Ayewale
He/Him- 1,070
- 778
So this thread is barely 24 hours old; trying to undo it with a CRT is probably pretty cool. But from what I can tell, literally no one showed any opposition to such a massive upgrade and the thread's been locked, so all I can do is this.
To summarize, the reasons behind the upgrade are as follows:
The gaping problem here is that Avatar The Last Airbender is probably the worst verse one could pick to interpret literally. The spirits in particular are creatures that are supposed to be ethereal and vague, beings that are less 'literal embodiments of the earth and nature' and more 'mythical creatures with vague connections to nature'. Examples:
So there seems to be plenty of evidence that spirits are consistently shown to not have direct, literal connections to the environment, which includes Word of God. From a lore perspective, the spirits being 5-C is pretty dumb, but there's a bit more, too!
The TL;DR is that the thread passed way too quickly. This is why I like to keep threads open until I get some pushback, because otherwise blatantly untrue stuff passes through.
Edit: As an additional point, why is this even considered? Disregarding everything I said prior, the moon disappearing when they are killed doesn't necessarily mean that they're literally the moon; even if we assume they're connected, assuming the most direct connection possible is stupid.
Edit 2: Concerning sustaining the moon as a stabilization feat, even by the wiki's own standards it's unusable still.
To summarize, the reasons behind the upgrade are as follows:
- Tui and La are the moon and ocean spirit respectively.
- This is considered literal since upon their death, the moon disappeared. So they're considered 6-A.
- This was later considered 5-C.
- In Aang's fused form with the moon spirit, he is considered the same tier.
- Raava and Vaatu are considered superior to the moon spirits, so they are the same tier.
- The Avatar State scales to Raava and Vaatu, so they are considered the same tier.
The gaping problem here is that Avatar The Last Airbender is probably the worst verse one could pick to interpret literally. The spirits in particular are creatures that are supposed to be ethereal and vague, beings that are less 'literal embodiments of the earth and nature' and more 'mythical creatures with vague connections to nature'. Examples:
- Hei Bai is a spirit of a burnt down forest, but nowhere is it implied that he's the literal forest, made clear by the fact that the whole forest is burnt down but he still exists.
- General Old Iron is guardian of the shore of Mo Ce Sea. This, too, is not literal, as he tries to destroy the entire place multiple times in an attempt to get rid of the humans around, including destroying an entire city in a whole night.
- Notably, General Old Iron straight up dies in the story he's introduced him, but no environmental destruction comes as a resul.t of this.
- The VAST majority of spirits have no explicit physical connection to the physical world, nor an implied connection (there's about two dozen examples but you get the idea) of any kind.
- The Painted Lady is a spirit of the Jang Hui River. When the river became polluted, contaminated and diseased, she simply...left the river. There is no evidence that this had any effect on her (and her leaving had no direct effect on the environment).
- One of the creators of Avatar likened spirits to "projections of pure energy that can shift into different states of matter". This is perfectly consistent with Hei Bai shapeshifting and Tui/La manifesting into fish. Being both spirits, the fish and the literal moon contradicts this (as well as everything else).
So there seems to be plenty of evidence that spirits are consistently shown to not have direct, literal connections to the environment, which includes Word of God. From a lore perspective, the spirits being 5-C is pretty dumb, but there's a bit more, too!
- The spirits being 5-C is such a massive outlier that it should've been denied on the spot.
- We see Koizilla go outright berserk on the Fire Nation soldiers and it's not even close to 5-C.
- The series does a good job of showing off the power of the Avatar State (many of these feats being the strongest stuff we ever see from the series) in a consistent-ish manner, and a 5-C rating is pretty much an 'ackshually, all of that is pure bullshit'.
- Korra uses the Avatar State more liberally than Aang does, and we see pretty definitively that it's nowhere near this strong.
The TL;DR is that the thread passed way too quickly. This is why I like to keep threads open until I get some pushback, because otherwise blatantly untrue stuff passes through.
Edit: As an additional point, why is this even considered? Disregarding everything I said prior, the moon disappearing when they are killed doesn't necessarily mean that they're literally the moon; even if we assume they're connected, assuming the most direct connection possible is stupid.
Edit 2: Concerning sustaining the moon as a stabilization feat, even by the wiki's own standards it's unusable still.
From the wiki page on Stabilization Feats:
This is a very, very bad stabilization feat. Proving that it consistently scales to their regular statistics is blatantly impossible.
- ...Requirement 2:Prove that the stabilized structure is being directly sustained by the power of the character and not from the character's abilities, life force, existence, magical properties or any unknown connection that is independent of their statistics.
...Requirement 4: Prove that the power of the character's stabilization consistently scales to their regular statistics, similar to our standards for creation feats.- Common Limitations:
- The character's existence only sustains the structure.
- The character's regular statistics aren't consistently portrayed at the level of what they sustain.
- The character and the structure are linked by a magical or unknown component.
Last edited: