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well, that doesnt nessesarely make it bad, if the soul is consenting, or if it is the soul of something like a snail for example
you could do a lot of good things with that

Sounds like the rationalization of every necromancer since the dawn of time. What soul would knowingly bind to a rotting corpse. Sounds like all the benefits are for the binder, not the soul.

consider this, your village is under attack by forces you cannot defend against, you only have the people to defend it
you need more soldiers, better soldiers

so, to save the children and the caretakers and the old, you bind this spell onto those that will fight, so that when they die in battle they rise again as stronger and more powerful, and you might just win the battle, you might even have a few defenders for your village once it’s over

that is only but 1 example

“rationalization” is often used by many to disregard logic that they dislike; do not hate a tool for it’s missuse, hate the one that missused it

I’m…. starting to get the feeling Tovio has some personal experience with this.

That would explain why he’s so upset. Otherwise it seems like kind of a disproportionate reaction – Spicer’s just a kid who desperately misses her parents. She wasn’t deliberately aiming to do Evil Magic; she just didn’t know how it actually worked.

“They can’t age” or “they will not age”?

‘Cose I’ve heard of certain island where they believed you went to after-life in the age and health in which you died.

So after-life is now doesn’t sound that raw of a deal until you turn into Mímir and even then you can get a bearded Gary-Stu to carry you around and take you on adventures with his son. 😀

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