"So, how was the world created in your religion?" A wizard did it.
@ivanlovell11956 жыл бұрын
Kathy Kat A wizard did it. "But who-" It's wizards all the way down.
@magusluporum34216 жыл бұрын
And that is the actual religion in the Earthsea cycles (the wizard Segoy spoke the world into being).
@pancake17816 жыл бұрын
What came first-the wizard or the wizard?
@thatoneguywhokeepsquestion59976 жыл бұрын
Another wizard, obviously
@richardnoggin15266 жыл бұрын
Wizardception
@travelsizedlions5 жыл бұрын
“I find your lack of faith disturbing” is easily my favorite line in the entire star wars universe. In one line, the major antagonist of the story sets up the following ideas: A.) Belief in the force is religious in nature. B.) Not everyone in the universe buys into it. C.) The religion crosses the boundary between the “good guys” and the “bad guys” D.) Using the force requires faith in its power, whether you’re on the dark side of light side of the force. E.) Despite the fact that it’s ancient and some feel that it’s outdated, it is incredibly real and absolutely relevant to the world of the story.
@lorigulfnoldor21624 жыл бұрын
In my opinion, this line paints Vader as some cardinal of a very powerful, corrupt and evil Church, but a Church with a benevolent facade; some high-ranking cosmic Dark!Catholic priest (that would make the Emperor kinda like the Pope). Imagine a story like Star Wars but in the real world with Dark!Catholics having magical power and corrupting Europe to their ways, and Luke leading a wiccan pagan rebellion against it...
@lorigulfnoldor21624 жыл бұрын
@Silent Knight In my eyes, he's more like to be of Cathar "Good Christians", than of Protestantism =) With those alternate!Catholics believing in jealous, angry and abusive deity of Old Testament, and those alternative!Cathars ditching him for the loving deity of New Testament. Come to think of it: isn't Old Testament deity a top-notch Sith, with all that passion, anger and jealousy of his? =)
@ckl93904 жыл бұрын
It also could be a comment on disbelief in general, even in a very tangible and real (in universe) force that a moment later was choking him. It also demonstrates that the admiralty of the Galactic Empire doesn't necessarily have respect for their emperor, just the might of the Empire that isn't contingent on The Force.
@noahjordan67613 жыл бұрын
Vader wasn't really the antagonist so much as a narrative driver but I see how he could be considered one
@willing10433 жыл бұрын
@ckl Well remember, the Emperor took over the galaxy through political scheming and democratic election. Not everyone knows he is a Sith, so they probably respect him, they just don’t respect Vader the blunt instrument of the Emperor’s power and they don’t respect him because they see him as no different from a Jedi who is on their side. They wouldn’t respect the Force because all the Jedi are dead, and most people would never have seen it being used. Also they know it is a tool of the Jedi, and if they were so powerful then why are they all dead?
@tasbard85454 жыл бұрын
"Tim the World Builder" sounds like a great god to build a religion around
@menoloehomobavones97774 жыл бұрын
I think in WoW that position is the world forger
@michaelacton96684 жыл бұрын
[Insert World Anvil Sponsorship] Light up the Forge!
@Cats7774 жыл бұрын
You could make a religion out of this.
@andrews96154 жыл бұрын
Sounds like everything I already knew, but 20 minutes long....
@Artaee4 жыл бұрын
@@Cats777 no dont lol you beat me to it i was gonna say that
@robbomegavlkafenryka61583 жыл бұрын
There is just one rule you cannot break, if you have a sky god, they have to fight to fight a giant serpent. No complaining, everyone else follows the rule, even Tolkien.
@himboghost6293 жыл бұрын
Wait did Uranus (sky incarnate) fight a giant snake?
@robbomegavlkafenryka61583 жыл бұрын
@@himboghost629 Zeus did
@rooraa18612 жыл бұрын
Rayquaza is next level, a sky god AND a giant serpent
@cush68272 жыл бұрын
Tolkien? When did Manwë fight a serpent?
@nyalan83852 жыл бұрын
The same thing but different phrasing: any lightning god is required to fight a dragon too
@WizardToby6 жыл бұрын
"Religion is complicated." Most true statement of the day, Tim XD
@livedandletdie6 жыл бұрын
DEUS VULT INFIDEL
@casimiriii59415 жыл бұрын
WizardToby occam's razor
@cristianvillanueva87825 жыл бұрын
*Deus Vult intensifies* *sabaton last stand screeching in the background *
@calebiott82625 жыл бұрын
I have a Great Courses lecture on the History of Science. When the Professor got to the whole "Religion vs Science" thing, first thing out of his mouth, and I paraphrase, "Science is complicated, religion is complicated, the historical relationship between science and religion is... complicated."
@Duchess_Van_Hoof5 жыл бұрын
One of my favourites is that the mesopotamians had a minor deity of brewery, another for brickwork and a third for sheep.
@TheSlasherJunkie5 жыл бұрын
9:10 To use a monotheistic example, this is actually how the Egyptian pantheon came to be. One city state expanded and conquered other settlements with existing religious beliefs, so the compromise off was “you’re not joining of your free will, but we’ll throw ya a bone and let you keep your god.” My favorite example of this is the Fayyum, a lake city with a large population of Crocodiles. These crocodiles are revered as guardians of the river, and this river needed protection as it was critical to the survival of that people group. Thus their regional god, Sobek, is a warrior who is depicted through crocodiles. These folks literally worshipped crocodiles as guardians of the river. By incorporating this religion into the existing pantheon, you secure both their loyalties and a warrior group. The drawback here is that the strong regional identity can ultimately backfire.
@kerricaine6 жыл бұрын
religion doesn't necessarily have to be focused on a "god" or higher power for it to still be used. for example, fascist or dictatorial governments will often use religious-like structures and rituals to keep everyone in line, making sure you show devotion to the great leader. and, like the star wars example from the start, the jedi and sith don't worship the force, and the force is not a god. but they are both considered "religions" within the story, because they follow strict moral codes that come into conflict from how the force should be used.
@SpiritwalkerMurphy6 жыл бұрын
I think Star Wars is a fun series, but the Force is so complicated... it's spoken of as having a WILL, which is an aspect of personalities (boulders don't have volition), but also described as impersonal, so... weird.
@jameswoodard43046 жыл бұрын
Mentioning the Force is an interesting point because it is based on Buddhim and Daoism. Classical Buddhism is essentially atheistic. Later developments added gods, demons, etc. in some forms of Buddhism, but they are all in the same boat as humans, stuck in samsara(death/rebirth/death) so there is no point in getting too involved with them. Daoism is complicated in its view of gods (and everything else). There are spiritual forces and the Eight Immortals etc., but the Daoist isn't so much about following deities as he is in following the Dao philosophy. Confucianism is also called a religion and a philosophy. Lip service is paid to the Court of Heaven, but it is more about a way of life and a social/ethical theory than anything else. Of course, popular Chinese religion often inserts various local spirits and gods, but the more formal, classical versions of these religions/philosophies have never been too concerned with deities.
