SCRawl wrote:Darth Yan wrote:maybe the others are cthulu
Welcome to about five pages ago.
This actually makes some sense as an explanation for the Aztec gods. A
really alien set of bubble-universe beings stumbled upon Mesoamerica, there were a few drastic encounters, and much shouting, reveling, and killing ensued.
I mean, Yahweh may be from a bubble universe in the Salvation War setting, but he's not really all that
alien when you get down to it. You could imagine a human being acting that way with that kind of power, even if you wouldn't like them for it. But Tlaloc demanding child sacrifices to keep the rains coming? And
getting them? Even Yahweh didn't actually make Abraham go through with it...
Baughn wrote:The Aesir always struck me as a fairly hands-off set of gods. They never made any bones about being elitist, either - only picking the best warriors for their afterlife - so we have little reason to be angry with them. The one possible problem is Loki and his family.. it's completely bizarre that they'd allow him to stick around, given all he's done, so I'm not sure what's going on there.
Well, by the end of the Norse 'past' mythology, they've imprisoned him in a cave, strapped him to a table with a rope made of his son's innards, and there's a snake dripping corrosive venom onto his face until the world comes to an end (in hindsight, centuries). So they did eventually quit putting up with him, yeah.
As to why they tolerated him before then, Loki was probably the cleverest of the Norse gods, and was often the one who figured out how to get them out of trouble. So they tolerated him as a valuable, if annoying, asset... until his insults and tricks got too extreme.