Talk:Forerunner-Precursor war

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Revision as of 01:39, October 3, 2013 by SNovah (talk | contribs) (Request for discussion on inconsistencies in the narrative)

Plausibility

Am I the only one who finds this whole "Forerunners wiped out the Precursors" thing very implausible? First, I'm baffled as to why everyone assumes that the single line of "I am the last of those your kind rose up against and ruthlessly destroyed" equates to "The Forerunners wiped out the Precursors in a massive war". What people seem to be forgetting is that Precursors were technologically advanced to the point of near-godhood, being worshiped by the Forerunners as the prime example of life. How could the Forerunners, an tiny, insignificant race in comparison, conceivably wage war against such a species, let alone win and wipe them from the universe? I would take the Prisoner's words with a pinch of salt; it might claim that it is the last Precursor, that doesn't mean it is. If the implications that the Prisoner is in some way related to Gravemind are true, even more so. Just my two cents on the whole affair. - File:Black Mesa.jpg Halo-343 (Talk) 17:48, 6 March 2011 (EST)

Given that this isn't the first war in Halo where a technologically inferior race defeated a superior one... Well, it's true that to me too it sounds implausible, but I don't own the book, and from the looks of here it sounds like it was just mentioned once in a throwaway line. Hopefully they'll explain more about how that could happen, because their own technogical divide here looks to be very wide indeed. Tuckerscreator(stalk) 18:12, 6 March 2011 (EST)
Arrogance is the one variable that people do not account for. Especially their own.
We see this happen in the Forerunner-Flood War - it isn't the Flood's abilities that overwhelm the Forerunners, though they were certainly formidible. It was the fact that the Forerunners were overconfident, and content at first to study their enemy, comfortable in the knowledge that a counter-weapon would be found. It was not, and they would pay for their arrogance with their lives, and the lives of trillions of sentients. We see it again in the Human-Covenant War. The arrogance of the Prophets in their puritanical interpretation of the Great Journey, drove the Covenant to civil war just as they were on the verge of absolute victory.
The Precursors were truly great. Their ego's were probably proportionally enormous, and as the old adage goes - the bigger they are, the harder they fall. -- Specops306 Autocrat Qur'a 'Morhek 22:55, 6 March 2011 (EST)
Providing a look back, and for anyone who is curious: the final book in the Forerunner trilogy confirms that, yes, the Forerunners rose up and destroyed (nearly) the Precursors; however, the reasoning is very much up in the air. --SNovah (talk) 01:10, 3 October 2013 (EDT)

Deletion Request

We literally know NOTHING about this. We don't even know that it was a war. They coulda poisoned all of their food, or stopped their reproduction with a genophage-like thing. We know nothing about this and all of the things in this article can be described on their own pages... Vegerot goes RAWR! File:Icon-Vegito2.gif Vegerot (talk) 11:13, 16 January 2012 (EST)!

Cause for war and inconsistencies

Not sure where else to put this, but I'd like to spark a discussion, and I certainly don't want to put speculation on the page itself, but I have two separate theories on this war and, indirectly, the origin of the Flood.

Theory 1: the Gravemind/Primordial could be telling the truth when they speak to the Ur-Didact (and to Bornstellar/IsoDidact): the Precursors created a number of species to find one that would be worthy of inheriting the Mantle, and the Forerunners couldn't accept that it wouldn't be them, rose up, and destroyed a pacifistic race/entity.
The main issue I see with this is the source: only the Primordial and Graveminds claim this is what happened and they are not in the habit of being truthful. On the other hand, I'm unaware of any instance where they outright lie. It also strikes me as unusual that the Forerunner would create literally hundreds of thousands of ships and cross galaxies simply because they were being the high-tech version of spoiled brats.
Theory 2: The Precursors did create many species, searching for worthy ones to raise. When it became clear that the Forerunners were unworthy of being holders of the Mantle, the Precursors sought to "wipe the slate" and start over. The Forerunners reacted as any species would and defended themselves.
This seems to be the most likely to me: the archaic Forerunners encountered by the Librarian in Path Kethona do not seem to run from their history. If they were in fact simply throwing a tantrum, I feel the Librarian would have revealed this, demoralizing or not; instead, it seems to mesh in very well with what occurred in the Forerunner-Human war: the Forerunners initially defended themselves and finally went to a point of no return, hunting the Precursors down to Path Kethona and purging them; some believed this to be overkill or unnecessary and protested, and were killed or stranded on the world the Librarian found. Either way, what the Librarian found reinforced at least the belief that the Forerunners faced annihilation by the Precursors.
The actual tale is also implied by Bornstellar in Cryptum as a sort of "fairy tale" about the Forerunner's creation.

A primary issue is that there is no evidence that the Precursors ever fought back; this lends some immediate credence to the Gravemind's claim that the Precursors were pacifistic, or, as it claimed, amazed at the destruction. However, more relevant is how the Flood and Precursors relate to each other.

Primordium reveals that the Primordial was found, seemingly sealed in a Precursor device; however, it is later implied that it might have been an ancient Forerunner cage. Either way, it doesn't match up with the narrative provided by both sides. While the star roads and architecture of the Precursors were seemingly indestructible, the Primordial clearly was not. It doesn't add up for either story that it would spared unless something else was going on. Additionally, the Primordial reveals that it was not, in fact, a "true" Precursor but carried their memories and was in fact a composite of several creatures; given that the claim is that the powder that would become the Flood was corrupted over millions of years, it is very strange that something that closely resembles an advanced Flood form seemingly dates from the time when the Precursors were just beginning to change into what would become the Flood.

The secondary issue, of course, is the war's impact on humanity: the Precursors supposedly fled beyond the outer arms of the galaxy. Humanity, which is claimed to be favored in Theory 1, is said in Silentium (Librarian's testimony), to have settled heavily in the same regions where the Flood would first appear and were initially quarantined and fought. They settled among Precursor ruins and fought the Flood alongside the San'Shyuum and were given the illusion of being victorious.

I'd like to see if anybody else sees the same inconsistencies I do, or different ones. I won't go on about possible theories, but I will say that I don't believe the Forerunner-Precursor war was a straight black-and-white affair. The imprisoning of the Primordial and the tendency of humanity to settle in a place that would bear the brunt of the first Flood invasions and infestations seems strangely coincidental. --SNovah (talk) 01:39, 3 October 2013 (EDT)