Bottom of the sea. Right down in the Abyssal Zone. Especially if the field can be used to cultivate coral and water plant gardens. Gonna make that place a palace.
Kali is the patron goddess of the Romani, so being Roma, Dark Time is the logical one for me haha.
Though stellar and lightning are pretty strong follow ups.
If you look at apocryphal works, specifically the ones about the Grigori and Nephalim, it would suggest the reason some magicks were considered bad was because heaven apparently didn't think humanity was ready for it. The types of magic in question were things like divination, so astrology and the "signs of the sun, moon, clouds and the earth." The Kabbalah was also considered "good magic" and revolved around calling upon the divine, incantation and crafting objects like amulets. So elaborate forms of prayer and blessings essentially. Golems were also considered okay.
The other kind of magic mentioned in the bible itself was Necromancy iirc. Specfically the classical kind, aka consorting with spirits for information. Additionally other gods could be sources of magic. This was forbidden because, long story short, it is incompatible with Abrahamic belief, so it was seen as trickery on behalf of "demons" or scam artists (though if you go far back enough they did acknowledge other gods as divinities, not just as demons posing as them). The Bible isn't consistent with which it is so the exact details of the matter are murky. But a sorcerer in Christian terms would essentially be quite similar to Yahweh's prophets, only under to thrall of a different god (or demons) or by using methods that are open to human error, like reading the stars or talking to dead people. The Witch of Endor is one example of a sorceress in the bible.
Guess I gotta hope they have a size difference kink https://powerlisting.fandom.com/wiki/Gigantes_Physiology As for the target of my interest, well, that list is honestly too long to write down lmao.
I don't know One Piece. Can I make him giggle to death? Probably not. https://powerlisting.fandom.com/wiki/Silliness_Inducement
More split than I thought it would be, wow.
Gotta live up to my name and go with Primordial Water.
Cool power. Glad I got something I like for once on the first roll. But I am fucking dead
Absolute Darkness.
There's a lot of war gods I could call upon with this. They should be enough to deal with the Xenos. Plenty of divine protection in there too.
Guess I might have to wait until sundown for this fight haha. Beyond that, burning him with suficiently powerful beams should work.
@RyanKraftBR Oh man that's fitting. The Rahab part of my username translates to "Storm" haha.
Let's go with 3 😨
https://powerlisting.fandom.com/wiki/Anthroscience
Huh, guess I win le epic debate with him regarding the human heart, and turn him away from being an absolute nihilist.
"that divine could include unholy"
I'm sorry I haven't been keeping up with this, life and all that, and at this point it feels like flogging a dead horse, but...Why? Like, what was the community's rational behind that?
@Elder Mythos "I was initially responding to a reply that was saying that angels and demons are Abrahamic concepts, which is factually incorrect even if the respective religions are similar."
But it is factually correct. Especially for modern society's conceptions of demons. The notion of "fallen good guys" is specifically a motif in the Abrahamic faiths, being its own version of the "descend into the underworld" mythotheme that added the additional moral context in the form of the Grigorii. That context wasn't part of its inspiring myths.
Outside of the Abrahamic belief systems, most of the entities that get associated with demons are either just gods who are not part of the revered pantheon, or are their own species and were simply never associated with the gods anyway. And unlike Abrahamic tradition's angels and demons, the roles they play aren't usually exclusively negative or positive, bar the odd individual like Apep.
Chaos from Greco-Roman mythology isn't really an Anti-God. It's role is only as a progenator.
The most typical example of an Anti-God would be Angra Mainyu from Zoroastrianism.
@29dan I could say the same thing about saying Angelic-Demonic 10 times. These are words to describe certain metaphysical states. If they evoke that vibe in your mind, that's more your personal interpretation of it than an actual appraisal of the words themselves.
For example, to me, it's "Angelic-Demonic" that's the childish terminology. Angels and Demons are Judeo-Christian mythology, and they do not translate to other cultures. Especially not Pagan ones as Derpmaster claims earlier in the thread. Hell the modern conception of these things aren't even 100% true to the cultures they originated from either. Case in point, "demons" in ancient Judaic mythology had nothing to do with the Underworld, they were just a thing in the world only related to morality in the sense of their seperateness from God. And the word itself comes from an ancient Greek group of lesser deities or spirits.
To ignore all of that for a simpler, Judeo-Christian and (modern) Western centric model is extremely reductive (and dismissive) of the individual culture's viewpoints and mythologies. However, "Holiness" and "Unholiness" are near universal concepts. Most other cultures and belief systems may or may not have anything akin to demons and angels, but they will definitely have traits, places, people, practices and mythological creatures that will be considered sacred or not so. Thus it can be applied, where appropriate, in a way that "Angelic" and "Demonic" simply can't.
Though I will admit that "Holiness" and "Unholiness" are probably the better way to phrase it in the context of a power. Unless it was made into an archtype I guess.