@barghestblue44536 жыл бұрын
Mark Murphy The Force in Star Wars (in Legends a least) can be divided into three parts, each embodied by the Ones (with a fourth that tacked itself on). These are the Daughter (Ashla), who embodies the light side, the Son (Bogan) who embodies the dark side, and the Father who embodies the universal force (it's basically the neutral side that keeps the other two in balance). The fourth is the Mother (Abeloth) who embodies chaos to the order of the Father. Abeloth was locked away by the other three after she came to be and destroyed their empire, ever since they just kinda hanged out on Mortis until they all died in the Clone Wars, which eventually lead to Abeloth getting free (whether any of the four will stay dead after they were all killed is not quite clear). The Daughter as the light side essentially represented creation and peace, the Son destruction and war, while the Father was balance and order. This is most basically represented by what the followers of their different parts of the Force could do (they were largely forgotten by the galaxy so they didn't have worshipers per se but different groups did call upon the sides of the Force they embodied). The light side users were best at healing, dark side users were the best at destruction, and while their were never really any pure universal force user, the members on each side that used it could do thing like see into the future or past and even affect things there to some extent. The will of the Force seems mostly how the Triad feels something should happen (mostly being the Father). Oh, and Abeloth kinda just represents chaos and annihilation, if she stays in one place long enough reality kinda gets a little warped. There's also the Font of Power and Pool of Knowledge where the power and knowledge of the universe take shape (these are how Abeloth became part of the Ones), there's also a lake filled all the souls of the dead, and a dagger/sword thing that can actually harm and kill the Ones. The Ones were apparently known as the Celestials during the time of their empire. The Force itself exists whether or not the Ones exist but they kinda gave it shape and defined it and it's will. The interpretations of the Force that so many different groups have in Star Wars is how they came to see it, since the Ones had long ago just disappeared. That's kinda a basic run through the reasons the Force is divided into sides and has a "Will" in Star Wars legends.
@dustwarewolf55326 жыл бұрын
I personally think that The Force in Star Wars is more based off of Zoroastrianism than either Daoism or Buddhism because, while both of the latter two focus on the neccisity of having both Light AND Darkness in your life in order to achieve true balance. Zoroastrianism on the other hand teaches that The Light is entirely good, while The Darkness is entirely evil, which seems to be more in line with the theological philosophy of The Jedi Order.
@barghestblue44536 жыл бұрын
Dustwarewolf 55 That is the view of the Jedi Order, but (in Legends mostly) most Star Wars stories show how they came to have that philosophy and how narrow minded, hypocritical, and weak it made them, since the dark side wasn't necessarily evil, it's just that most if not all of it's followers were at least seen as such by everyone else, because it's the side of aggression, power, and fury, mostly being predisposed to destruction, with it's use generally having a rapidly corrupting effect on it's users. Not all dark side users are evil, and the dark side itself isn't evil, it's just very, very dark. Though admittedly the original trilogy does give the impression that you gave, The Force was based of Buddhist and Doaist beliefs originally.
@alecchristiaen48565 жыл бұрын
I once wrote down a pantheon based on tarot cards, with each god being one card. Different groups interpret these cards and thus gods differently
@lesteryaytrippy72824 жыл бұрын
Oh wow! That's a beautiful concept and quite esoteric. Good luck!!
@alecchristiaen48564 жыл бұрын
@@lesteryaytrippy7282 it's working pretty well so far. divided them into big primordial gods (the world, wheel of fortune, and death) major gods (most of them) and archangels (high priestess, hierophant, justice, hanged man) for the rest, it kinda writes itself.
@nickmerryman16663 жыл бұрын
@@alecchristiaen4856 omg do you have an update I would love to hear more
@jegangunnithan45653 жыл бұрын
@@alecchristiaen4856 me too
@Starrypaws643 жыл бұрын
no way thats so cool!!! id like to read about the pantheon :o
@maluse2276 жыл бұрын
Having a degree in religion can confirm, its complicated af. And somehow real life religions make way less sense than fictional ones.
@iiiiitsmagreta12406 жыл бұрын
Makes sense. Fictional religions are designed to serve a narrative purpose. Real-life religions just kind of happen over time.
@gavin76836 жыл бұрын
also fictional religions have just one or two authors and they are allowed to change things as the see fit to fill plot holes. irl religions tend to be rather resistant to retconning, typically requiring that there be more people that want the change than can be conveniently burned at the stake.
@maluse2276 жыл бұрын
Its somehow the opposite in practice, go to any church listen to what they have to say in regards to how they interpret the bible, then go down the street to another church of the same denomination and I guarantee they will have radically different views and not even realize it. If there can be Jews for Jesus anything is possible and reality is certainly stranger than fiction.
@CesarTheKingVA6 жыл бұрын
Fiction has to make sense. Reality has no such limitation.
@Ssatkan6 жыл бұрын
You're right there. Fictional religions shouldn't make too much sense. They should provide their worshippers with something (from magical power to simply comfort), but they shouldn't be too "smooth".
@geminiguy60322 жыл бұрын
People creating gods based on their environments is something I needed to hear for a story I'm writing. Everything is finally coming together, thanks.
@PrimetimePaskell6 жыл бұрын
on the Mythopoeia, the anime Noragami includes a bit of the reversal of it. the MC Yato was once a god of war, but with japan's peace he became forgotten as a war god, the only way he could continue to exist was as a god of basically odd jobs. so long as he got payed and remembered, he'd do the task asked, whether that be freeing a person from the influence of an evil spirit, or finding a lost cat. But yeah, nice little media example of it.
@CruelestChris6 жыл бұрын
Oh I did something like that in a story once. A desert had engulfed a city in a world where Gods are immortal but their power depends on the faith their people have in them, and he was left as a figure in a tattered robe, blind and clawing at the sand that had taken his city from him with hands worn down to bone.
@annapplegoldfinch55335 жыл бұрын
Terry Pratchett did something similar to his gods too. The Hogfather, which is a parallel version of Santa Claus, used to be the god of rebirth and resurrection until people stopped making sacrifices to make the sun rise. So he took on a new job as a giver of gifts, spreading joy and hope during the cruel winters. As Pratchett puts it, "Old gods need new jobs". :)
@rager1635 жыл бұрын
Actually yato is the god of calamity
@randomnessrules49714 жыл бұрын
Japanese right wingers want to put him back in business.
@YuletideGlory4 жыл бұрын
@@CruelestChris That's actually very sad.
@trikitrikitriki4 жыл бұрын
"Are you just telling me your religion?" I say to the Mormons and Jehovah's Witnesses showing up at my house.
@squibble3113 жыл бұрын
lmao
@sirramic2023 жыл бұрын
Or to the redditors when you post a comment even remotely mentioning the bible.
@YataTheFifteenth3 жыл бұрын
Also _literally everyone_ Spain, Portugal, and Britain colonised.
@a.dennis48353 жыл бұрын
"Have you heard about our lord and savior Mithras?"
@waterfallsdontsaymeow29173 жыл бұрын
@@YataTheFifteenth yes thank you lol
@bowenarrowesquire99946 жыл бұрын
You should make a "how to make a fight scene" video
@Diszzzon756 жыл бұрын
how to write a fight scene*
@bowenarrowesquire99946 жыл бұрын
Eric Cristo, my bad
@NightBat-vc5jx6 жыл бұрын
Bowenarrow Esquire More like how to choreograph
@joaomarcoscosta46476 жыл бұрын
I've seen a really interesting video on this topic before: kzbin.info/www/bejne/qHbRYatneaieaqM
@joaomarcoscosta46476 жыл бұрын
Meltdown 81 There is more to good fight scenes than choreography, and this channel tends to focus a lot more on narrative aspects so... Yeah.
@XTheLoneWandererMCX6 жыл бұрын
Sneezed, immediately heard "like how we say 'bless you' when someone sneezes." Freaky precision.
