so the movies are but a fragment of 18k of pretty much the same thing happening again and again (we humen are stupid i know) the movies are very nice, and had an big weight on me, but now watching your video the movies lost their weight so much!! lol
Dune is so prescient. It's like humans can't change, making the same mistakes over and over again. In dune it's machines and spice. In our world it's machines and oil. This video was so eye opening. Thank you.
It's downright frightening how all the topics are so prevalent today more than ever. Decadence that breeds incompetence. Bureaucracies that developed out of innovations after the world wars turn around and try their best to keep new innovations down.
Really good video. So much of the Dune series is about control and how to get it and what getting it in different ways does to you and this is a really solid understanding of that and how it connects with the real world
Why did the Reverend mother protect Paul from Baron Harken? She must have suspected that a problem like this would occur. When he was tested whether he was an animal or human really the test was to make sure that whatever he did to solve the trials to come, the control structure wouldn’t be damaged. The class structure would be preserved, and the spice would still flow. Was she thinking that Paul would enlist the Freeman to be an army for the Benny Jesuit?
Great stuff but I would recommend you are consistent with names. There are many times you will call someone by their last name and then their first name in the same sentence. This can be very confusing for newer people who don’t know the characters. I know the characters and it was difficult to follow at times. I would recommend you call people by their first name or first and last, but not last name only.
Man. did you get that wrong. A Reverend Mother surviving the spice agony gains access to her female ancestral memories, but is trained to handle them. Abomination is a fetus going through the agony, where the memories can overwhelm the unformed psyche of the unborn.
Not gonna lie, I’ve been going through your videos and for the longest time I thought you were called the Lorebarians (lore-barbarians), not lorebrarians (lore-librarians)
Erasmus deserved a lot worse than he got. Even if his intentions were pure, _nothing_ excuses such cruelty as that he inflicted on Serena. Serena had to live the rest of her life unable to conceive a child, unable to forget the pain he had caused her, and what is his reward for this atrocity? A quiet death, and silent martyrdom. You won’t catch _me_ praising the son of a bitch, I can tell you that.
Okay here's the deal bud; you keep posting lore vids and imma keep listening to it at least 4 to 5 times in the same week as a sleep aid, then another 1 or 2 times to actually get the info so I can steal lore ideas for my d&d game, sound good? Good
I love that this man unlocked cosmic smarts after drinking the water, and when he finally wanted th emperor to kneel, he just looked at him and stomped his feet. Not saying a single word lol
This is something I haven't put together till now, but the putrid mother blocks direct access to Bramis castle if you get the rune of Adyr before encountering the lightreaper, forcing you to confront him in the upper calrath. From the looks of it, the putrid mother really considered him a thorn in her side and wanted to get rid of him and/or prevent Adyr from having both you and the lightreaper as his champions, which speaks volumes about how formidable the lightreaper is.
I'm so happy this channel exists. LotF has excellent lore that, in game, is a bit tough at times to interpret as a whole. Videos like this give great context and make the game more fun to live in! Thank you!