(This Chapter Is Free of Charge) Let’s Chat a Few Words About Mythical Beasts, the Ultimate in Evolution, and some Settings
Regarding the ultimate evolution of Qiongqi and Phoenix, you don’t need to think too much.
1. The reason for mentioning Eastern mythology is purely because the names of the mythical beasts that I set are not as powerful as those of others. After all, those have been famous for a long time and everyone is familiar with them.
But every novel has its own setting, and this one actually has nothing to do with Eastern mythology.
2. Regarding the mythical beasts such as Qiongqi and Phoenix, although I don’t want to write about Eastern mythology, they are indeed related to the earth. (With so many people coming here every year, it is impossible to say that Blue Star has nothing to do with the earth. There is obviously something wrong behind it. secrets known to everyone), but this earth is still an imaginary earth, and it is the unique earth of this book.
For example, what if I set this earth to be the last refuge opened by a super powerful person for the human race?
There was a popular book before. The author's setting was that the protagonist traveled from the earth to a parallel world, but in the end he discovered that the earth was a seed projection and not the real earth. I think this is very good and very imaginative.
3. I have actually considered a lot about the evolution of a beast into a mythical beast, but how should I set it up? Some readers will say that it is normal for a cat to evolve into a lion or tiger, but it feels wrong for a cat to evolve into an ape. At the same time, it seems a bit strange for an ape to evolve into Qiongqi (Qiongqi is the image of a winged tiger, not like an ape).
But actually there is nothing wrong with this, because there is no setting that says they must evolve into similar species.
The simplest setting...the setting of most novels and movies is that any animal or plant will turn into a human form after reaching a certain level of cultivation.
The centipede spirit with countless legs finally turned into a two-legged man;
The nine-tailed fox finally turned into a two-legged man;
A caterpillar eventually turned into a two-legged man;
You have no way to debate whether this is right or wrong. To debate this kind of thing, it is more meaningful to debate whether the chicken or the egg came first (actually, I think it is meaningless^?^)
When it comes to evolution, even races have changed, cats can turn into lions, what else can't change?
Races can change, and attributes can also change, so there is no need to limit them to looking similar.
If we have to look similar and get a centipede as a beast, it would be difficult for me to figure out what kind of mythical beast a centipede has to evolve into with so many legs┭┮﹏┭┮.
Divine beasts must be very rare in number. But in the world of monsters, there are many, many species and all kinds of strange things.
Everyone thinks it is normal for a python to evolve into a dragon, but what about a fish evolving into a dragon... A carp jumps over the dragon gate, and after passing the dragon gate, it transforms into a dragon.
I used to write fantasy and focus on the plot, but this time I lost a lot of my brain cells just thinking about the names, races, and evolutions of the beasts, and I burst into tears again (┬┬﹏┬┬)
So I think it would be better if the settings of each book are logically consistent.
4. By the way, about the attributes of beast control, the setting of my book, from the very beginning, is that all kinds of animals and plants have the opportunity to awaken, and after awakening, they will have their own attributes, but there is no restriction on race... I did not say Ragdoll cats must have thunder attributes, Xiaobai has thunder attributes, and other ragdoll cats may have fire or water attributes. Similarly, like the orangutan that came out earlier, the old ape has the shadow attribute, and the wild and violent ape has the water attribute.
As a result, in the second chapter, someone rushed out to sarcastically say, author, are you kidding me? Are orangutans water-type?
This kind of conflict with the author's setting is actually very strange. I sent him a few replies... What attributes should the orangutan have? Who stipulated it? Why?
I don’t know what the attributes of orangutans in other novels or TV movies are. The orangutans or other mythical beasts in many books have no attributes at all.
In my book, some orangutans are of the earth attribute and can hide on the ground; some are of the fire attribute and can breathe fire; some have grown wings and can fly; some even know how to watch the little sister dance, and then use rockets to become the first on the list. ;Some of them can still drive...I mean drive normally.
A book or a movie is an independent world, written by different authors and shot by different directors. There is no need to discuss them together... because they have nothing to do with each other.
The most important thing is that if the author sets it up this way, write it according to this setting and don't be inconsistent. If it is inconsistent, it will be chaotic and the power system will collapse.
(Because the word count is a bit large, 1365 words, I opened a separate chapter. This chapter is free and does not require a subscription)