Originally Posted by FSF 5, Chapter 14: Gold and Lions IThough abandoned, forgotten, and scorned as out-of-date dolls, they continue to carry out their mission, unchanged from the time they were designed.
Machines do not lose their worth when a newer model appears.
Their worth (life) ends when humans can no longer bear that purity.
I don't know about School Life, but SF Ayaka doesn't seem to have the same background as Prototype one. I don't think she has any background in magecraft before wandering into the Einzbern house and apparently lived in an apartment building instead of her family home. There's no mention that she was involved in the Tokyo HGW in SF.
If the Tohsakas did exist in the Fragments verse, it would be awfully weird for Rin to have an identical lookalike in Tokyo, although considering how many of those Artoria has...
Originally Posted by FSF 5, Chapter 14: Gold and Lions IThough abandoned, forgotten, and scorned as out-of-date dolls, they continue to carry out their mission, unchanged from the time they were designed.
Machines do not lose their worth when a newer model appears.
Their worth (life) ends when humans can no longer bear that purity.
In SF there are two Ayaka’s. One is Prototype Ayaka who is a kinda student of waver and she’s in Romania. The 2nd, the one that summoned Richard. She’s a mystery
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Snipe
"Only in my company, will you not be a monster"
anywhere than here
Are we sure there are two Ayakas and not just Waver and Flat not knowing what's going on?
Also the Saijous aren't a Prototype equivalent for any family (except I guess the Emiyas, but they have nothing in common,) so there's less contradiction with them being in FSN than the Tohsakas being in Prototype.
i once heard that Shiki Tohno once saw the point of death of the universe.is that true?
No, Waver calls and talks with the real Ayaka upon seeing the one on TV.
Makes sense considering the "Flat solving the Voynich Manuscript" joke also came from School Life
Though my own thought is that SF world could be something like a mashup/kaleidoscope of a world like tsukihime & a world like Fate pulled together with AYAKA(?) as the observer.
I have a quick question. What exactly IS the Age of the Gods? I get that it was a time in Earth's history when The World followed the Laws of Mystery as opposed to the Laws of Physics, a time when Gods/Divine Spirits and Divine Beasts were able to exist outside of the Far Side of the World, and when magecraft was far stronger and reaching Akasha not an impossibility, but how exactly did the whole all gods are real thing work, and do phantasmal beasts and divine beasts still exist in the World during the Age of Man? Also, was Gilgamesh only chosen by the Mesopotamian gods or all gods?
The Age of Gods is just a mythological period.
And myths and mythology are supposedly events that happened in this period.
And the rules of the world had to be different during that time because if they weren't different, how did a clap of lightning impregnate a woman, how did dragons exist and now don't, how etc etc.
This whole capitalized Law of Mystery and Law of Physics smells of fallaspeak
This whole AOG and the world having different rules back then isn't like a thing Nasu made up. It was an ideology and theory of ancient Japanese philosophers. Mew posted some stuff about it before.
Originally Posted by FSF 5, Chapter 14: Gold and Lions IThough abandoned, forgotten, and scorned as out-of-date dolls, they continue to carry out their mission, unchanged from the time they were designed.
Machines do not lose their worth when a newer model appears.
Their worth (life) ends when humans can no longer bear that purity.
Fallaspeak, Fallacanon. There’s a lot of names for that but I call it Fallaheadache.
Well magecraft had more going on because a lot of things weren’t know.
then you get people who learn how bodies work and whoop everyone’s puppets suck now. Except Touko, but Touko is Touko.
that's why you just read the abstract
Originally Posted by FSF 5, Chapter 14: Gold and Lions IThough abandoned, forgotten, and scorned as out-of-date dolls, they continue to carry out their mission, unchanged from the time they were designed.
Machines do not lose their worth when a newer model appears.
Their worth (life) ends when humans can no longer bear that purity.