lashtal Posted August 26, 2014 Author Report Posted August 26, 2014 The reasons are likely somehow connected to lash's forum sig You're definitely on the right track To bring Mur into Necro To learn from Mur Because he wanted to! because the mandrake told you to? the shades wanted you to in exchange for passing around that dark water to gain access to the crypt and field of fear? To be killed himself in retaliation for killing Mur? Because the signal in the LAST AL went out, and this time Mur dying was part of the assignment? One of these should be rephrased, but it's 99% close. If none else puts it in better words, Intrigue gets one point. Not quite what I'd originally have gone with, but: 1. To deny the god of MD. 2. To deny Mur as the the god of MD. 3. To deny MD has a god. 4. To deny Mur's godhood. 5. To deny Mur regardless of whether or not he might be ultimately denied. 6. As an act of love for Mur. 7. To allow Mur to be reborn, or to be reborn himself. 8. Because love became desire. 9. As a form of self sacrifice. 10. To deny god so that he might not stray from god. One of these is very close!
DARK DEMON Posted August 26, 2014 Report Posted August 26, 2014 1) Because it was part of a card game 2) Because the killer loves Mur (god) more than anyone else 3) So that someone kills the killer for doing this crime (killing god) and then the killer would be dead as well, and he could interact/learn from the dead Mur in a better way because they'd always be together :D 4) To change Mur to become a new/better god, one that the killer could never wander away from 5) To see how it felt like to kill the god he loves
dst Posted August 26, 2014 Report Posted August 26, 2014 To elevate Mur as a god to another level. To learn something from the killing of a god.
Krioni Posted August 26, 2014 Report Posted August 26, 2014 1. The killer loved Mur 2. Mur wished to understand death, or experience what change a Mur goes through in death 3. The killer, knowing Mur's wishes, helped him accomplish this death. 4. The killer does not care for the reason why Mur wanted to be dead, merely he loves Mur, therefore does what Mur wishes. 5. Mur wished his death, so the killer served Mur by killing him.
DARK DEMON Posted August 26, 2014 Report Posted August 26, 2014 To prove there is no such thing as god, because a god can't die, and Mur died John Constantine 1
Intrigue Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 because by killing mur, mur must be revived, and by reviving mur, maybe it'll lead to a revival of MD? lashtal 1
Eagle Eye Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 Killing mur is to connect people, Calling the sleeping people and the killer want his mur leash Rophs 1
lashtal Posted August 27, 2014 Author Report Posted August 27, 2014 1) Because it was part of a card game 2) Because the killer loves Mur (god) more than anyone else 3) So that someone kills the killer for doing this crime (killing god) and then the killer would be dead as well, and he could interact/learn from the dead Mur in a better way because they'd always be together :D 4) To change Mur to become a new/better god, one that the killer could never wander away from 5) To see how it felt like to kill the god he loves To elevate Mur as a god to another level. To learn something from the killing of a god. In both cases, one of the mentioned contains something true. Keep trying folks!
DARK DEMON Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 In both cases, one of the mentioned contains something true. Keep trying folks! Wait so.. both of us have one correct point or we were just close to one? Also: 1) Because the killer represents such an action (LAShTAL represents those actions performed by a purposeful will, without lust of result). In this case, killing Mur had a purpose, and at the same time it was done with patience. 2) Derived from the above: because the killer wanted to learn patience/self control 3) Derived from the above: to see how long the killer could control himself and resist the temptation of killing the Mur he loves
lashtal Posted August 27, 2014 Author Report Posted August 27, 2014 Wait so.. both of us have one correct point or we were just close to one? The second you said: you were just close to one.
Eagle Eye Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 The Killer hate himself so why he killed mur
DARK DEMON Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 1) To see how death changes love, as well as both the parties involved (killer + victim) 2) To create something like a dead god
Ary Endleg Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 Lash wanted to outshine kingslayers dst, Granos and Eon by becoming the godslayer. :p *pins medal on lash's chest* Prince Marvolo and DARK DEMON 2
lashtal Posted August 27, 2014 Author Report Posted August 27, 2014 Lash wanted to outshine kingslayers dst, Granos and Eon by becoming the godslayer. :P *pins medal on lash's chest* My reason was more about the possibility and less about Ego-feeding ... but the basic idea is there. If nobody puts in better words, Ary gets 1 point!
Intrigue Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 To destroy the old so the new can arise. It was Lashtal's destiny To facilitate the redemption and resurrection of Mur
DARK DEMON Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 1) To dare to do something no one else would think about 2) To improve his medal collection :P 3) To be unique and special, aka the only one with a godslayer medal? :P :P 4) For the lulz (yes this is a real reason :P :P :P )
Intrigue Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 By destroying Mur (murdering him), He was liberating him. Lashtal has some insight/understanding that it is time to face the New, and let go of the old. Because unless someone did this (murdered Mur), MD would remain stagnant and the transformation into the new couldn't happen. Lashtal was deceived (either by himself, or by others) into thinking that he was doing this because it needed doing, but he really was partially wanting to, thus this act satiated his desire. Lashtal doesn't want there to be any gods in MD / desires a lack of a god. Lashtal needed to obtain peace, which could only be gotten by the wisdom gained by murdering Mur. To gain Immortality. He wanted to release Mur (by murdering him) because he loved him.
Intrigue Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 To allow Mur to be reborn/renewed (like a phoenix from ashes thing)
lashtal Posted August 27, 2014 Author Report Posted August 27, 2014 To destroy the old so the new can arise. It was Lashtal's destiny To facilitate the redemption and resurrection of Mur One of these is on the right track!
Intrigue Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 (edited) 1. Lash has some sort of deathwish (either to die at the hand of mur, or because he killed mur, or so he can be reborn, not sure) 2. Mur's death is to facilitate someone's rebirth (either Mur, or Lash, or both?) 3. Lash is trying to anger Mur/get his attention 4. There is some kind of secret involved (either on Mur's end or Lash's) 5. Somebody wants someone else's job/role, and by Murdering Mur, that role potentially could be taken (what role/job i'm not sure, nor by whom) Edited August 27, 2014 by Intrigue
Intrigue Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 1. Mur's death was an act of self sacrifice in order for Mur to develop into the next "stage" of Mur-ness, Lash was merely the tool used to have this happen. 2. Lashtal's lack of selfishness allowed this to happen (if he'd been selfish, he wouldn't have killed mur at mur's request, or he would have killed mur for reasons of his own). 3. Contradictory almost, Lash wanted to kill mur, to satisfy Mur's wish to "advance" (level up? attain a higher... something?), thus allowing for the opposite interpretation of LAShTAL. 4. The secret is, Mur wanted to be murdered.
Ackshan Bemunah Posted August 27, 2014 Report Posted August 27, 2014 (edited) [SIGSEGV] Edited November 12, 2014 by Ackshan Bemunah
Azthor Posted August 28, 2014 Report Posted August 28, 2014 (edited) 1. To learn from Mur's death. 2. To fulfill the mandate of balance. 3. For the experience of the deed itself. 4. To discover what the denial of a god would entail. 5. To see how it would change him (the killer). 6. To bring god before their (god's) creation. 7. To free god from the world. 8. It was not a choice. It was his role to do so. Edited August 28, 2014 by Azthor
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