Player




Pretty much!
Most of Eorzea worships the one or all of the Twelve in some fashion, going back at least 6,000 years. The land is saturated with the traces of such beliefs, or as Lousioix would have said, "the Twelve slumber here". His plan was to "wake them up" by carving their symbols near places where worship of them is or was once prevalent. When people prayed there, it would stir that saturation.
Here are the symbol locations, just for the sake of completeness:
- Halone - [ICE] At the Fury's Gaze in Coerthas, where she is worshipped by Ishgardians.
- Menphina - [ICE] Carved into Gwyr Aen in Coerthas. Reasons unknown.
- Thaliak - [WATER] Carved into the Crypt of Xande I in Mor Dhona (moved in ARR). Reasons unknown. Not in Dravania, because we couldn't get there at the time.
- Nymeia - [WATER] Carved into a rock near Moraby Bay. Reasons unknown.
- Llymlaen - [WIND] Carved into a statue in Limsa Lominsa, where she is worshipped.
- Oschon - [WIND] Carved into a rock near the ruins of Nym, where he was worshipped.
- Rhalgr - [LIGHTNING] Carved into a stone in Little Ala Mhigo (as actual Ala Mhigo, where is is worshipped, was not accessible)
- Byregot - [LIGHTNING] Located near Camp Crimson Bark in the Shoud. Reasons unknown.
- Nald'thal - [FIRE] Located in Ul'dah (both statues), where they are worshipped.
- Azeyma - [FIRE] Located near the runs of Qarn, where she was worshipped.
- Nophica - [EARTH] Located in Gridania, where she is worshipped.
- Althyk - [EARTH] Located near ruins of Amdapor, where I thought he was worshipped; symbols inside of Amdapori ruins seem to contradict this.
Louisoix called on every able Eorzean to drop everything and make a pilgrimage to each stone, offering their prayers to the Twelve. If a 1.0 player did this, they mysteriously found a ring on their guardian deity's stone that had that god's symbol carved into it. (One of a few "thanks for investing in the broken version of this game" keepsakes.) Once the aether in the land was saturated and stirring, Louisoix harnessed it all at once - drawing a massive amount of aether from the aetherial streams all over Eorzea to summon the power of "The Twelve" so that he could shape that aether into a manifestation of peoples prayers. That's why the spell looked literally like "The Twelve" are "sending Dalamud back into the heavens". He planned to kill himself mid-ritual so that the Twelve didn't manifest as aether-hungry deiforms that would drain the land dry and destroy all life. Bahamut broke the spell before that happened.
Or so we think. The 3.5 trailer shows the return of "Louisoix Dalamud" via what looks like Tupsimati and/or Omega and we don't know why, yet.
Last edited by Anonymoose; 01-10-2017 at 05:00 PM.
"I shall refrain from making any further wild claims until such time as I have evidence."
– Y'shtola


I'm not sure what you mean by Buddhism in this case.
There is Buddhism as a life philosophy, then there is Theravada Buddhism, which essentially seeks Nirvana through asceticism.
And then there is Mahayana Buddhism, the most common form of the religion practised in most of East and Southeast Asia today.
Mahayana Buddhism, in particular, tended to blend in with a huge variety of local folk religions and superstitions. It thus evolved into unique syncretic forms wherever it has taken root, so much so that the Buddhism practised in, say, Thailand, would be significantly different from the way it is accepted in China.
In a sense, the way many adherents practise Buddhism, it's almost like Buddha has become a god, and Nirvana is spoken of almost like heaven. This is divergent from what Buddha sought to achieve, but that's besides the point. The real point is that, for many worshippers, the bodhisattva (think of them as the Buddhist equivalent of Catholic saints) are as good as gods, whose favour they'd seek on the road to Nirvana.
So here's the cultural difference that Westerners need to grasp, especially if they are familiar only with a post-Enlightenment, sceptical view of monotheistic religions: For many East Asians, the gods are real, not just in the sense that they physically exist in some sort of alternative plane, but also that they are literal metaphors of many aspects of daily lives.
What I'm trying to say is that the idea that gods are born and sustained by belief alone is not actually so radical in many parts of Asia.
So, in a way, it's not correct at all to claim there are no "actual gods" in this game. Whatever the primals may be metaphysically, to their respective beast tribes, they are the manifestations of their true gods, their tutelary deities.
As for the Twelve, no one knows whether They do in fact exist. But that is the nature of faith: It requires you to believe in something even in the absence of proof.
Belief is all you need for a "god" to exist. It really is that simple.
Last edited by TinyRedLeaf; 01-10-2017 at 10:30 PM.


Louisoix was very concerned that all the belief, prayer, and aether flying around during Bahamut's rampage would succeed in summoning the Twelve in Primal form. Note that, like all Primals, these would not have been the "true" Twelve, but Primal representations of the Twelve. That would have been a disaster as great or even greater than the one being caused by Bahamut himself. He carefully, meticulously planned things out to avoid that happening.
So, do the Twelve really exist? Did they ever exist? Plenty of Eorzeans believe that they do and did. Our characters, too, worship a deity chosen at the time of character creation - though whether it is a deep devotion or mere lip service is up to you as a player to decide. Whether the gods actually exist is purely a matter of faith within the context of the game, however. The game has not verified their existence for certain one way or another - and possibly never will.

