Talk:Basim ibn Ishaq: Difference between revisions
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:Except this idea of the Staff of Hermes returning there is all hypothetical. Layla is openly told that the only reason she's alive in Yggdrasil's vault is because the Staff is protecting her from the radiation that built up over 8 years after the machine went into overdrive when Desmond saved the world in 2012. If she ejects, without the Staff nearby, she dies. Basim is only alive because Loki ran calculations hedging on Alethia still being in the Staff wielded by Kassandra and then Layla, and that Layla would enter Yggdrasil's vault with the Staff. Just entering animation does not mean one is dead, since Eivor and Sigurd were able to plug in and willingly eject. While there is no way to know when ''specifically'' that Svala's body functions stopped while Yggdrasil preserved her mind, no human/Reborn Isu can survive after having withered away over a millennium, never mind radiation's impact on what amounts to a briefly-living corpse. [[User:Darman36|<span style="font-family:Old English Text MT;font-size:15px;color:#">Darman</span>]] ([[User talk:Darman36|<span style="font-family:Viner Hand ITC;color:#">talk</span>]]) 04:45, 10 April 2023 (UTC) | :Except this idea of the Staff of Hermes returning there is all hypothetical. Layla is openly told that the only reason she's alive in Yggdrasil's vault is because the Staff is protecting her from the radiation that built up over 8 years after the machine went into overdrive when Desmond saved the world in 2012. If she ejects, without the Staff nearby, she dies. Basim is only alive because Loki ran calculations hedging on Alethia still being in the Staff wielded by Kassandra and then Layla, and that Layla would enter Yggdrasil's vault with the Staff. Just entering animation does not mean one is dead, since Eivor and Sigurd were able to plug in and willingly eject. While there is no way to know when ''specifically'' that Svala's body functions stopped while Yggdrasil preserved her mind, no human/Reborn Isu can survive after having withered away over a millennium, never mind radiation's impact on what amounts to a briefly-living corpse. [[User:Darman36|<span style="font-family:Old English Text MT;font-size:15px;color:#">Darman</span>]] ([[User talk:Darman36|<span style="font-family:Viner Hand ITC;color:#">talk</span>]]) 04:45, 10 April 2023 (UTC) | ||
::I think the real discussion should be "should Layla have a date of death". I'd argue no. Her body is in suspended animation not dead regardless of being narratively written out for the time being. [[User:Lacrossedeamon|Lacrossedeamon]] ([[User talk:Lacrossedeamon|talk]]) 08:25, 10 April 2023 (UTC) | ::I think the real discussion should be "should Layla have a date of death". I'd argue no. Her body is in suspended animation not dead regardless of being narratively written out for the time being. [[User:Lacrossedeamon|Lacrossedeamon]] ([[User talk:Lacrossedeamon|talk]]) 08:25, 10 April 2023 (UTC) | ||
:::Thank you, yes I believe this is more the question I was getting at. If Layla is considered dead, shouldn't Basim also have been considered dead from 878-2020 and thus noted accordingly here on the wiki? Or, if Basim wasn't considered dead - just in suspended animation as Lacrossedeamon said - should Layla also still be considered alive? [[User:Boolbordan|Boolbordan]] ([[User talk:Boolbordan|talk]]) 13:50, 10 April 2023 (UTC) | |||
Revision as of 16:51, 10 April 2023
Basim's son
The bio of Basim read as such, "Years later, he became a father, but his son was taken from him by a close friend." I remember this sequence from the game, when Eivor and Basim are talking near a campfire during their quest to rescue Sigurd, at which point Basim told her that his friend/mentor took his son from him. Are we sure that it wasn't Loki talking through him about Fenrir ? Maxattac (talk) 15:55, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
- Yes, the line likely was a reference to Fenrir and Odin, respectively. By the time Basim was an adult, Loki had taken over his mind, so the man is speaking from memory of thousands of years ago, as opposed to Basim having physically fathered a child. – Darman (talk) 16:00, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
- There is no way of knowing, though the rebellion bio doesn't even mention loki. - Soranin (talk) 16:17, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
- I think the implication is that whatever the incident was with Basim and his son (possibly caused by Rig) it awakened Loki's consciousness within him like Sigurd getting his hand cut off. Of course none of this is explicit and thus not sourceable.Lacrossedeamon (talk) 01:04, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
- So do we keep the sentence or not, since it's so open to interpretation whether Basim actually had a son or if he's remembering Loki's life? – Darman (talk) 01:25, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
- Keep the sentence; there is nothing in Valhalla or it's ancillary material that suggests what is stated in Rebellion can't be the case. Lacrossedeamon (talk) 15:12, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
- So do we keep the sentence or not, since it's so open to interpretation whether Basim actually had a son or if he's remembering Loki's life? – Darman (talk) 01:25, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
- I think the implication is that whatever the incident was with Basim and his son (possibly caused by Rig) it awakened Loki's consciousness within him like Sigurd getting his hand cut off. Of course none of this is explicit and thus not sourceable.Lacrossedeamon (talk) 01:04, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
- There is no way of knowing, though the rebellion bio doesn't even mention loki. - Soranin (talk) 16:17, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
Mentor or not?
