Wait a second...

Started by Splicer, April 28, 2014, 10:53:41 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

Splicer

I was looking at the Journey cards, abd I saw a lot of cards refrencing murder of gods and the fall of Xenagos. What happened? Did elspeth kill him?

Ekann1

See {deicide}.

"Dei" as in deity, deus, or god (so xenagos) and "cide" like killing. Literally "godkiller" or "killing of a god" or something like that.

Remillo

Basically, the plot of Theros is...

Xenagos realizes he'd rather be a God on one plane than a weak Planeswalker in the multiverse (Big Fish, Small Pond)
Elspeth the ends up on Theros and inadvertently helps Xenagos ascend to Godhood, throwing Theros out of whack.
Because a god cannot kill another god, Heliod and the others recruit Elspeth as their Champion, and eventually turn her sword in to the Godsend (Literally both God-send and God's-end).
With the new sword and Ajani's help, she commits Deicide (the act of killing a Deity or god), and strips Xenagos of his newfound power.

At least, that's as best as I know it.

MuggyWuggy


Splicer

Thanks, and I missed it because I can't find the plotlines anywhere.

Remillo

If you're going to read any of the books, just find the PDF of the 'The Brother's War'.  It's the story of Urza and Mishra and it's a pretty great read.

Kaworu, the Fifth Child

My first life? They had better get it right!

IntoFire

The Time Spiral cycle of books with {Teferi}, {Jhoira}, and {Radha} were great too.

cltrn81

Quote from: Remillo on April 29, 2014, 01:55:44 AM
Basically, the plot of Theros is...

Xenagos realizes he'd rather be a God on one plane than a weak Planeswalker in the multiverse (Big Fish, Small Pond)
Elspeth the ends up on Theros and inadvertently helps Xenagos ascend to Godhood, throwing Theros out of whack.
Because a god cannot kill another god, Heliod and the others recruit Elspeth as their Champion, and eventually turn her sword in to the Godsend (Literally both God-send and God's-end).
With the new sword and Ajani's help, she commits Deicide (the act of killing a Deity or god), and strips Xenagos of his newfound power.

At least, that's as best as I know it.
If anyone read this and did not +1.....you are wrong.

Cool post 👍