievances, vengeance, debt, and a mystic link between Time and Godtime. As a result, she has become the eternal servant of suffering people.
[Dragon Pass, p.18]

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Zzabur though he was no killing machine, seemed to have some power of his own.
 
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