Stuart wrote:A few points on this. It would indeed be possible to have put the human Army in extremely difficult terrain and that's an option that is being retained. But remember something; Michael selected this battlefield to suit his own ends...
True.
One of the little problems with working out the back story to all of this is the implausiblility of the basic mythology. The fact is that the daemons and angels are overpowered, not underpowered. Their capabilities are laid out in mythology and they've got them all... It just doesn't do them very much good and I had to play games with physics to give them those "powers". You see, by the standards of their time, the gods, daemons, angels etc are omnipotent and omniscient. it's just that they aren't that way by our standards...
The problem with upgunning them still further is the basic "rule" and that is there has to be a vaguely logical sounding explanation for what they can do...
Yes, you've mentioned this several times, it's quite reasonable, and I like to think I'm bearing it in mind. I guess what I'd like to see isn't so much making them
tougher (and therefore more difficult to kill with modern weapons); it's making them
smarter. Better command decisions, or use of their existing abilities in ways that make them more effective: "thinking with portals," as an obvious example, or angels using mind entanglement abilities to communicate over long distances. To some extent we saw that in the Bowls of Wrath.
And no, I'm not saying "You should have done this, and I condemn you for not doing this!" I'm saying "I would have enjoyed seeing this, because it would have been interesting."
For example, demons and angels can possess human minds. It would not have been unreasonable for you to make them (or some of them, the specialists who are analogues to the nagas in Hell) telepathic with respect to each other. You chose not to do it, but you could have chosen to do it without making the story bad.
But if there were a few angels able to send telepathic messages, it would give them a huge advantage they do not now possess: the ability to coordinate their forces over long distances, and to take more effective advantage of the mobility they get from being able to fly. That could make them more difficult opponents in conventional warfare by itself, without giving them any abilities that are less physically plausible than what they already have.
The Angelic Host can fight a lot better than the daemons but here we run into a mythological problem. If they fight better than the daemons and they outnumber them 2 or 3 to one, why did the Great Celestial War take so long? The daemons should have been curbstomped.
The way you portray the Celestial War, the demons were physically similar to angels in those days, and had equivalent physical abilities. Thus, you'd have a war between two groups that are broadly equivalent in individual capabilities. The Angelic Host can fly and trumpet and so forth, but so can Satan's rebels. The only advantage Heaven would have is numbers, and you could offset that by, say, having had most of Heaven's armies run off with the rebels, leaving Yahweh with a numerically superior force of inexperienced warriors.
But since then, the demons have changed- on the one hand, the mutagenic effects of living in Hell (which you just recently brought up) have made them less dangerous as physical specimens, except on the high end. Most of them can't fly, for example. But they now exist in numbers comparable to the angels, in spite of a more hazardous physical and social environment, because they breed faster.
However, that's irrelevent; the one thing Michael doesn't want is for the human armies to have a really hard time of it; he knows if they do, they'll come in blasting and that could easily be an extinction event for the angelic host.
Now this is certainly true, and does indeed militate against letting the forces of Heaven put up a hard fight.
I still don't think the story
had to be the way it is with truly inevitable logic. But any criticism I have is fairly limited- I'm not one of the ones demanding angels the size of cities and the Wrath of God disintegrating armies.