@StepBaum6 жыл бұрын
After ten minutes I took this from the video: "Religion is complicated" Edit: Great video, loved the very well explained aspects of each point. Learning about Worldbuilding is probably my favourite series on this channel
@Sorain16 жыл бұрын
Yeah. Religion is essentially never a simple or easy to explain subject. Any fictional religion that sounds like it's simple, even if it had an entire doctrine consisting of one paragraph in the present language? That is a lie. The kind of doctrinal disputes like "Is Jesus God? Separate from God? A part of God?" or "What parts of the Bible are canon?" from the Abrahamic faiths history give solid examples of how divisive it gets. In general Religion serves one of two roles in stories: as an element of some actual plot point. (IE: members of X faith use this particular spice in their dishes, victim had eaten this spice hours before death.) in which case you can generally avoid having to detail it much if it doesn't show up again... Or it's a part of the setting. If it's the latter, it is only right to flesh out that religion properly. Where things get truly thorny is settings where you have a real religion (or sect their of) around, especially when it needs to deal with an out of context for real life thing. As an example: How do good Catholic people deal with finding out they are Wizards in the setting of Harry Potter? Is there a sect of Catholicism that found a way to reconcile the texts and doctrine with this new reality? Is there a 'Wizard-Pope' and whole other set of doctrinal works specifically removed from the rest of the religion (IE the accurate to real life one) because they addressed this? It can be fascinating to consider, but it's an extremely touchy subject compared to a religion built from whole cloth, even if it borrows major elements from real religions. (For example, the faiths of the Kushan people in the setting of Homeworld, which have pilgrimage to holy sites as a major component.)
@poisondamage21826 жыл бұрын
DEUS VULT INFIDEL!
@jewelyJewels5 жыл бұрын
@@poisondamage2182 dEUS vULT iNFIDEL!!!
@lucideandre6 жыл бұрын
I love how Lovecraft made his Mythos. There are the gods of the earth that we all know, above them there are the Other Gods, above them there are the Outer Gods, and there are also other groups of Gods like the Ancient Ones. So there are many groups which coexist, part of the same pantheon, yet markedly separate ones, and even the Gods have their own Gods which they worship, and above all that there is Azathoth, who is the “One God”, but is an Idiot God, mindless and uncaring, and all it does is sleep and dream, helping no one, caring about nothing, but is nonetheless the absolute creator of all things.
@vitriolicAmaranth8 ай бұрын
A fact that goes unrecognized a lot of the time is that Greek gods are canon to Lovecraft's Dream Cycle and by extension the Cthulhu Mythos.
@Jessie_Helms6 жыл бұрын
Dishonored has one of the coolest fictional religions I’ve seen. The Abbey of the Everyman, Witches, simple sailors, all believe some of the same basics *but* they interpret it differently. The Abbey chooses to take the Outsider’s nature and resist it (while vilifying him over generations). Witches say ‘forget the Outsider’ and go straight to the Void for power. Sailors don’t even touch the Void, but carve the bones of the creatures they catch as good luck charms. Then there’s people with the Mark, who may not even like the Outsider or know much about the Void, but they have insane power.
@kerricaine6 жыл бұрын
people with the mark also meet the outsider personally, and he too has his own worshippers and cults, hence why you find all the shrines to him.
@Great_Olaf56 жыл бұрын
I just love how the only real religious organization we see is devoted to hating the only godlike entity we see.
@kerricaine6 жыл бұрын
i think the abbey defines good not as some morals or goals, but as simply a lack of perceived evil. hard labour and dedication=good, taking the short way out or using magic=evil.
@dutchvanderlinde20026 жыл бұрын
Justin Helms I like the abbey seeing how they are the remnants of the cult that created the outsider
@dutchvanderlinde20026 жыл бұрын
kamenkewl remember you don't need the mark of the outsider for him to interact with you, because Lurk didn't have the mark
@elijahfordsidioticvarietys87705 жыл бұрын
In Percy Jackson, a god fades away if everything they stand for is gone.
@zoujonathan61724 жыл бұрын
Trump: what if I pollute the world so much I kill Zeus and Poseidon?
@theunreadyone4 жыл бұрын
This is how real world mythology works. The god of Mammoths probably existed at some point but died when the mammoths died
@d4n7374 жыл бұрын
@@theunreadyone No it doesn't. If you think you have any idea on how Pantheons work, You don't. Because there is no real definition of what a god is. Some Religions portray gods as nature personified, or alegories (Norse). Some as powerful people with their own fellings and thoughts (Greek). Some as a hibryd of those (Egiptian). Some have gods as Living elements, only vessels the elements use as a form, While some as just rulers of forces, Where the fire god has authority over fire no more, than a mortal king over steel.
@theunreadyone4 жыл бұрын
@@d4n737 I don’t understand your point. If a god is meant to represent something, and that thing fades away, people will forget about it, stop worshipping the god, and the god will fade away too. Is that not how it would go? I won’t pretend to be an expert on pantheons, but I see no reason why this wouldn’t happen
@d4n7374 жыл бұрын
@@theunreadyone Ah, you mean sociologically. if if it's the other way around, then, well People are stubborn. If a god partons a celebration, and they no longer celebrate it, they're still gonna believe in the god, Maybe under a diffrent name, domain, etc.. Cultures change and gods will be depicted as patrons of diffrent things over time.
@wiksolop726 жыл бұрын
I found the Dark Souls games have a very interesting way of presenting mythos/religion. While most information is provided through item descriptions, there's still a TON of details hidden in things like the level design, enemy behavior, and even the covenant system. It's done in a way to show the players that the world was rich with culture, ideals, and beliefs LONG before their character arrived. And even though this is a game with an unconventional narrative, I still find it to be a really solid example of worldbuilding.
@kasmanian69086 жыл бұрын
EXACTLY. I hope to adopt some aspects of Dark Soul's mythos into my own worldbuilding.
@justnoob81416 жыл бұрын
Yeah, Religion in Dark Souls is work because you can literally meet that god and kill him and use his holy soul on useless weapon...
@tylernelson56564 жыл бұрын
Aren't all the gods dead or crippled in the Darksouls universe?
@spawnofchaos94224 жыл бұрын
@@tylernelson5656 Well yes but actually no
@tylernelson56564 жыл бұрын
@@spawnofchaos9422 lol memes used as an accurate response are my favorites
@Mr.Nichan5 жыл бұрын
"[Christianity] didn't spread quite like this." You have it going in completely the wrong direction: e.g., spread to England FROM Rome.
@oliveranderson9285 жыл бұрын
"Am I fictional?!" That made me laugh harder than anything has all day. Thank you for that.
@stevenneiman97896 жыл бұрын
19:45 there's an interesting book called City of Stairs which really explores this idea. A central plot point is that there was a vicious cycle where extremist followers would exaggerate certain traits of their gods, their reinterpretation would affect the gods, moderate followers would adjust their views to match the gods' new behavior, and then new subgroups would form which are extremist relative to the new normal.
@Vinemaple2 жыл бұрын
City of Stairs, the subsequent novels, the new Founders Trilogy, and pretty much anything by Robert Jackson Bennett is simply incredible, beautiful, and awe-inspiring.
@lucyandecember2843 Жыл бұрын
o.o
@fgregerfeaxcwfeffece6 жыл бұрын
Religion isn't that complicated: 1. Eris pads her chest 2. beware of the squirrel apocalypse 3. you should enter the next life shiny and chrome Edit: There was a spelling error as Sam Pew pointed out.
