Celedam wrote:A bittersweet "lifelong journey in an instant" kind of thing.
That feeling is starting to hit
hard.
Fantastic lands, secret organizations, time loops, alternate timelines created by time loops, pocket dimensions, shadow realms, god-controlled metaphysics…
And within this framework ("cosmology" is the proper term of art in worldbuilding) are so many opportunities for characters to wander off for minutes or decades to do… whatever. Go on a quest to save the world, or just get smashed
because it's the end of the world. And every time those characters return from… wherever, things are that much more complicated. It's both tragically epic and epically tragic, and I love it.
'Tis a shame it's all limited by the realities of being a TV show for edgy twentysomethings. They're doing a damned good job, considering. But in other hands, in another medium, I could imagine it to be literally a neverending story.
(In addition to my previous examples of stories that give me similar feelings, see also Neil Gaiman's
Neverwhere and Roger Zelazny's
The Chronicles of Amber.)