Anyone ever wonder why dispersal dreams aren't used more often in Myth wars? I mean, we know they can be set off by an explosion, so they don't need an Avatara to trigger them (although it takes an Avatara to target the dream; otherwise it starts at the location of the energon cube).The huge, slow-moving undead armies of the Dark would seem ideal victims for dispersal dreams. Just imagine:
The Watcher is enroute to Covenant, leading an army of Thrall a million strong. Hearing a faint shout over the tramp of dead feet, he looks up to see a small red balloon floating overhead, carrying a couple of very, very excited dwarves. As Dori moons the enraged Ghols in the Watcher's vanguard, Nori tosses a glowing green cube over the side, tied to a couple of primed and smoking bottles.
Three years later, the Watcher's helmet lands in the Dire Marsh.
So why don't they do this? Can the Fallen Lords cancel a Dispersal Dream once it's started, if they have enough time?
Or do dreams have a very limited half-life after the Avatara who created them dies or gives them up? What do YOU, the American people, think about this?
--SiliconDream