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  1. There was one of these for WandaVision, so I guess now there's one for Falcon and the Winter Soldier.
  2. I was just wondering, what would happen if a Leecher (or Mistborn) burned chromium and touched a Fused? Draining all or even some of the Voidlight in a Fused's gemheart has been shown to be lethal, and draining Investiture is exactly what chromium does. If a Leecher or Mistborn got onto Roshar, I think that this would mean that Fused can now die permanently with a mere touch. Even if that's not the case, the worst-case scenario is that the Fused runs out of usable Voidlight and has to go recharge, which still is a decent result.
  3. Like I said, this was a list of guaranteed victories, not necessarily likely victories. Like I also said, the list only took into account the compounding effects themselves, not the individual powers. I don't think that's how that works. It does increase your mass, but I'm pretty sure that Wax said that it didn't add any stopping power.
  4. Wait, What happened to Dunno? @Channelknight Fadran
  5. There are 16 possible compounders, not including godmetals. Out of those 16, I count 3 that would be guaranteed to win against a Radiant (not counting the base powers), assuming the user has enough metal and the Radiant doesn't just fly away or something. (And I mean guaranteed. A few of these could realistically defeat a Radiant, but still have a chance at losing.) (Spoilered for size)
  6. Imagine for a second what would happen if a Forger became Radiant or if a Radiant learned Forgery. Ignoring obvious obstacles (Forgery not working off of Sel, physical inability for a Radiant and their spren to leave Roshar, etc), this could be quite powerful. Most of the time, a Forger would have to spend a while physically making a soulstamp, but a Radiant far enough in their oaths could just near-instantly summon their spren in the form of a soulstamp. They would have to spend some time perfecting the shape, but this is still much easier than meticulously carving the exact right form where the penalty for failure is starting over from scratch. The only other thing they'd need is ink, which probably wouldn't be too hard to come by. (As a side note, which Radiant order would be the best suited for Forgery? I'm thinking Lightweavers would be the best, with most of the others okay with it depending on the circumstances, and Skybreakers taking roughly the same view as the Rose Empire's government.)
  7. It was interesting how that worked, what with him already being a Lightweaver.
  8. Here was my thought process for the fifth ideal. The first two dealt with actively doing something ("I will protect those who cannot protect themselves" and "I will protect even those I hate"), and then the next dealt with accepting something ("I will accept that there are those who I cannot protect"). I feel that the second Windrunner oath and this one are somehow opposites, to a degree, so I think that the fifth ideal will continue this: an ideal about accepting that runs somewhat contrary to protecting those you hate. I believe that the fifth ideal will be "I will accept that there are those who I should not protect."
  9. When I said that, this is what I meant. What I intended to say was that with Taravangian now the vessel of Odium, he couldn't serve as his own champion. I would just like to point out that the Shard of Odium doesn't have a personality; it has an Intent. There is a difference. I fail to see how Dalinar being his own champion makes any difference.
  10. I'd have to say that my favorite part was when Brandon Sanderson himself showed up and turned Odium into Idiocy just by writing in his notebook.
  11. Still, no part of the contract defined what happens if the champions change their minds. There is potential for exploitation. I don't completely understand what you're saying here. (For one thing, Taravangian is Odium now.) I'd say this is less of a loophole and more of a specific instance not covered in the contract. (Based on my understanding, a loophole is a rule- or lack thereof- that allows someone to circumvent the intended purpose of something; in this case, a contract.)
  12. Visiting the Cognitive Realm doesn't, though death does. Another possible loophole-- the rules of the contest only defined a win condition: one champion kills the other; that side wins. There are a few ways to circumvent that, such as both champions killing each other at the exact same time, or both champions refusing to fight. If this happens, it would be possible for Odium to exploit this somehow. (Rayse likely almost certainly would have tried to escape Roshar with this, but Taravangian as Odium presents a huge unknown element.)
  13. My idea was for there to be some kind of extradimensional void that kind of exists outside the Macrosmos that fundamentally unmakes anything that enters it, and for Minecraft to be some kind of border. Or something like that. Unless someone has already done something else for it.
  14. It shook its head. "No, I don't."
  15. "I... don't know. I remember the panic, but I don't have any sensory memories. I don't know what I would have been scared of or not scared of."
  16. It searched its limited memories, looking for something that would interest these Elders, but it... wait. "I... just remembered something. A feeling of panic. Before I... fell asleep. I don't know how much before, though."
  17. "No, but I do remember a weird distinct feeling of the word 'ironclad' not applying to me, once the word was mentioned. I'm not sure where it came from or what it means or why it is."
  18. "... I don't know. All I really remember is waking up in the snow and the kippies being scared of me and being brought here."
  19. "I have no idea what to say."
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