
Originally Posted by
Cleretic
To clarify what I mean, the fact we disposed of Elidibus and the crystals has never been even off-handedly discussed as a thing that may not be permanent, and it's been two-and-a-half patches since then--all three of those patches including at least one Ascian in a starring role (5.4 including either two or three, depending on how you count Loghrif). They've had ample opportunity to discuss that subject, and they haven't--especially notable around Fandaniel, since a huge part of his current motivation is that everyone above him in the organization is dead. Which reads to me as 'that's done, let's move on'. Which is fine; it's not feasible to just keep leaving that stuff open.
I absolutely think the crystals will come up again, but not in a 'we got these back, it's Ascian Time again' way; you're right that the fact we know about and listened to them is more important than what they were capable of. After all, they want to close the book on the Ascians, bringing back the crystals after they were very plausibly disposed of is kinda just the writers making more work for themselves.
They brought Gaius back 13 patches later after presumably dying in the Praetorium explosions. I wouldn't consider something not being mentioned for a couple of patches as proof it's done.
To be honest, I'm expecting (meta-role quest spoiler)
the Crystal Tower on the First to end up playing a key role in the plans to save the Thirteenth. I highly doubt SE will neglect to continue that story. Memories contained within the stars could be useful in determining exactly what went wrong and how to correct it. It's doubtful the memories would be limited to pre-Sundering, they would be updated with the memories of the shards that died before being passed to the next shard raised to the Seat so they would be up to date on everything going on..
There's always the chance we could gain the cooperation of what Ascians are still left at the end of 6.0 but the stars in the Tower would be a very useful backup. Closing the book on the Ascians as an organization doesn't necessarily mean closing the book on its individual members.