Originally Posted by
ObsidianFire
Nhaama and Azim. This set of gods is a bit weird compared to the other ones we've run into. The Twelve in the Eorzean Mythos create the world and then leave it for the the Heavens. The primals were originally called primals because they were the primary force behind the creation stories of the beast races. The kami live in divine objects and it's very murky whether the object becomes a kami, the kami moves into the object, or a mix of both. In any case, all those stories start with the gods in the world and end with them either staying it it or leaving it.
Nhaama and Azim don't start in the world; they start in the heavens (as the sun and moon) and then come down to the world where they make corporeal forms for themselves. They aren't involved in creating the world like The Twelve are and they don't inhabit objects like kami do. After making corporeal forms for themselves, they have children somehow and then leave for the heavens again. Well... not quite. The Dorthal think some part of Nhaama's essence is still in the House of the Crooked Coin. And the Oronir think Azim purposely had children outside his own people to leave part of himself behind to protect Nhaama's people.
I just think it's rather odd that you've got one mythos that has really no creation myth in the traditional sense and swaps the locations of the gods. The gods forming bodies for themselves is also noteworthy. The only time we see gods take "corporal form" is when a summoning happens. Only apparently Nhaama and Azim do this to themselves. I'm kinda wondering if long before the Au Ra split, they did summon Nhaama and Azim. And then managed to keep part of Nhaama's aether in Hose of the Crooked Coin somehow.