If there would be vampires I'd imagine them to be in Gridania. It has more voidsent/demonic presence than Thanalan (who deals them them due to thaumaturgy) Just take a look at Haukke Manor, Tam Tara (Edda), Amdapor Keep/ Township, and probably more.





If there would be vampires I'd imagine them to be in Gridania. It has more voidsent/demonic presence than Thanalan (who deals them them due to thaumaturgy) Just take a look at Haukke Manor, Tam Tara (Edda), Amdapor Keep/ Township, and probably more.



You could be right. Assuming vampires are demonic in origin. I chose Ishgard because it has been locked off for ages, so it would be quite normal to find well established and relatively intact vampire families compared to Gridania where we fought voidsent since 1.0, but it is true that gothic horror always finds a way into Gridania. Then again, the phantom train is somewhere in Mor Dhona. You are definitely right that Thanalan seems to be relatively safe from demons and undead, but as the Hildibrand questline revealedUl'dah used a zombie plague against Sil'dih. Who knows what else is hidden by the sand.
Last edited by Balipu; 02-01-2015 at 07:14 AM.


I think that shoehorning Vampires into Heavensward would be doing them a disservice. Let Heavensward be about the Dragons - the Voidsent, which I presume is the category under which Vampires would be included, deserve an expansion of their own.
No one in Eorzea, not even the Thaumaturges, know a great deal about Voidsent - just that they exist in this other realm and can't seem to get enough of clawing their way into this one to chew on the inhabitants. I'd like a whole expansion to tackle the topic, and it would be a great place for Vampires to shine.
Pff. Shows what you know! This is totally not what my Ul'dahan history textbook says!



Sure, why not? Vampires can't be far from their old enemies. Just one thing. No werepires! That word makes no linguistic sense whatsoever, and even if it did, it would mean a human-vampire hybrid.
Even better. You need life force to heal, don't you? That's the whole problem in the conjurer questline. Normally you call upon the elementals, or if you are a n00b conjurer, you use your own lifeforce. Now, if you were to use the life force of the people in close proximity...hmmmm. Actually I like the idea of vampires being white mages. Throws all the black-white morality out the window nicely.
Since Shiva is long dead and Ishgardian, I doubt she's grandmother, but they could be related. Only a bit more distantly.
True. A Dark Gothic expansion with vampires, phantom trains and witches *cough* Ultimecia *cough* would be nice, but that would be much harder to pull off. It all depends on where the story is going. You see, we are focusing on dragons now, and the sins commited by Eorzeans go back at the very least to the Allagan Empire and the Meracydians. They are a huge part of the current plot. On the other hand, vampires can't make such claims. Yet. If however we get entagled in the social intrigue of Vampire Lords in Ishgardian society they would become important enough to warrant their own expansion.I think that shoehorning Vampires into Heavensward would be doing them a disservice. Let Heavensward be about the Dragons - the Voidsent, which I presume is the category under which Vampires would be included, deserve an expansion of their own.
No one in Eorzea, not even the Thaumaturges, know a great deal about Voidsent - just that they exist in this other realm and can't seem to get enough of clawing their way into this one to chew on the inhabitants. I'd like a whole expansion to tackle the topic, and it would be a great place for Vampires to shine.
Pff. Shows what you know! This is totally not what my Ul'dahan history textbook says!
Well as the questline reveals, a secret society made sure that the true account remain hidded. That is, untill the Mandervilles came along.


I might be wrong here, but I think this has been "revealed" since 1.20 (Lambs of Dalamud event where you entered Sil'dih Aqueducts).





As far as I'm aware, you are correct - the destruction of Sil'dih by zombie apocalypse has long been known even back in 1.0 (Erik the Ala Mhigan scholar first mentioned it, you know, the MNK quest NPC). And it wasn't Ul'dah that were responsible either - Sil'dih actually were in fact the instigators of their own destruction, as the war with Ul'dah was going badly for them and they couldn't replace the increasingly large losses in troop numbers they were suffering, so they turned to zombifying their fallen troops out of desperation.
Of course this backfired on them horribly, when the mechanism of the zombification (from what I understand, it was biological in nature), spread to Sil'dihian civilians as well, which naturally Ul'dah exploited to their advantage, turning a conflict which until then had been over scarce water supplies, into a holy crusade to send "these zombies straight back to Thal." Needless to say, Sil'dih didn't last long after that.
So Sil'dih not only lost the war militarily, but also turned it into an utter public relations disaster. Hoisted by their own petard, indeed...
In any event, the fall of Sil'dih has long been known - the Hildibrand questline only, to use a pun, fleshed it out more...![]()
Last edited by Enkidoh; 02-08-2015 at 11:47 PM.
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