@sampew16056 жыл бұрын
*Eris
@justnoob81416 жыл бұрын
And fight frog with water base attack
@fgregerfeaxcwfeffece6 жыл бұрын
Ok, a little late, but better late then never, fixed the AEris Error.
@justnoob81416 жыл бұрын
And goddess wear invisible underwear
@CharlesFreck5 жыл бұрын
Hail Eris
@rogerfvb5 жыл бұрын
This is slowly becoming one of the richest internet channels of all time in my view. And I've been around.
@blueeyeswhitemoron44886 жыл бұрын
My favourite religion has to be the worship of the god Emperor from warhammer 40k. I think it is interesting how an atheist ended up as a god after failing in his crusade to med religion on a galaxy whide scale. By the way Hello Future me i recommend the Horus herasy book series if you like Dune.
@343-penitentnarrator86 жыл бұрын
In all honesty, the Chaos Pantheon (and by extension, the eldar pantheon) was always more fascinating to me. The idea that your actions , emotions and thoughts create genuine deities without you even realising their extent, and these in turn manipulate and feed off the collective consciousness is mythopoeia at its purist. It also seems fitting that our worst hell is the one we make for ourselves, hence the Big4
@Xo-31305 жыл бұрын
@@343-penitentnarrator8 The thing is in the backstory of the franchise it's made clear that they wouldn't have existed if two Godlike forces hadn't altered the balance of the warp. In doing so they twisted it behind belief.
@343-penitentnarrator85 жыл бұрын
@@Xo-3130 Fair point, but ultimately it would have happened regardless. Sure the War in Heaven kick-started the turmoil, but the nature of the warp, and the sentient beings of the universe, means something like the chaos pantheon would have eventually occurred regardless. Don't forget that the big four encompass positive emotions as well as negative or base ones. Honor for Khorne, Vitality for Nurgle, Joy for Slaanesh, Hope for Tzeentch, etc. Some are even shared between them. The idea is that the baser emotions of rage, excess, fear of death and ambition tend to be stronger, and hence coalesce stronger in the warp. This may be because these are primal emotions. The writers are therefore pragmatic, cynics or just as likely just thought it would be more fun for the setting, (which it is). If you want a more "realistic", or balanced pantheon, in the same settings, check out the old eldar religion, or their Warhammer fantasy elf counterparts, where the gods are\were deliberately crafted by them to reflect all the aspects of their nature, and hence give them the power to advance and further their society. It's more akin to the Greek or Norse mythology as a result
@Archone6665 жыл бұрын
@@343-penitentnarrator8 All that begs the question... can the Warp be fixed? Can mortals hope to fix things and undo the crap that the Eldar created?
@343-penitentnarrator85 жыл бұрын
@@Archone666 Well, the Eldar only strictly created one bit of crap by birthing Slaanesh through incessant, unrepentant murder fucking. You can perhaps lay the enslaver plague on their door but that's really the turmoil created by the near apocalyptic War in Heaven and the nature of the Warp which, as per my previous post, would have caused the issues with the warp seen in "modern" 40k regardless. To answer your question, I suppose in theory it is, but would require either galactic genocide (to destroy Chaos' source of food) or , even more unlikely, a herculean effort of will by every member of every species, 24 hrs a day, to essentially think them away and colossal amounts of self discipline to contain their baser emotions or relegate them to some other parts of their psyche. The Crafteworld and early eldar, plus the interex, tau (by sheer luck of psychology) and a handful of other civilizations have managed this or something similar and all it does is allow them to deal with chaos and possibly give them an actual afterlife (actually no longer possible, in retrospect). To get every species to do this, let alone just humanity, is borderline impossible. Sapient nature just doesn't seem to work that way.
@samhubert23024 жыл бұрын
I accidentally created a Pantheon in my story based around aspects of reality like life death time and space. I didn't realize the way I described them was like God's until after the fact
@DoktorAJ6 жыл бұрын
Dragon Age has one of the best religious systems I've seen in a work of fiction. There are essentially three prominent, well fleshed out religions in its world that affect how the characters act, and how politics operate, alongside a few other minor, but equally interesting religions.
@Nachtelfin0des0Todes6 жыл бұрын
DoktorApplejuce Abridged it Always seemed pretty standard for me... It feels like the catholic church.
@galahadwolf58186 жыл бұрын
And then we find out there are more from smaller tribes and we just get even more confused :v
@willl6766 жыл бұрын
Dragon Age has good ones, but I personally prefer The Elder Scroll's.
@willl6766 жыл бұрын
I'd say the Qun is Islam to be honest. The Qun has none of the 330 000 different gods or belief in re-encarnation or a philosophy of pacifism in the face of certain agressions.
@willl6766 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah, I forgot about the caste system lmao. Been some time since I last played any DA games. Yeah it's kind of a syncretistic religion.
@Sysyphony6 жыл бұрын
Honestly love this kind of content! When I was a teenager I read a trilogy of books named The Saga of the borderlands but I don’t know how well would the style fare in english since something is always lost in translation . The world building is full of animism that makes you care for not only the characters but the world itself which seems to understand it is also in danger.
@TheManFromWaco6 жыл бұрын
For a good example of how "RELIGION IS COMPLICATED" in fiction, check out the comic book series 'The Mice Templar'. The protagonist mice worship a deity named Wotan and have religious beliefs and institutions very similar to Judaism and Christianity, but are bitterly divided between conservative and liberal interpretations of the same core tenets, which is further complicated by character development as individual characters on both sides often begin gravitating towards more moderate or hard-line views as the story progresses. The antagonist rats, bats, and weasels all theoretically worship a being named Donas who has strong parallels to the Satan, but go about it very differently. The rats have an organized caste of priests called druids who conduct large-scale rituals, while the bats revere Donas and hate Wotan but have no religious institutions (perhaps due to their race's opinion of themselves as semi-divine), and the weasels clearly value their political goals over any religious scruples- at one point openly threatening to switch sides and join the Templar if the druids attempt a theocratic coup.
@JulyRuliia4 жыл бұрын
Achivement unlock : being able to talk about religion without being offensive or mean toward them Well done :D
@RathFox6 жыл бұрын
10:56 I absolutuly love how much detail and time you take to express your thoughts within regards to writing. I've been writing for many years out of hobby and fun. But now I want to actually make something of these writings. Thank you for the perspective and insight :D It will serve well in my adventure.
@lemurleopardgalaxy49033 жыл бұрын
I listen to my favorite book series “Wings of Fire” all the time on audible
@ouroboros_13556 жыл бұрын
Fine! I shall include Mishka god in my D&D religions
@MadAtreides16 жыл бұрын
Ouroboros_13 there was an insanely powerful demon lord back in the 2nd edition named Mishka the Wolf-Spider, the first demon prince, way more powerful than Demogorgon
@YuriVidalO6 жыл бұрын
YIIIIIIIISSSSS
@PhyreI3ird6 жыл бұрын
im mortal THAT'S IT. I'm OFFICIALLY making Mishka a little bear spirit/deity in my setting. Fuck it, I'm doing it. It has to be done! There's no other option!
@hectorvega6216 жыл бұрын
@Ned Stark Have you of Ursa Minor. I think it will fit perfectly with the Russian name.
@geraldgrenier81324 жыл бұрын
@@hectorvega621 you mean the name Ursula?
