Well, it took a lot of time making / uploading them and since not many people listened to them, I decided to scrap the whole thing.GarfunkeL said:What happened to the looped soundtracks? They were a great touch. And a good update.
Yep, a very thorough reference system.GarfunkeL said:Funny how each author named the exact book needed for extra information... :D
Locally.
John Roots.
Accurate.
Early Days.
See more Shards.
RK47 said:Locally.
John Roots.
Accurate.
Early Days.
See more Shards.
moar
It's also completely fake. The author was a wanna-be witch-hunter who wanted to become rich and famous, so he wrote a book full of bullshit. It wasn't taken very seriously amongst educated at the time of writing.
I love the castle part. Cheesy, but it complements the game. Does the game ever give any info on what exactly was that Dragon? A tempting archangel? Some creepy and twisted St.George apparition? A demon? The devil himself? The physical manifestation of the key means it wasn't just a figment of Gabe's subconscius.
You just said it yourself. Just replace "much" with "everything". Being a witch hunter at that time wasn't an occupation that required an university degree. The authors were basically grifters who made their living through conning superstitious, uneducated people. First problem already is that witch hunts didn't only target women, nor were women always in majority. Swedish, Finnish and Russian crazes killed more men than women and even in HRE and France, were women were a simple majority, there were plenty of men killed as well. Nor do other Inquisitors journals collaborate with that book. It's the best known only because its so outrageous and thus sparks the imagination of people even centuries later. Like Necronomicon. Or the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.It's also completely fake. The author was a wanna-be witch-hunter who wanted to become rich and famous, so he wrote a book full of bullshit. It wasn't taken very seriously amongst educated at the time of writing.
Why would you call it "fake"? All evidence points to it being actually written(or at least acknowledged) by Sprenger and Kramer, who were actually the most active Catholic inquisitors of Germany back in those days. While much of what appears in it is indeed bullshit and baseless flokloric superstition, part of it is a very interesting outlook of what those inquisitors actually met and what were the widespread views on women during the medieval witchhunt crazes.
The philosophical themes contained in the book were somewhat influential and many of the witchcraft acts described in it are material rather than supernatural(infanticide, caniballism, abortion, psychological manipulation, hypnosis, ritualistic murder, poisoning, use of psychotropic herbs, etc).
I searched in case the books were real, but Jensen made them up. It would be good to know what books she actually read for her research on the story.
Being a witch hunter at that time wasn't an occupation that required an university degree.
You just said it yourself. Just replace "much" with "everything".
Well I certainly didn't expect the Inquisition to find me here. Then again, nobody does.