Soviet Heavy said:
fnlrpa said:
Soviet Heavy said:
fnlrpa said:
Warhammer 40k is a good example of ways 'dark' can go. Dan Abnett can write a dark story well while some other authors just aren't good writers and just make it "dark"
Abnett actually improves on the 40K formula by
not making everything excessively dark. Back before Games Workshop got their heads stuck so far up their asses, the insane darkness of 40K was used as parody not unlike the Judge Dredd comics. Nowadays, they take their darkness way too seriously without any hint of irony.
Dan Abnett sidesteps this by lightening the mood. It's still a depressing situation to be sure, but he remembers the most important part of a dark storyline: Hope.
There is a reason that 28 Days Later is my favorite horror film. By all means, the events that happen in the film are terrifying and tragic, but the characters are so endearing because they believe that they can and will overcome the disaster. And when they do, it is so satisfying. The Imperium actually functions in Abnett's 40K. It gives humanity a reason to fight, even if it is misguided.
The hope that they can overcome the challenges that humanity faces is a driving theme that keeps you invested in the characters. That despite the horrific nature of the universe, good people can and still do exist.
Thant is the same reason mass effect is compelling along with the characters. Despite the reapers being unstoppable, there is a glimmer of hope, no matter how bad the situation is.
Indeed. To go back to the 40K example: Ollanius Pius. Back before Games Workshop got their pauldron fetish on, Ollanius Pius was the most badass figure in all of 40K. Who was he? A single human who stood up to Horus in the darkest hour.
He has armor the equivalent or cardboard and a glorified laser pointer. And he fearlessly stood between the Emperor and Horus, two literal GODS, to stand up for what was right. He was obliterated instantly, but his sacrifice gave the Emperor clarity for two things.
#1: Horus was so far gone that he would be petty enough to stomp on someone who wasn't even a threat.
#2: Ollanius represented the hope of humanity. That someone so small and insignificant would lay down his life for what he believed in, standing against impossible odds and facing total annihilation was proof that humanity deserved its place in the galaxy.
The point of Ollanius's sacrifice was that it gave the Emperor the resolve to keep fighting.
All of that was thrown out by Games Workshop when they replaced Pius with a Terminator and then a Custodes, changing the Emperor's attack from resolve to getting a second wind while the Supersoldier kepts Horus busy. Completely missing the point of what Pius's sacrifice meant.
Dan Abnett brought Ollanius Pius back. He's back in the canon as of the latest Horus Heresy book, and I hope he gets to do his original sacrifice once again.
You've missed it entirely.
Oll may have been a hero to the humans, but in his original format he meant nothing to The Emperor. His death at the hands of Horus would've been the death of just one more human. A psychotically brave human, but just some human no less. Beyond that though, Oll's death made no sense since his very presence aboard the Vengeful Spirit was inexplicable. There was simply no reason whatsoever for him to be there.
The death of an Imperial Fists Terminator made sense in the fact that Rogal Dorn's Terminators had joined The Emperor, Sanguinius, and Dorn in teleporting aboard the Vengeful Spirit, but his death would have been basically equally meaningless to The Emperor as Oll's.
The death of an Adeptus Custode Terminator is the ideal version of the story. The Custodes go everywhere The Emperor goes, and thus it makes perfect sense for him to be aboard the Vengeful Spirit.
The Emperor was reluctant to believe that the Horus he knew and loved, his son, his most trusted general, was gone and irrecoverable, DESPITE Horus attacking him and Sanguinius laying dead at his feet, because The Emperor had only seen the effects of Horus' corruption and never saw the corrupt and twisted thing Horus had become in action for himself. He allowed Horus to swat him around, trying to find a way to get through to him.
The Custode Terminator one of The Emperor's constant and fiercely loyal companions for decades or even centuries, enters the room. One of the few beings in the galaxy who The Emperor might truly call a friend. This warrior enters the chamber with the Warmaster and fearlessly attacks the Arch-Traitor, only for Horus to instantly obliterate him from existence with a quick attack and maniacal glee. That Horus, his son, could so callously and unhesitatingly slaughter such a loyal and noble warrior, his bodyguard, his friend...THAT is what snapped The Emperor out of it and made him realize that the Horus he knew was truly lost to him. THAT is what made him annihilate the Warmaster's soul and cause the Chaos Gods that were possessing him to flee in terror.
It wasn't a matter of Horus being petty enough to destroy someone who was no threat, it was Horus' willingness to destroy someone whose worth The Emperor was personally familiar with. It was just a stone's throw away from being the same exact thing as if The Emperor had actually personally witnessed Horus murder Sanguinius. The Primarchs may be his sons and generals out leading his armies in the galaxy, but the Custodes are his constant companions and friends.
With the exception of maybe Horus and Dorn, The Emperor probably wasn't nearly so familiar with his Primarchs as he was with The Companions.
Ollanius Pius' new place in the fluff may actually earn him a reason for his death to matter to The Emperor, should he find himself aboard Horus' bridge somehow.
If he is, as some of us suspect, one of the handful of remaining Shamans (along with John Grammaticus and Malcador the Sigillite), then he may be among both the truest family and oldest friends of The Emperor in all of history. THAT would mean his death aboard the Vengeful Spirit would be significant to The Emperor, but it still doesn't explain his presence there.