@Cgriff5126 жыл бұрын
After the third clip of Sabaton’s The Last Stand, I had to hit that subscribe button
@marinary13266 жыл бұрын
Me: *cries* "I just... love religious worldbuilding so much you guys. So much." I don't think I've commented on one of your videos yet, but seriously love them. I have a recommendation for a book series- nothing to do with religion, just worldbuilding in general. The Temeraire series by Naomi Novik takes place in a world with dragons, during the Napoleonic Wars. The series starts off with a primarily European perspective, and despite certain quirks among dragonrider society, the history seems familiar. Dragons are basically owned by the state and are used almost exclusively for war, and the nations of Europe seem more or less the same as we know them. As the series moves on, however, we are introduced to societies with different answers for where dragons fit in to society, and the history has changed more drastically. I like this series not just for all the different ways in which dragons are used and affect the world, but how the reader is eased into more and more fantastical settings. And, I know this would be a touchy subject, but you've done religion now so whatever- gender roles in worldbuilding. Some stories just default to generic traditional Western gender roles. Some say that they are gender equal, but fail to play it out in the story itself or in the characters. Some say that they are unequal, but one plucky princess gets to buck all the rules and that makes her better than those girly girls! Some are actually just a fairly gender equal setting (The Elder Scrolls tends to be this, moreso than most fantasy settings). Some have roles resembling real-world societies but actually engage with what this means for the characters (ASoIaF is very good about how different people work with and around a patriarchal society). And some have completely unique gender roles that bear little resemblance to our old familiar models! Just some food for thought. Anyways, still and probably will always adore this series!
@walgekaaren1783 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your hard work. Was enjoyable to follow as a former theology student from a Christian Baptist background. Keep doing your great work UWU
@HelloFutureMe6 жыл бұрын
Hey everyone! QotD: Which story has your favourite worldbuilding when it comes to spirituality and religion? My personal favourite is the Elder Scrolls, but the only reason that would stand out is if you are really into the lore. That series has a really interesting set up of spirits, gods, and religion. Also, I'm exhausted. I'm sorry if there are some mistakes in this video. I was up 36 hours straight getting it done, so, well, my brain went all blegh. GET ON WRITING AND WORLDBUILDING VOL II (the book with ALL the discussions we've had + tons of extra depth and detail) I linktr.ee/timhickson ~ Tim
@louisbirks18006 жыл бұрын
Hello Future Me , you should sleep and take your time to make these videos. Trust me I found your channel a few days ago and have watched many of the videos, there definitely worth a waiting period with this level of quality. Personally I’ve been trying to get into writing and your videos are really useful in understanding worlds, characters and stories.
@nolanpalmer51816 жыл бұрын
I don't know if you have read Throne of Glass, but if not you should. It is a fantastic high fantasy series with excellent world building.
@aurenkleige6 жыл бұрын
Any chance you could do Monotheistic Religions in Fiction next? I find this topic fascinating and this video was very well done.
@MineKynoMine6 жыл бұрын
You should definitely read the His Dark Materials series, it has one of the best views on religion I have ever seen in a book series
@thehoser17176 жыл бұрын
Another long but good series is the wheel of time, it's a fantasy series that does worldbuilding incredibly well and takes multiple views of the same monotheistic religion to the point that you can bearly tell that it's the same religion.
@morganbiddlecom4 жыл бұрын
"What's the afterlife like?" and "Is MISHKA THERE?" hits way harder these days. I'm genuinely crying about it! IS there an afterlife? IS Mishka there??? I don't know 😭
@raptorus77736 жыл бұрын
Ooh! I like the drawing animations, and once again, great video, especially on a topic that always interests me in fictional stories.
@foxesareentirelycanine42546 жыл бұрын
Raptorus77 Saaame.
@ernestlam56326 жыл бұрын
Actually, tbh I watch his videos bc of his attractive human form.
@mint74426 жыл бұрын
Honestly sometimes I don’t know why I like your videos so much but I’m not complaining! Keep up the good work
@JamoboBorg6 жыл бұрын
An interesting story is the manga/anime Noragami. I mention it because it focuses on a minor god in Japan and his attempts at getting followers, with key plot points being the life/death of a god and how gods change over time. It's great fun and has fantastic action when necessary.
@briannawilliams31556 жыл бұрын
Jacob Borg I'm still waiting for season 3. X.X
@unknowndane47546 жыл бұрын
It also fits the description that the MC was a wargod and because he's no longer needing with peace, then he's forgotten by everyone
@barghestblue44536 жыл бұрын
UnknownDane He's a god of War and Calamity, who's trying to be seen as a Messenger god and god of Fortune. Kinda makes some wonder if the gods of various pantheons liked their characterizations or realms of power.
@JakubWojciechowski9336 жыл бұрын
It's actually based 99% on the real life religion
@gameinsane47186 жыл бұрын
I've always had this "Volcano" god in my head. "God of the forge, of warmth, and once of destruction. To build in my name is my own honor, but to destroy comes a cost. If a weapon be forged for me let if be cast of the smith's blood or cursed be the metal 'til returned to the crucible. To call my name on the battlefield by he who cast not less than 1000 weapons ensure the enemy swallowed by my own forge at the cost of thine own" A god of the forge who grants his followers, mostly blacksmiths and artists, immeasurable talent at metal work and a seeming invulnerability to heat/fire and the ability to cause them with ease. Blessed be the benevolent but if a weapon is to be forged with this skill you must submit at lease a drop of blood to the molten metal or anyone who uses it shall see it rust and shatter upon use and the curse will remain until it is returned to molten metal. the last part is a fable passed down where a blacksmith in a war torn region bargained with the God to defeat an invading army. He told the smith to call his name as they advanced and when he did the mountain's melted beneath the invaders feet in a cascade of molten rock. When the mortal returned to his shop the god burned the blacksmith alive for merely touching the furnace. This god is mostly like Hephestus from greek mythology who made divine weapons for the other gods and was a great inventor. However one day he was annoyed with the requests and wanting a vacation he torched what is now a vast desert. When the gods realized what he had done their king took his powers from him until he forged a weapon 1000 times stronger than his already indestructible weapon. His story is engraved in the culture in various mountain regions as a way of worship and lesson in humility as well as a vital part of their economy through trade and architecture which incorporates advanced metal work and mechanisms into their designs and nation securities
@PrettyMuchBlack6 жыл бұрын
Your editing is actually improving, keep it up
@ganymedemlem61192 жыл бұрын
Watching this made me feel much better about the religious system/pantheon I built for my D&D games.
@thecreature76086 жыл бұрын
I'm not really the biggest fan of religion in books because often times it leads to visions. I don't like visions much. They seem to be a writer's cheat tool to give characters information they needed for the plot but would otherwise never have gotten, or have them be places when the plot needs them to be. What I am a fan of though, is your channel and this video. So good.
@tobiaswinters38156 жыл бұрын
At the same time, it's easy to simply not include visions. Game of Thrones does this, as does Avatar- although in this case there is some communing with spirits. The trick is to not be lazy in the writing. If a vision or similar device is used, it should be consistent with the way the fictional world works and not come out of the blue as a literal deus ex machina. If it does come from nowhere, that means the writer had steered the story in such a way that he needed an intervention to redirect it. Visions are best used (consistently within the plot) to highlight a character's connection to something, or to demonstrate a conflict within a character, such as Luke Skywalker seeing visions of his friends dying and being unable to let go of his attachment to them. That vision moved the plot along in a non-lazy way that led to meaningful events and character development.
