If one were to use a Command Spell and tell his servant to go to hell, would that prove if hell exists or not?
If one were to use a Command Spell and tell his servant to go to hell, would that prove if hell exists or not?
I could be wrong but I'm pretty sure that in Nasu cosmology, hell exists because there are humans who believe that it exists. Whether or not it factually exists is more murky than that, but I think humans have to exist in order for the records of their beliefs to exist and the records of their beliefs are like a permanent part of the world and will exist for as long as humanity does. Something something something Forces.
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There's also an actual Questions thread in General Discussion where you could go and posit this question to people who know stuff.
Imagine that the world is made out of love. Now imagine that it isn’t.
Imagine a story where everything goes wrong, where everyone has their back against the wall, where everyone is in pain and acting selfishly because if they don’t, they’ll die.
Imagine a story, not of good against evil, but of need against need against need, where everyone is at cross-purposes and everyone is to blame.
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Spoiler:
Originally Posted by FSF 5, Chapter 14: Gold and Lions IThough abandoned, forgotten, and scorned as out-of-date dolls, they continue to carry out their mission, unchanged from the time they were designed.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 dunno man, command spell teleporting tends to take one spell from what I tend to see.
In cases where you've seen that, though, the Servant was willing to go there...
Imagine that the world is made out of love. Now imagine that it isn’t.
Imagine a story where everything goes wrong, where everyone has their back against the wall, where everyone is in pain and acting selfishly because if they don’t, they’ll die.
Imagine a story, not of good against evil, but of need against need against need, where everyone is at cross-purposes and everyone is to blame.
Blog of Fiction for You to Consume
Other Links
Spoiler:
If your Servant is against that, you don't get that synergistic effect.Kiritsugu raised his right hand, showing the Command Seals carved on the back.
It was completely up to Kiritsugu what kind of order he would give. But Saber had already made up her mind that no matter how strange the battle tactics he intended to employ, she would do her utmost to carry them out. As long as she could retaliate against Archer, any methods would be fine.
Even if his command was to block the sense of pain and use all her strength, Saber would ignore the pain of her physical body, and exert the greatest strength from within her body until there was nothing left. If he commanded her to undergo instantaneous movement to the side of the Grail, then she would be able to escape this extremely disadvantageous position. Perhaps through precise calibration of Excalibur, she would be able to bring Archer down without harming the Grail. Such is a Command Seal. If the Command Seals were used with the consent of both Master and Servant, then no matter how impossible the task, it could be completed. In this moment, Saber entrusted everything to this last hope, because only it could turn the tables astonishingly on the current situation.
also if it goes beyond what the Servant can do, then it's beyond what the Servant can do and it's just throwing magical energy at the solution.Q: How long are the effects of Command spells valid for? For example, when a Servant with no healing skills is dying, what happens after "heal right this instant" instruction? (Ehime/MidoriSansen)
A: Without healing skills, the body will be "temporarily able to move" while still wounded. The wound would be temporarily sewed shut with a thread of magical energy.
Of course, as soon as the potency of command spells is exhausted, the damage taken is greater than before the command spell was used.
Because the wound is not healed, there is still pain and one's abilities is also reduced.
Let's call it a temporary "zombie" state.
Like how Saber was commanded to fly in HA.
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.