Ur-Didact: Difference between revisions

171 bytes added ,  4 years ago
mNo edit summary
Line 124: Line 124:
John-117 soon arrived in the Control Room with the ring's [[Activation Index]] and confronted the Didact; the Spartan explained that because the Didact could not be killed by conventional means a different approach must be taken. The Didact became puzzled when John inserted the Index into [[the Core]]; he asked why the Spartan would fire the ring just to eliminate him. John informed the Didact that he did not activate the ring's weapon, but instead disabled its safety protocols; this allowed the monitor to eject a large section of the ring containing the Control Room toward the Composer's Forge. The monitor rescued the Spartan while the Didact was subjected to the Composers' effects, disintegrating his body but storing his essence in digital form;<ref name="waypoint didact"/> John later told [[Terrence Hood|Fleet Admiral Terrence Hood]] that he believed the Forerunner was merely "contained", not dead.<ref name="HE10"/><ref group="note" name="composed">In ''Halo 4''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s Terminal Five, the Didact claims the Composer would not work on his new form, and in the level [[Midnight]] is seen levitating himself within the Composer's active beam. It is possible that the Didact was merely resistant to the effects of the Composer, rather than completely immune, as the energy released by the overlapping pulses of five Composers would be orders of magnitude greater than the energy released by a single pulse. In the Library Edition of ''Halo: Escalation'', however, it's stated by Brian Reed that the Ur-Didact wasn't composed but the explosion did do something to him.</ref> By [[2558]], the Office of Naval Intelligence was still vigilant about any sightings of the Didact, advising that any sighting of him must be reported to ONI immediately.<ref>'''[[Halo: Official Spartan Field Manual]]'''. ''page 164''</ref>
John-117 soon arrived in the Control Room with the ring's [[Activation Index]] and confronted the Didact; the Spartan explained that because the Didact could not be killed by conventional means a different approach must be taken. The Didact became puzzled when John inserted the Index into [[the Core]]; he asked why the Spartan would fire the ring just to eliminate him. John informed the Didact that he did not activate the ring's weapon, but instead disabled its safety protocols; this allowed the monitor to eject a large section of the ring containing the Control Room toward the Composer's Forge. The monitor rescued the Spartan while the Didact was subjected to the Composers' effects, disintegrating his body but storing his essence in digital form;<ref name="waypoint didact"/> John later told [[Terrence Hood|Fleet Admiral Terrence Hood]] that he believed the Forerunner was merely "contained", not dead.<ref name="HE10"/><ref group="note" name="composed">In ''Halo 4''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s Terminal Five, the Didact claims the Composer would not work on his new form, and in the level [[Midnight]] is seen levitating himself within the Composer's active beam. It is possible that the Didact was merely resistant to the effects of the Composer, rather than completely immune, as the energy released by the overlapping pulses of five Composers would be orders of magnitude greater than the energy released by a single pulse. In the Library Edition of ''Halo: Escalation'', however, it's stated by Brian Reed that the Ur-Didact wasn't composed but the explosion did do something to him.</ref> By [[2558]], the Office of Naval Intelligence was still vigilant about any sightings of the Didact, advising that any sighting of him must be reported to ONI immediately.<ref>'''[[Halo: Official Spartan Field Manual]]'''. ''page 164''</ref>


In July, 2557, [[343 Guilty Spark]], formerly the human [[Chakas]] who once helped release the Didact from his first exile, learned from [[Catalog]] that the Didact had tried to access the [[Domain]], but had been denied access by the ancilla.<ref>'''[[Halo: Renegades]]''', ''Chapter 31''</ref> On September 1, Spark [[Mission to Mount Kilimanjaro|met with]] a personality imprint of the [[Librarian]] beneath [[Mount Kilimanjaro]]. The Librarian told Spark of the awakening of herself and the Didact on Requiem, but did not go into detail. Spark asked if the Didact was alive, only to have the Librarian's expression grow forlorn. Though the Librarian did not verbally respond, Spark deduced that the threat from the Didact was "not worrisome." Before they parted ways, Spark recognized that the Librarian's deepest desire was still for the Didact to find peace and asked her if it was possible. With great sorrow, the Librarian told Spark that she feared that her husband was beyond redemption.<ref>'''[[Halo: Renegades]]''', ''Chapter 48''</ref>
In July, 2557, [[343 Guilty Spark]], formerly the human [[Chakas]] who once helped release the Didact from his first exile, learned from [[Catalog]] that the Didact had tried to access the [[Domain]], but had been denied access by the ancilla.<ref>'''[[Halo: Renegades]]''', ''Chapter 31''</ref> On September 1, Spark [[Mission to Mount Kilimanjaro|met with]] a personality imprint of the [[Librarian]] beneath [[Mount Kilimanjaro]]. The Librarian told Spark of the awakening of herself and the Didact on Requiem, but did not go into detail. Spark asked if the Didact was alive, only to have the Librarian's expression grow forlorn. Though the Librarian did not verbally respond, Spark deduced that the threat from the Didact was "not worrisome." Before they parted ways, Spark recognized that the Librarian's deepest desire was still for the Didact to find peace and asked her if it was possible. With great sorrow, the Librarian told Spark that she feared that her husband was beyond redemption.<ref>'''[[Halo: Renegades]]''', ''Chapter 48''</ref> Sometime after his defeat by John, the Didact was imprisoned in the Domain, reflecting on memories of his wife.<ref>'''[[Halo: Adult Coloring Book]]''', ''Page 41''</ref>
{{Clear}}
{{Clear}}


485

edits