Thread:BlackfootFerret/@comment-32182236-20190319173036/@comment-26006155-20190402163723

King Asgore didn't name the Kingdom. He named Home and New Home, the cities in the Ruins and the Underground.

To my knowledge, we've never gotten a name for the Kingdom.

How could The Prophecy be made before written history, when written history records when the Barrier was cast, and the Prophecy is about the one who's een the surface that will lead everyone out of the Underground and/or kill everyone so the Underground goes vacant?

Since we don't know the circumstances by which Kanashi acquired a human soul, we can't make any assumptions until we get more information. While recieving this soul as dying gift might seem unlikely, it's just the sort of thing that makes a touching story, and sets up a misunderstanding with the humans that could easily lead to war.

Since you're playing the part of the judge, it doesn't surprise me at all that my arguments are constantly rejected. Which is why I'm keeping it simple instead of RPing a trial. The fewer moving parts to a machine, the better, and the harder it is to tangle things up with Procedure.

If you like, you can make your case for why, as an incredibly improbably story, "Murder on the Orient Express" should be condemned as a respected work of literature simply because you think mysteries should have simple solutions. See how far you get with that.

Do the waterfall Glyphs really say that no human soul was EVER absorbed by a monster?

In that case, Kanashi must be a hybrid, since interbreeded with humans would be the only way for a monster a going a human soul if none were ever stolen.

Papyrus has an incredibly detailed vocabulary for a fool. I'm still wondering how much of it is an act. A lot, I think.

How do you mean The Yellow SOUL related to the blueprints? The only blueprints I recall were the ones Alphys found in the True Lab and used to make the Determation Extraction machine.

As to where I got the idea that humans and monsters fates were intertwined? That's the theme of Undertale right from the introduction sequence. Every we time we die Asgore reminds us that "You are the future of humans and monsters." Humans are judged by how they interact with the monsters, and vice versa.