

Basically, a lot of details of what things actually look like will be missing, or they will fill in the blanks subconsciously to fit what it may best look like.Īlso, it takes a good amount of concentration to use their power, and it’s easier for them to view a future that’s further from the present, thus they couldn’t be constantly looking one second into the future or something to be able to “see” where they’re going. If Adrian wanted to see George Washington getting sworn in, the Washington they “see” may look like an illustration from a textbook or perhaps a statue they saw as a child. The gameplay and experience builds its foundation on a strong storyline, a sense of fluidity and a darkly pleasing ambience. The Blind Prophet offers a mature look at the Point 'n' Click genre. This applies to looking in the past as well. Lead the apostle Bartholomeus through a comic book-style experience. Such as, if one future involves them purchasing a new car, they wouldn’t see what that car is, but they may remember their family car from their childhood and their subconscious fills in the blanks. When Adrian looks into the future, what they “see” is entirely dependent on what they’ve experienced before they went blind. I have a couple ideas how this can work, and I wanted your opinions on it! Now, I want them to have their powers but also not take away their disability. Their powers involve Foresight: being able to look into the future for multiple possibilities and choose the path that fits them best, and Hindsight: seeing into the past. In my comic, several folks in a town gain supernatural abilities, my character (whose name is Adrian) included. Only a minority percentage would have any hope of seeing through a scheme created by a god, and would be marginalized by the believer society.Hello! I’m writing a superhero comic, and one of the main characters is blind (they’re currently mid-twenties and have been blind since they were 11). Loki likes to antagonize humans, so he invented a God who supposedly cares for people to give them false hope and make them despair when God doesn't come to save them.Įvidence: Humans have no divine protection from disasters, disease, famine, you name it.Įvidence (thanks Mgoblue201): Humans easily trick each other with things like emails from fake Nigerian princes, Ponzi schemes, and Republican populism. Followers also routinely persecute women and minorities.ģ. Loki is a god of mischief and likes to trick people into fighting each other.Įvidence: the devotees of the Abrahamic religions he invented are currently at war with each other, causing hundreds of thousands of deaths. Thus Abrahamic religions are just as they would be if they were designed in a too-good-to-be-true fashion by a trickster.Ģ. These religions have very easy means of ensuring yourself eternal life in heaven, making them preposterously attractive to all kinds of people, including people with egocentric/sociopathic mindsets who wouldn't normally consider themselves as worthy of a god's favor. To weaken him.Įvidence: Hardly anybody worships Odin now, and it's because of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. It is recorded that shortly after the coronation a blind prophet recovered his sight, and, although he missed the royal pageant, he had the consolation. Loki invented God to lure people away from following the true father, Odin.

This is the evidence I've compiled that Loki was behind the Bible and Qu'ran- that he completely fabricated the Abrahamic God. This is from one of my favorite threads on neogaf back in the day.
