This sounds very plausible. Thal is worshiped by the poor, which might well describe Sil'Dih refugees.
By the way, BAM! I made a page for us to put info on. Feel free to add anything else we uncover.
This sounds very plausible. Thal is worshiped by the poor, which might well describe Sil'Dih refugees.I was reading about Nald'thal and how it relates to Gemini. Maybe back when the two kingdoms were still rivals Ul'dah worshipped Nald and Sil'dih worshipped Thal. When Sil'dih fell Ul'dah took Thal into their worship like the immortal gemini twin (Pollux) shared his immortality with his dead twin (Castor).
By the way, BAM! I made a page for us to put info on. Feel free to add anything else we uncover.
If we get to go to Nym, it should be populated solely by Qiqirn.
...
If you get the mis-spelled literary reference there, you can have a cookie!
Immemorial Nym as in amnesia status effect Qiqirn are well known for Mjollnir =o?
Lol well i'll leave that for someone else =P i remember a large majority of the Qiqirn you come across were close to the Sea besides a few exceptions. I remember the Qiqirn ship crew and the large concentration of Qiqirn on the coastline too so they seem to like being around the Sea.
Edit: bah thats no fair the secret of Nihm is older than i am! x.x
Last edited by Alaltus; 03-27-2013 at 10:40 AM.
La Noscea, particularly around Camp Iron Lake, would make a lot of sense for the lost city of Nym. If you remember, that was the location of Oschon's shrine. I always thought it was a random place for a Wanderer god to have a permanent shrine, I figured it should be somewhere very high up and twisty and hard to get to. But if the ruins of the city he guarded are nearby (or underneath it) then it would make perfect sense.
That would be a place even a wanderer may feel anchored to.
Do you mean the stones with their symbols carved in them? That was Louisoix and Urianger, and they are by no means "permanent".La Noscea, particularly around Camp Iron Lake, would make a lot of sense for the lost city of Nym. If you remember, that was the location of Oschon's shrine. I always thought it was a random place for a Wanderer god to have a permanent shrine, I figured it should be somewhere very high up and twisty and hard to get to. But if the ruins of the city he guarded are nearby (or underneath it) then it would make perfect sense.
That would be a place even a wanderer may feel anchored to.
That doesn't mean Nym can't be somewhere in that area, but the Mark of the Wanderer isn't that great of an indicator.
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