Tag: paganism

  • It could be another game review

    It could be another game review

    But instead it would be two thoughts about the Yaga game, full of Slavic folklore like babushka1 who always have a story to be told to cheer you up or to calm you down or to give a bit of wisdom.

    First, I see sort of missing branch on the large oak tree of game plot.

    Vasilisa is missing from the start

    Playing game few times, I thought that there is a plot branch with an ending when Ivan founds Vasilisa somewhere, may be saves her from some danger, and marry her.
    For example, it can be that Vasilisa went to Underworld, kingdom of Veles, to find that Sheep of Fate, to make a magical thread, and make a healing scarf with it, to help Ivan get lost arm. But Vasilisa lost in her travel, and got imprisoned by Zmy Gorynich, three-headed fire-breathing serpent/dragon.
    In this branch Ivan can get blueprint for sword, weapon that missing in game, and for something else, such tool as plow, which may not have a combat use, but necessary for some plot quest, likely to open the portal into Underworld.
    After Vasilisa saved, but before the ending she can make/sell the magical scarfs for Ivan – not only something like Scarf of Scorn, but more interesting, like Scarf of Perun, as soon as Ivan shares Rune of Perun with Vasilisa. With such scarf there is probability of lighting striking enemy who touching Ivan in melee combat. Scarf with Veles rune would allow to dodge of projectiles. Scarf of Chernobog would cause “evil eye on enemy touching Ivan with some probability, and so on.
    Other thing that can such update can provide is the mere idea of some armor, a clothing slot for torso, then Vasilisa would instead of scarves would make vyshivanka with runes for Ivan…

    Other thing is a global and a bit sad

    It seems that Baba Yaga and Fates sorts of playing a tabletop game, and while Baba Yaga seems to be a Game Baster in this tabletop game, and Fates, as players in this twisted upside down tabletop game, give more and more difficulties for Ivan to overcome.

    This idea of people and their lives being just board game miniatures in a tabletop game, sometimes joyful, sometimes grim, or even boring, for The Great Powers, at some moment stroke my mind like some Arrow of Sadness, because, for person who lived 95% of own life with idea that we, people, have some control over our lives, it is still sad for me world in this way.

    At least I am not getting angry now about idea of some limits we have on what we can control and not in our lives, not speaking about being a tabletop miniature in someone else game.

    And even the final words of Baba Yaga can’t disperse away this a bit sad feeling I told about.

    Conclusion?

    Don’t get me wrong! The game is great! The things I told about – like possible missing plot branch or not being used to living outside of “me-centric” worldview, all this does not make worse or bad. Some things can be added, like it happened with plot branch about Leshy. And some things can be part of me either taking something too seriously or me growing up a bit as person.

    Lets enjoy the game, folks!

    1. I don’t know whether there are still such babushkas who remember folk tales and using them such way, but I find this interesting as part of folk tradition that could be revived as well ↩︎
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  • Instant response from Perun

    It was a thing that is hard to miss. Today I discussed with my wife some recent politics and events, and as soon as I said something like “It is time to destroy russia”, lighting strike and thunder boom happened instantly, and first thought was “Perun agrees with this!”.

    Of course you can say this is some coincidence. But how high is probability of randomly matching in time when you saying something and transition of usual rain into thunderstorm?

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  • A theory about ancient Slavs view about world of dead

    A theory about ancient Slavs view about world of dead

    I find this article (thanks normalhumanlibrarian of Tumblr) very fascinating, because it touches one of core aspects of Slavic paganism, and basically points out that we do not have a reliable info on whether Slavs paganism had special ruler of the Underworld. And this can be interesting question.

    What if Veles is not so creepy as some authors (especially Chistianized ones) depict him? What if Slavs did not had such figure as ruler of world of dead, Underworld? What if Slavs paganism did not had such concept of Underworld as creepy kingdom of dead, but what if instead Slavs assumed that world of dead (Nav’, Навь) was something that was not a completely separated from world of alive (Yav, Явь), that explain the intense worship of ancestors as someone who can help and protect, and the name of home spirit (“domovoy”, домовой) is not from home word (hut, изба) but from coffin word (domovina, домовина).

    Sounds like ancient Slavs considered Ancestors not as someone who live in a special kingdom for dead but here and now with us, and seen them as someone who can help us and protect us, those who are alive, living here in Yav.

    Painting of Veles by Andrey Shishkin
    Painting of Veles by Andrey Shishkin

    And this worldview does not have some creepy place like hell, and creepy or super-evil god-like figure who would be ruler of that creepy place, like Christian devil, or even Hades ruler Pluto.

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