: The Jman-Codex thing doesn't seem to be a problem at all
: to me--maybe the narrator carries the book most of the
: way in his pack, but only the Jman knows how to find
: it in the first place. And during battle, the narrator
: might hand the book off to the Jman because he's
: bigger and his robe has pockets; hence he's less
: encumbered by the book during battle than the narrator
: would be. Or something.
: It seems to me, though, that the narrator has to be (if
: he's going to be any one unit) an archer. There are
: certain levels where, clearly, there are only a few
: units anywhere nearby, and where the narrator makes it
: obvious he's one of them. Like "The Baron"
: and "A Murder of Crows" and "Limbs,
: Heads and Smoking Craters." The only units common
: to these levels are archers and dwarves, and I'm
: pretty sure the narrator isn't a dwarf. :-)
I agree with you on this
the narrator in myth was a firBolg and in Myth 2 it was a bowman
: Or is the narrator not human at all? Perhaps he's a
: creature of pure mind, possessing a different member
: of the Legion in each battle...
now that's a little far fetched =)
: --SiliconDream