Imps as can’t be seen or heard or remembered, even while they’re eatin’ yer face.
It’s probably a reference to Worm (which has a character called Imp whose superpower is to selectively stop other people from noticing or remembering her).
I’d say their mention also raises the question of how trolls were able to secure the top third spot for most dangerous predator over them. Or even dementors, for that matter. A threat you don’t know to run away from until it’s too late is worse than one that you can’t defeat, but can easily escape.
Possibly a single imp will eat its fill from a human being without ever doing fatal harm. But a few Imperiused imps would be an absurdly deadly weapon.
It may be that there are simple charms that can be used to defend against the imps in advance (say, a basic proximity alert charm that covers all moving creatures in high-visibility sparkles a la Glitterdust).
In regard to the Imperius, it’s possible that an imp’s natural “cloaking” prevents potential masters from being able to remember them long enough to make practical use of them. It’s also possible that they don’t speak human languages. Has it ever been established how Imperius commands are conveyed to targets?
In regard to the Imperius, it’s possible that an imp’s natural “cloaking” prevents potential masters from being able to remember them long enough to make practical use of them. It’s also possible that they don’t speak human languages. Has it ever been established how Imperius commands are conveyed to targets?
Maybe even a captive imp is too well concealed to Imperius, although if they’re that well cloaked it raises the question of how people even know they exist.
In the original canon, Crouch Jr. as Moody was able to Imperius a spider, which implies that it does not require that the recipient have human language capacity, or even be intelligent.
Also, in canon, in book 7 the protagonists themselves use the Imperius themselves (as part of the break-in to Gringotts.) There we get the best look at the actual mechanics of the Imperius, including that we see Imperius commands being issued telepathically as it were, from the caster’s thoughts.
Divination, corpses of imps killed by natural causes/accident, magical creatures immune to their effects (or unusual charms that grant immunity)… The great thing about magic is that it’s not just broken, but broken in every direction.
It’s probably a reference to Worm (which has a character called Imp whose superpower is to selectively stop other people from noticing or remembering her).
I’d say their mention also raises the question of how trolls were able to secure the top third spot for most dangerous predator over them. Or even dementors, for that matter. A threat you don’t know to run away from until it’s too late is worse than one that you can’t defeat, but can easily escape.
Possibly a single imp will eat its fill from a human being without ever doing fatal harm. But a few Imperiused imps would be an absurdly deadly weapon.
It may be that there are simple charms that can be used to defend against the imps in advance (say, a basic proximity alert charm that covers all moving creatures in high-visibility sparkles a la Glitterdust).
In regard to the Imperius, it’s possible that an imp’s natural “cloaking” prevents potential masters from being able to remember them long enough to make practical use of them. It’s also possible that they don’t speak human languages. Has it ever been established how Imperius commands are conveyed to targets?
Maybe even a captive imp is too well concealed to Imperius, although if they’re that well cloaked it raises the question of how people even know they exist.
In the original canon, Crouch Jr. as Moody was able to Imperius a spider, which implies that it does not require that the recipient have human language capacity, or even be intelligent.
Also, in canon, in book 7 the protagonists themselves use the Imperius themselves (as part of the break-in to Gringotts.) There we get the best look at the actual mechanics of the Imperius, including that we see Imperius commands being issued telepathically as it were, from the caster’s thoughts.
When I heard their mention in the story, my first thought was “But then how does anyone know of them?”
Divination, corpses of imps killed by natural causes/accident, magical creatures immune to their effects (or unusual charms that grant immunity)… The great thing about magic is that it’s not just broken, but broken in every direction.