I read the Silk Road. In one sentence, the narrator described Basim as a Mentor with a capital "M" and other times with a little "m". Which one must we consider?Francesco75 (talk) 21:03, 22 September 2021 (UTC)
- I think it makes sense that Basim was the mentor of the constantinople brotherhood but he served under a head mentor which was rayhan maybe?BearticWiki (talk) 06:12, 23 September 2021 (UTC)
Death date?
Since Layla is considered dead, would Basim also have "died" when he originally entered the Yggdrasil device back in Eivor's time and would it therefore be appropriate to include that date as a date of death here? With the disclaimer of course that once being ejected from the Yggdrasil device, he landed on the Staff which kept him from fully dying.
I mean obviously she's working on stuff with Desmond in there, versus Basim who was waiting for the right moment to leave... but let's say hypothetically that somewhere down the line, the Staff happened to end up back right beneath Layla at the Yggdrasil device, and she happened to get ejected from it and land on the Staff the exact same way that Basim did and she ends up surviving. Would the death date on her wiki page be removed? Or would it stay there with a disclaimer similar to the above?
I don't know for sure but I wanted to throw the question out there. At least to me it seems like if Layla is considered dead, Basim would also have been considered dead during that time - or, if Basim was not considered dead while in the Yggdrasil device, that Layla would still currently be considered alive. —unsigned comment by Boolbordan (talk · contr) 22:59, 9 April 2023 (UTC)
- Except this idea of the Staff of Hermes returning there is all hypothetical. Layla is openly told that the only reason she's alive in Yggdrasil's vault is because the Staff is protecting her from the radiation that built up over 8 years after the machine went into overdrive when Desmond saved the world in 2012. If she ejects, without the Staff nearby, she dies. Basim is only alive because Loki ran calculations hedging on Alethia still being in the Staff wielded by Kassandra and then Layla, and that Layla would enter Yggdrasil's vault with the Staff. Just entering animation does not mean one is dead, since Eivor and Sigurd were able to plug in and willingly eject. While there is no way to know when specifically that Svala's body functions stopped while Yggdrasil preserved her mind, no human/Reborn Isu can survive after having withered away over a millennium, never mind radiation's impact on what amounts to a briefly-living corpse. Darman (talk) 04:45, 10 April 2023 (UTC)
- I think the real discussion should be "should Layla have a date of death". I'd argue no. Her body is in suspended animation not dead regardless of being narratively written out for the time being. Lacrossedeamon (talk) 08:25, 10 April 2023 (UTC)
- Thank you, yes I believe this is more the question I was getting at. If Layla is considered dead, shouldn't Basim also have been considered dead from 878-2020 and thus noted accordingly here on the wiki? Or, if Basim wasn't considered dead - just in suspended animation as Lacrossedeamon said - should Layla also still be considered alive? Boolbordan (talk) 13:50, 10 April 2023 (UTC)
- I think the real discussion should be "should Layla have a date of death". I'd argue no. Her body is in suspended animation not dead regardless of being narratively written out for the time being. Lacrossedeamon (talk) 08:25, 10 April 2023 (UTC)