!!!
Where does he say that?
!!!
Where does he say that?
In the cutscene just after you do defeat the falling machine thingy. And I quote:
“This is where you were created.”
Silly me …
Forgot about that…
Altho in that scen i have my doubts…
I meanwhy did Lagi “roared”???
It sounded like he was answering to Abadd…
Maybe he was comforting Orta.
Perhaps he needed bodies to host each master’s respective consciousness.
Whoa…
Abbad?s primary objective was to resuscitate the ancients but it seems as if that was only a part of his mission. When he goes after Orta I don?t think that he was still trying to bring back the ancients (?resuscitation is 100% impossible?). He just searched for another way to fulfill his mission (creating drones to inherit the world appears to accomplish that).
Exactly what I thought. So creating drones accomplishes Abadd’s mission of resuscitating the Ancients. So the Ancients were drones.
That’s bullwhat…
I mean resuscitation of the Acients has nothing to do with making more drones …
[quote=“Shadow”]
Exactly what I thought. So creating drones accomplishes Abadd’s mission of resuscitating the Ancients. So the Ancients were drones.[/quote]
Abbad’s mission wasn’t just resuscitating the Ancients, bringing them back was only an essential part of it. So if he could have accomplished his mission that wouldn?t necessarily mean that the Ancients would have returned. That wasn?t his objective anymore. Drones were created by the Ancients as slaves. They can?t be slaves of themselves.
So Abadd’s mission wasn’t really to resuscitate the Ancients? What was it then?
Maybe he wanted to resuscitate them to show them his “New Drone era”…
Seeems dumb I know…
When Abadd realized his mission had failed, he did what he interpreted as the will of his masters - to populate the world with their creations, more specifically drones. When he realized that his mission had failed he did what he thought was the next best thing. Of course, what the Ancients would have really wanted after they died could have been different than what Abadd thought they did; this was his interpretation.
Hmmm… what Abadd ‘thought’… I didn’t think drones could think for themselves? In Orta, does it not say ‘Drones, the mindless tools of the Ancients’?
‘soulless’
This is clearly wrong though. Drones do have some degree of freedom, or Azel would not have done what she did. Perhaps the Ancients did not create them to have souls, however.
W00t!Of course Drones have intellegence…
Why make a humanoid combat machine that can’t think?
[quote=“Solo Wing Dragon”]
Whoa…[/quote]
A nice idea to toy around with, eh? But populating the world with drones was probably the next best thing to resurrecting the ancients, as you’ve stated.
It’s an interesting idea you have there…
The Ancients could have stored their minds as ‘data’ in Sestren and hoped to preserve them there until the planet had become changed into their ideal world.
Took a bit to read but I’ll add some stuff here.
Well I think we all know that Drones have no means of reproduction, this including Azel as well. I dont think just because she was given the form of a female would have major impact on anything, it is simular to why even give a drone a male look or even a human look in the first place. She has the genes of a female, but other than that, reproduction is not possible. It would also be a convienant way for the Ancients to keep track/control of the drones.
Which is probably why Orta is a more valuable.
Half-drone, half human. Her human background alone gives her the ability to reproduce through a natural method and pass along the genes of both her human and drone parents.
I dont think Abadd would just pluck any human and work with those genes. Afterall, why do that when you can use the body of a person who already has drone genes? You would just need to use the genetic information to create several more drones that also have the ability to give reproduce. Doing this, you would give the race something that they were denied, offspring. This will help in a growing race no?
My thoughts anyways.
Drones weren’t built to reproduce and yet Azel clearly does. Why didn’t Abadd use the same method Azel used to create Orta, instead of trying to abduct Orta herself? The method was obviously unkown to him but somehow known to Azel. Why? How is she different?
Perhaps Azel was given new knowledge when she was kidnapped in the Ancient Age. After all, the ancients wouldn’t want their servants having children, but their enemies might.