@thecreature76086 жыл бұрын
Tobias Winters I see your point, but in most of the cases I've encountered it does what I said with the whole info thing, or gives a character the last piece of the puzzle at just the right time. Visions seem to just not be my thing, though if the rest of the book is good, I always tolerate it. Anyway, appreciate the view on the matter, espessialy since its different
@lennysmileyface6 жыл бұрын
I was thinking of having a vision that wouldn't show the future but something happening at that exact moment. Something they know they have to prepare for.
@youtubeuniversity36386 жыл бұрын
Imagine conflicting visions, Gods taking advantage of visions by sending false ones. One way you could handle it there.
@Karanthaneos6 жыл бұрын
I'm actually working on these stuff for a RuneQuest campaign I just started. Since it's in the Paleolothic-Neolothic the belief system the people of that time has is everything. While watching your video I realized I followed pretty much all the stuff you've been talking about, specially about answering the three main questions about religion, so I think I'm doing a pretty good job on that. Also, because it's such an arcaic period, most of the conflicts come from those kinds of intepretations and the way the society shapes their system of beliefs. Loved your video, keep the amazing content flowing.
@EffinChat6 жыл бұрын
I remember reading a short story where magic was real, as was a polytheistic pantheon of gods - however, the gods distrusted magic so priests and monks were completely nonmagical. Magic users were either actively not-worshipping gods through their use of magic or were worshipping gods heavily as a sort of penance for using magic. The god of the harvest was offered a significantly higher sacrifice from the local seer in order to please her, for example. This meant most communities only had one magic user and had higher levels of prayer in areas where more mages were. A magic school had basically been turned into a sprawling cathedral necessity of keeping the gods appeased. There was also a book where the only real god that was explicitly stated (although it was obvious other gods existed) was the technically malicious god of misfortune, who was fortunately very easily appeased by small offerings such as saluting magpies and knocking on a doorframe as one passed through it. No one worshipped this god because they didn't realise it existed, and only believed that their offerings were superstition
@KaichouClips3 жыл бұрын
Do you remember what those stories are called?
@ryla22 Жыл бұрын
"the god Yin disagreed with her brother Yang, splitting everything into two sides, never to converse again." I'm totally going to write something like this into a world I'm spitballing atm. Either as an explanation as to why there's different continents (it might turn into a Trinity in that case) or maybe even an actual 2 world's scenario where the story of the world would take place in the recombination of the worlds. Idk, I've been playing too much final fantasy 5 lol, it's a plot point in the game that there's the two worlds and the combined world (for a completely different reason)
@RealRanton6 жыл бұрын
excellent video Tim
@NitinKumar-lq6bj4 жыл бұрын
Wtf where you here?
@Twisted_Logic6 жыл бұрын
I was just starting to write a comment about the Thalmor and Mythopea when your note popped up on the screen. Always glad to see a shoutout to TES. ;)
@sophiejones77276 жыл бұрын
14:59 only true in modern times. Most ancient polytheistic religions had a god who specifically patronized the monarch and in order to be legitimate a king had to please this god's priesthood. Of course he could go to war with other sects, but again only with the blessing of his patron deity. Ancient Greece was unusual in that, in most of the states, this wasn't true. However even there we see the mark of this practice. The word "tyrannos", originally meant a king who wasn't blessed by the appropriate god(s). It later evolved to mean a ruler who obtained their position by unlawful means more generally during the Classical period when the elites started to care less about religion. What is true about polytheistic religions is that there is at least one god whom they others don't like. Often all the gods in the pantheon basically hate each other because they represent opposing forces.
@j2dragon1096 жыл бұрын
Sophie Jones What do you mean I modern times? What religion are you talking about? Hinduism? So can you give me examples of King-patron gods?
@sophiejones77276 жыл бұрын
I'm thinking about the ancient Mediterranean actually. Zeus in some Greek cities (most importantly for history: Macedonia), Jupiter in Rome, and Ammon in Egypt would all be good examples. In Egypt particularly, military conquest did not automatically grant political power: and the Assyrians found that out the hard way. This way of checking the power of what was otherwise an absolute monarch seems to have been adopted after the defeat of the Assyrians by the Egyptians and the Persians by many other states in the ancient Mediterranean (but not all). There are examples of this of course in monotheistic religions too: Judaism, Zoroastrianism, and the Sunni branch of Islam all at one point espoused this philosophy. Of course the only place you'll see it now is Tibet.
@blaelgore6 жыл бұрын
I really love when creators invest so much into a topic, especially one complicated like this one. Keep doing the good work, I love your videos, greetings from D.R.
@MartaTarasiuk6 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this video. Right now I'm reworking my old fantasy novel and realized how bland and boring the word in it seems to be. The things you said in the video help me understand what mistakes I made and how to fix them.
@tiffanypersaud35186 жыл бұрын
Go for it!
@carlocasin3943 жыл бұрын
Thank you this greatly increased my ideas in creating my fantasy novel
@5leepDeprived6 жыл бұрын
ALL HAIL MISHKA! *(battle cry)*
@FireflyJuu6 жыл бұрын
Kathy Kat Shh.. Mishka is Mishka
@dark_fire_ice4 жыл бұрын
Just noticed a historical mistake; in the Old Kingdom the Sahara was still mostly a serengeti, it was likely the desertification that lead to the collapse
@moisesmontgomery6 жыл бұрын
good thing you made this. i recently created a pantheon for the universe of my fantasy novel, now i can learn to incorporate it effectively if there's ever any mention of it
@Mothspiral_Art5 ай бұрын
one interesting thing i have in one of my worlds religions is that the beliefs that came from it changed the vocab of the people. The word for moon (sol'apsar) is a slightly altered version of the name of their moon god (apsarishka), as one example.
@IceRiver10206 жыл бұрын
I had a thought while watching this. What if there was a god that is seen as kind of like a servant to his people? Haven't thought out all the details on how this would work, but I thought it was an interesting idea.
@msjkramey6 жыл бұрын
Like the god is the one who is subservient and trying to gain favor instead of us little people? Maybe a commentary on collective strength over the might of one person?
@nanoblast57486 жыл бұрын
A god among men? I am kinda playing with this for my world, where gods are able to bind with a being into some kind of symbiosis, giving long life and unimaginable powers to the hosts. However, the god might take controle, resulting in a weaker link or something, but that's still not entirely fleshed out since it might not play a role at all.
@shineinouzen74126 жыл бұрын
IceRiver1020 / J Girl Watch Noragami Anime, I haven’t seen much but from what I’ve gathered. There are many gods, and each one needs supporters/prayers to gain strength. The main character is a lowly god with not 1 follower. So his power is minuscule in comparison. In his scenario he has to do favors and help humans as much as he can to boost his own standing. Sound pretty similar to what you guys talk about so it might provide good insight.
@normal64836 жыл бұрын
The servant god relationship sounds somewhat similar to the idea of binding spirits, demons, and djinni that occasionally shows up in our mythologies. Especially djinni, since they can vary from being servitors and slaves to being powerful rulers and monarchs. The relationship they have is thus mostly of equals, but with so much mythology revolving around enslaved or bound djinni it certainly makes for a good case study when examining how that mythology might work.
@pyrosianheir6 жыл бұрын
The Spellwright trilogy by Blake Charlton has an interesting version of that. The various deities are given power by people praying to an Arkstone, which the god is tethered to. They can only get that power from the stone, and thereby stay alive, by fulfilling the prayers of the people who pray to them. So, a war deity would have to actively defend their people or attack their enemies, an agricultural deity would need to protect the crop from blight and bugs, and a sailing deity would need try to keep ships from getting wrecked for any number of reasons. Also... Just.... go read that series. It's REALLY good. There's a level of wordplay to it that I could only sometimes wrap my head around, and it's super enjoyable, even without that grasp. Though I will warn, the grand finale of the whole thing is.... Unexpected.