Here's the theory I'm going with untill we get some form of solid information regarding the Twelve. Given the prevalence of their symbols and worship all through Eorzea going back at least to the Allagan Empire (at which point they were already deified) they most likely existed on Hydaelyn in some fashion prior to that. Howerver many of the beliefs that Twelve worship is based on are probably false, particularly in regards to the afterlife. We see this in the 2.0 MSQ when we first go to Coerthas and find out that Halone worshipers believe that the rightous end up in Halone's halls (aka Heaven of Ice) when they die, but we later find out that aether (in this case the soul) doesn't work like that and that everything retuns the the Lifestream to be born again as something else.
If the beliefs surrounding the Twelve as deities are false, then I think they weren't deities but people who did great things and passed into legend and godhood as the ages passed. In particular I think they may have been the first Warriors of Light who kept life from being completely destroyed by the first Calamity. Hydaelyn would have been at her strongest then and the Blessing of Light could have made them so powerful that people mistook them for deities. Also reading the descriptions of the Twelve they are all depicted as a person holding a weapon or tool of some kind, which makes me think of a group of adventurers. If the first Warriors of Light were like the seventh, and everyone remembers their deeds but not them, then by the 3rd Astral Era the legends of the first (and most powerful) Warriors of Light may have changed from them being simply heroes to gods, and other details added to them over time to fill in the collective gaps in memory.



Phoenix is a strange case as he wasn't summoned. He was pretty much created.
Bahamut destroyed the half formed Twelve Primal and scattered the Aether used to summon them all around Carteneu. All that Aether and the collective: Oh dammit, we don't want to die!!!!! Gave birth to a Primal whose whole shtick is making people not die. His method of making sure nobody dies was to punch a whole into Bahamut. Of course Bahamut used his last breath to somehow temper Phoenix (funny how Primals can temper primals) and forced him to turn the ruins of Dalamud into the Coil and rebuild Bahamut's broken body from it.
No idea why Phoenix wasn't simply summoned, Maybe Louisoix prayed for enough power to stop Bahamut.




I think there are a few headcanons floating around how how specifically that worked out.
Personally, mine is: The original spell that Louisoix cast was infused with explicit prayers to the Twelve that Dalamud be returned to the sky. It stirred the long-present traces of worship in those areas, and then Louisoix was able to focus it specifically on re-binding Bahamut ("Dalamud") and exiling him again. When Bahamut broke this, it broke the entire focus, so all that was in the air was a massive amount of free-floating aether.
That aether then reacted with the prayers of thousands and thousands of people below, "I don't want to die. Please, let Louisoix save us." This focused all of that aether on Lousoix himself and transformed him into a deiform. This is where I have a big ? even in my headcanon. Did he technically die somewhere in here? Did Bahamut light him up? Did the aether flooding him instantly tear him apart and put him together? That would explain the vision, I guess.
Anyroad, Louisoix is a scholar. Looking out on a world in flames and desiring nothing more than to see it reborn, it wouldn't be surprising if thoughts of the phoenix were at the forefront of his mind. With that sentiment weighing heavily on his heart when he got smacked with thousands of prayers in aetherial form, perhaps it just warped him right from one into the other.
But that's just my headcanon, lol. Based on the side-stepping of the specifics that happens every time it comes up, I wonder if this topic makes the lore team get a deer-in-the-headlights smile on their face as they quietly chant "Please don't think too hard about it. Please don't think too hard about it. Please don't think too hard about it..." Perhaps it's specifically what the scenario team wanted, anomalies be damned, lol.
Last edited by Anonymoose; 01-12-2017 at 12:23 AM.
"I shall refrain from making any further wild claims until such time as I have evidence."
– Y'shtola



Well we have enough questions for a few more lorebooks, don't we?
It is worth remembering the attempted summoning of Rhalgr by the Ala Mhigan Resistence, this thankfully was stopped as it would have created a Primal(version) of Rhalgar the Destroyer. So despite the truth of the twelve, whether they be god or humans of heroic deeds(whatever their origins), their current existence in the populace of Eorzea's minds are deities to pray to/worship. This existence is perhaps most comparable to primals in this sense since the Primal is separate to the actual existence(similar to shiva primal versus shiva the person who is deceased). What is important in this circumstance, I believe, would be the unified image of said primal. Everyone knows the twelve for their symbols, but to create a humanoid deity would require a much more uniform image, plus crystals & ritual of course.
As for a one true god, I suppose it would come down to what limits of godhood you think of. On the most generic level, you have the creator and the destroyer, the light crystal and the dark crystal respectively. I say this because I think there is an argument of Hydaelyn and Zodiark being primalistic themselves. I'll just point to this link and say enjoy!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ZhT...bQQr-psMidCXH8
Assuming that my memory functions as proper, neither Louisoix or Bahamut were killed. While Louisoix's methods are still shrouded in some mystery, we know that some image of the twelve were summoned in attempting to hold the primal. While still unsure about the worship, we are told that the aether poured back into Louisoix, and he became the Pheonix. (I would have to check, but the Pheonix was chosen due to the bird being the symbol of rebirth and life in most if not all people.) After striking Bahamut down, he released the aether intending that it would return to the land. However, Bahamut refused death and took in a fraction of this aether to survive. Mind you, Bahamut took in all the aether he could, including that infused with Louisox/Pheonix, Gaius Van Baelsar, and more.
In response to Louisoix's transformation, I believe it to be more of an ascension of existence. Perhaps it is to be compared to the summoning of Shiva? I would hazard a guess to say so.
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
|