Yeah, it's pretty obvious when you think about it.
You have all the continents on the one side and ocean on the other so there has to be some sort of counterweight to make sure everything doesn't start slipping and falling off. This predictive use of the world theory led to the discovery of the golden island. Sure the four elephants provide a stable base on top of Arduin but you if you completely stock a plate on top of a glass only on one side it's going to fall off even though the plate is full of soup.
For any doubters they should feel free to take a ship to the edge of the world and take a peek at the irrefutable evidence filling up your entire view before your eyes. Your could argue that the world is multidimensional since some people are known to travel the mysterious L space but it hasn't been proven yet. Until then you can be sure that most evidence point to the obvious fact that the world sits on top of four elephants on top of the great turtle floating through space.
I have wanted to make a soulslike game that uses creationism lore for its world building for a while because it perfectly would fit the religious/biblical overtones I want, while also being 100% straight up fantasy with some pretty dope ideas for a fictional world.
The only thing stopping me from even starting such a project is that it is one of the few ideas I have that absolutely requires a visual touch that I can't provide, and store bought assets would not do what I have in my head justice at all. 😮💨
You should set up a Kickstarter, send it to all the SovCit and Flat Earth Facebook pages, saying that you're going to create a realistic SIM of flat earth, and then release a fantasy game based on all of their ideas and watch the meltdown create the best press a game has ever received before launch.
The book of Judges would make a great game. Like a bit where you capture foxes, attach torches to their tails, and have them run through enemy farmland burning it all down. Truly I say to you, Christian video games haven't mined their own lore far enough.
Just ... That bit about chopping up a concubine will put it firmly in the 18+ rating. And the subsequent I'll-turn-my-back-and-not-see poaching of young women might be a bit much for modern sensibilities.
Still, a Riddles in the Dark crossover with
Out of the eater came something to eat;
Out of the strong came something sweet
... No okay I can't actually see how that would work, but I'm sure someone could!
Also plunging a left-handed dagger into a fat king - that's probably peak Lemmy cheesecake.
The map reminds me a little of the world in Hunter x Hunter. The viewer is initially shown a world map (a flat projection) that is basically the typical cluster of continents in a vaguely ring-like shape, but it is much later revealed that it's not a map of the whole planet but just a fraction of the surface area, and all the inhabited continents are actually completely encircled by one giant super-continent labeled "The Dark Continent", meaning every known ocean was just part of one super-continental lake called "Lake Mobius".
p.s. watch/read hunter x hunter, it's a cool manga
That's right, it was just like 30 chapters or so since then most likely, and it's all been the succession war on the boat headed there. I think most likely the story is written so that they never actually reach the Dark Continent because the ship was always meant as a vessel for the sacrificial ritual of the succession war. On a meta level, there's not a specific enough stated goal for the expedition, so I think it's meant to be a pie in the sky. I'm fine with that though, since the succession war has been my favorite arc in the whole manga so far. All just my personal opinion on it, of course.
I am not sure I like my Pratchett being likened to an actual nutjob flat earther. Or did I miss him being all about that other than writing humorous books about a world like that?
The Aquaman movies were laying some groundwork for the Warlock comics to maybe be included, which is a hollow-earth reality. It's too bad they did such a terrible job.
this is why i really like the book "shadow of the conqueror", it takes place in a world consisting of a floating continent suspended in a seemingly infinite expanse of air, and from that the author just worked out how to justify this in cool ways and the consequences of having a world like that.
The one on the left is giving Malazan vibes. If someone could manage to keep a K'chain Che'malle caged up, I could see somewhere in the world turning fighting it into a blood sport.