@richierich20096 жыл бұрын
This is fantastic! I really appreciate all the word and research you put into these! Please keep doing more writing analysis/worldbuilding videos....and also ATLA!
@Ratchet46476 жыл бұрын
Amazing work! If you happen to have any more to say on what you discussed in this video, feel free to, you've made some fascinating points! This was amazing and I love how you drew from vastly different works of fiction for you arguments (although my inner GOT/ASOIAF fanaticism thought about how you could (and that you should) have used the series more as it encompasses many of your points, on the other hand my inner Elder Scrolls fanaticism was bummed out that while featured as background visuals, you didn't reference the series in your points). Anyways... All hail Mishka Deus Vult! Infidels!
@DragonBorn-ij3wz2 ай бұрын
I won't lie this video helped me so much it gives me a better understanding of religion and the impact it has society and all of course I still have lots more to study but it's a step in the right direction so thank and also you were right religion is complicated lol
@no1ofconsequence9366 жыл бұрын
A few points to make. Firstly, there can be deities with different values towards the same things. You mentioned Athena, who was the Greek goddess of war, but Ares was also a god of war. But they were not incompatible, as they focused on different aspects of war (Athena focusing on strategy and tactics while Ares focused on bloodshed and slaughter). Secondly, and this works a little better in monotheistic cultures, characters don't have to be good followers of their religion. Either they follow the rituals and don't follow the philosophy, or the other way around. For example, in the Godfather (and I know this isn't fantasy, but I don't have any other examples) Michael Corleone has people killed including (spoilers) is own brother-in-law and his biological brother, but he will also throw a party for his son taking communion for the first time (I know that's not the correct terminology for Catholics, but the other one would just be weird to type). He celebrates the rituals of his religion while violating some of its most widely accepted precepts, the Ten Commandments. Just because there is religion and the character follows it does not mean he actually believes it in any great amount. Thirdly, I would warn people from creating religions in their fantasy stories that don't add to anything. You don't need to put one in if it doesn't do anything. If there is no religion that is the true religion, then it doesn't actually explain anything to the readers about how things should be. Leaving it out does make things simpler and can relieve the author of things they don't think they can handle or should handle. It isn't a necessary aspect of world building, and if you think I'm biased, perhaps I am but part of it is being sick of the Babylon 5 approach to religion, which was primarily written by an atheist. Pretty much, it's there and can make people act better or worse, and some aspects of it are grounded in fact, but there is no one true religion. It's more respectful than most takes on religion in fiction, even on real world religions, but he didn't understand it. There are some things that a writer should only write if they understand it, and religion is one of them as otherwise it's only going to end in misery for the reader. But I doubt anyone bothered reading this far, and that okay; opinions are a take it or leave proposition.
@professionalmemeenthusiast21176 жыл бұрын
It's very difficult I would think for an author not to use fictional religion to endorse either their religion or anti-theism.
@grahamturner26405 жыл бұрын
When it comes to the Greek god of war, Athena was more on the wisdom and strategy side of war, while Ares was on the fighting side of the issue.
@Rainbowthewindsage5 жыл бұрын
Personally when it comes to fantasy and scifi, I have a hard time beleiving that a culture wouldn't have a religion, just from what I know of human history. However, I would agree I'd rather no religion than a badly written one.
@CenturionMariusVinicius Жыл бұрын
Says Ares and Athena are not incompatible, then immediately describes how incompatible they actually are.
@no1ofconsequence936 Жыл бұрын
@@CenturionMariusVinicius , yeah, whoops. While I suppose a strategy could call for the bloodshed of Ares, I didn't say that. Ah well. Thanks for pointing that out.
@dracolich33484 жыл бұрын
Love the addition of The Last Stand by Sabaton!
@christianbjorck8166 жыл бұрын
Started reading Dune a couple of weeks ago, great book! A must read really. Good example of religion/faith done right.
@SirToaster93302 жыл бұрын
I am trying to do that now :)
@TheNotoriousLARGE3 жыл бұрын
A really interesting theory about Akatosh/Auri-El in the Elder Scrolls, which anyone who watches Fudgemuppet will know, is that he has been driven mad by both the multiple mythopoeic interpretations of him by different races as he exists in every culture on Nirn (or at least Tamriel), as well as the many Dragonbreaks that have occurred throughout history (where the timeline splits and re-converges), namely the Middle Dawn which lasted over 1000 years after the Alessian Order tried to separate his human and elven aspects into separate beings. Akatosh is the Dragon, time itself. 'Dragonbreak' literally refers the Dragon/time breaking, Akatosh himself being broken and put back together over and over. Pair that with the fact that maintaining linear time in an otherwise temporally unstable universe is a fairly monumental and stressful job. Gives a pretty interesting view of how gods may function, and how they and the universe they exist in can affect each other
@jeremypike50246 жыл бұрын
This is a good one for Dungeon Masters.
@intergalactic926 ай бұрын
The really interesting part about Small Gods is the fact that the God Om has probably the most followers, yet has lost all his power because none of them truly believe (they are more invested in the institution of their religion than in the god himself.)
@W0RDFARER6 жыл бұрын
Right on time! You always seem to make just the right video when I need it. I've been thinking a lot about what kind of religion/s I'll have in my world, how to implement it and what role it will play so this video was perfectly timed.
@TheGamingBDGR4 жыл бұрын
Hearing Tim talk about Dragonlance makes me very happy. It's my favorite and it doesn't get enough love.
@stevethedragonborn6 жыл бұрын
Question, do you play D&D? Because that's the primary reason I watch your world building videos, to help me build my world.
@Balmarog6 жыл бұрын
I am going to have to watch this a few more times. Great video, but so much to take in!
@fionnaskyborn6 жыл бұрын
Oof, thank you for the book, Tim! Won't spoil which book it is, though. ;P Edit: Person: What's your religion? Me: *Shows galaxy-winged Mishka* Person: I'm interested.
@hakeemyaylo88042 жыл бұрын
I think avatar the last airbender depicts spirituality so beautifully
@mirandastokes49296 жыл бұрын
Genuinely thought you were going to say 9 episodes and I got so excited ;(
@syaoran54766 жыл бұрын
This was a great discussion and I’d like to thank you for making the video! This has been one of my biggest hurdles when I’m world building, as a person learning to uncolonize I’ve found it difficult to make a convincing polytheistic pantheon that isn’t just ten pages of lore about creation etc.
@chrishandy91726 жыл бұрын
Fact check for use in future videos: the Silent Sisterhood follow the Stranger rather than the Mother in ASOIAF. In 40k, they follow the God-Emperor like all faithful members of humanity.
@LordChrom5 жыл бұрын
I have watched this and every time Tim says "Religion is complicated" I was filled with joy just by listening to 2 s of Sabaton's The Last Stand xD PD: Coincidentally, I was wearing the T-shirt of that album while watching this :D
@missinglink100016 жыл бұрын
They should make one-off, self contained 2-3 hour movies. "The Fall of Ancalagon", "Beren and Luthien", "Morgoth and Ungoliant", etc...
@BonaparteBardithion6 жыл бұрын
missinglink10001 With the right budget and directing The Silmarillion would make a killer miniseries. The question is whether to try to make a cohesive storyline, or film it as the abridged history docudrama it is.
@tevildo77186 жыл бұрын
I am now imagining David Attenborough or Ian McClellan doing the narrating for a docudrama. (Of course, Sir Christopher Lea would be the best choice but that is sadly no longer a possibility.)
@vitriolicAmaranth8 ай бұрын
Grade school teacher's starting kit of bad writing advice: "Show, don't tell" "Never say 'said'" "Always work from an outline"
@TheWilbynator30006 жыл бұрын
You asked for recommendations of books to ready with great world-building, and I think The Culture series by Iain M. Banks fits the bill. It's a far-future sci-fi setting, where the titular Culture is a utopic civilisation being run by super-advanced AI. It's interesting mainly in that while the Culture themselves rarely have any problems the focus of most of the novels is on their interaction with other civilisations, and how they attempt to use social engineering to steer them towards a brighter future; in this way the books do a lot of disassembling of what makes each society tick which is a very helpful case study for building your own fictional society from the ground-up. Most of the books are only sequels in the loosest sense, they're mainly just a shared world so you can pick them up in whatever order. I recommend "The Player of Games" as a good starting point.
@ucheucheuche5 жыл бұрын
The Grande Alien: What is your religion? People of Earth: Football.
@samanthal.89476 жыл бұрын
This was really well made and has inspired me to go back to creating an old project I dropped
@maddiedoesntkno3 жыл бұрын
*Particularly Pertinent to Polytheism* That’s some tasty alliteration, friend Tim.
@myrmidryad6 жыл бұрын
The Empire Trilogy by Raymond E. Feist and Janny Wurts is one of my all-time faves for gorgeous worldbuilding, and I loved the religion-building in it as well. It's set in a much more Asian-inspired than Europe-inspired fantasy landscape, where there's almost no metal, there's a very strict social hierarchy in place, gods have very intense followers (you're introduced to the protag as she's about to take vows to become a follower of a goddess before Family Duty gets in the way), magic is real, there are giant sentient insects...god, I could flail about it all day.
@pikebraingaming9659 Жыл бұрын
Ii found this very helpful and inspiring for designing the religion in my novel. Thank you for these talking points. They helped me hone in on what was important and the best ways to create a religion that felt lived, and not just existing.
@Pedro.Soares6 жыл бұрын
PRAISE THE NINE!
@yrralfbe47686 жыл бұрын
Pedro Soares Divines or Ringwraiths?
@Pedro.Soares6 жыл бұрын
Halo Nerd this was Divines.
@yrralfbe47686 жыл бұрын
Pedro Soares Good to know you are not an Orc
@ottoleois93236 жыл бұрын
HAIL TALOS!
@sandor46786 жыл бұрын
praise the eight. Talos worship is outlawed under the whitegold concordiate and you filthy nords should do well to remember that.
@katelynbrennafowler6 жыл бұрын
Leigh Bardugo's GrishaVerse books do religion like absolutely no one else. The first series, Shadow and Bone, involves a woman literally becoming a living saint, while in her second series, Six of Crows, we see how a different country in the same world worships money and trade above all else. They're both amazing series, I really can't recommend them enough. Her worldbuilding is practically unparalleled.
@OtakuNori6 жыл бұрын
"For the glory of tzeentch" "all is dust"
@merrittanimation77216 жыл бұрын
Blood for the Blood God
@whatisupmyfellowamericans88086 жыл бұрын
The Emperor protects!
@Archone6665 жыл бұрын
I recommend two examples for Mythopeia. The first is the Dresden Files series, in which the protagonist comes to learn that not only are deities and spirits formed and shaped by belief as much as anything else, but that they can change and adapt over time. This hits home when Santa Claus shows up to his birthday party, laughs with his belly like a bowlful of jelly, and hints that he's been known by other names in the past. And that Harry's already met him under a different identity. The second is the webcomic "Order of the Stick," in which adventurers are involved in an epic conflict involving the gods... and something horrible that they created inadvertently. In a recent story arc Thor leads two of his worshippers on a journey through the afterlife... not so much as a "final reward" thing but as a "let's take a walk and discuss a few things while your friends are preparing your resurrection" thing. He expresses some regrets regarding his father Odin, who is currently recovering from the last world they created. "The last world had us being worshipped by barbarians who believed magic is for sissies and books were dumb. Since he's the god of magic and knowledge, it affected him a bit... he should be fine in another century or so."
@itzscritz6 жыл бұрын
i recommend the Malazan Book of the Fallen series for super interesting world building, and also lots of gods meddling and changing the world. super interesting stuff
@Peptuck6 жыл бұрын
Oh, man, I love how you used that picture of Malacath when talking about how gods can transform and change.
@gustavbw3 жыл бұрын
Fair Drinking game: Take a shot whenever Deus Vault is displayed on screen
@lilians.4026 жыл бұрын
Tim's avatar is incredible. All I wanted to say, the fact that his vids are great is an unsaid fact.
@siddharthjohn4786 жыл бұрын
I've noticed that in this video series, which I love btw, you haven't talked about the Malazan books of the fallen. Fantastic in terms of world building, and my favourites fantasy series! Would highly recommend it if you haven't read it yet!
@shiriguessman51574 жыл бұрын
I have a nerd love connection to your channel and therefore you...thanks for making awesome nerd content! You are an amazing human with complex thoughts!
@Bluelink136 жыл бұрын
HUGE WALL OF TEXT BECUASE I CAN'T CONTROL MYSELF WHILE NERDING OUT I personally love Final Fantasy's XIV, because religion vary wildly to the point it can become pretty crazy. Most characters in the game are from the continent of Eorzea, which recognize Hydaelyn, the Mothercrystal, as the god from where everyone is born (and who is also the only real god that actually exists), but they also worship The Twelve, which is a group of 12 gods which are responsible for various things and specifically most City-States centre their worship into one of them they identify with (Ishgard, the most religious of the City-States worships Halone, The Fury, because their entire culture is formed arround their 1000 year war with Dravania, the nation of Dragons, and their religion is deeply tied into their monarchy, politics and justice system) or they don't (While Gridania does maintain the bigges sanctuary to The Twelve, their spirituality is mostly tied to the fact that The Black Shroud, the forest that sorrunds it, is so big that it's basically alive and the forest if pretty fickle and bound to destroy the city if they piss it off too much). Then there's the Beast Tribes, the non humanoid races who worship a single patreon deity of their own creation. Meanwhile, the latest expansion, Stormblood, takes the player to a Journey to Othard, which is FFXIV's Asia and we see pretty different religions there. The humanoid races and some of the Beast Tribes worship the Kami, which is a huge polytheistic phanteon where gods are more like spirits, that guide the world and have a will but don't really have absolute control over the world. And one of the Beast Tribes, the Kojin, specifically believe that the Kami inhabit objects that they hoard and treasure. Meanwhile, the 52 Xaela tribes in the Azim Steepe, while in Othard, don't believe in the Kami, but in their creators, the Dawn Father and the Dusk mother, and each have their own particularities, like the Dotharl, who believe that people who die in battle get reincarnated, or the Mol, who believe that there are other deity-like beings aside from their creators and turn to them for council. And then there's the Garlemald Empire adn their state enforced Atheism, but getting into the whys of that would probably double this in length.
@casimiriii59415 жыл бұрын
My favorite video ɡame reliɡion is Final Fantasy too, only it's Final Fantasy X's.
@RMLLcrazy4 жыл бұрын
The Gods are Bastards has a really good take on this.
@mysticladyrachel4 жыл бұрын
My favorite fantasy world is from the book "One Good Knight" by Mercedes Lackey