Lbh ner ersreevat gb qr-choyvfurq zngrevny, juvpu nf sne nf V’z pbaprearq qbrf abg rkvfg. Nalguvat gung Ryvrmre unf jvguqenja sebz pnaba, ur vf serr gb punatr ng jvyy. Zl vzcerffvba (V qba’g ernq zbfg bs gur UCZBE guernqf) vf gung gung pbzzrag bs Ryvrmre’f, juvpu ab ybatre rkvfgf, vf gur fbyr fbhepr sbe D=I. V nyfb abgr gung gur Cvbarre vapvqrag unccrarq jryy orsber gur riragf bs UCZBE; jurgure D jnf= I gura V qba’g unir na bcvavba ba.
I gave in-world reasons, based purely on published HPMOR canon, for thinking Q != V. A meta-consideration tending in the same direction is this. In Rowling canon, Q=V, but this is a dramatic reveal at some point in the first volume. Readers coming to HPMOR having read Rowling, seeing that this is an alternate version of the Potterverse, will immediately be wondering how all the characters of the two parallel universes correspond to each other. Hence the question, as soon as Quirrell appears: is Q V? Now, how can the answer to this question be revealed as a surprise, if the answer is that Q=V? The only way of making a mystery of it is to plant suggestive hints that Q=V and then, when the time comes, reveal Q != V.
Anyway, I’m right or I’m wrong, and the story itself will give the real answer soon enough.
Now, how can the answer to this question be revealed as a surprise, if the answer is that Q=V? The only way of making a mystery of it is to plant suggestive hints that Q=V and then, when the time comes, reveal Q != V.
What makes you think it’s supposed to be a surprise or a mystery? Maybe it’s supposed to be obvious.
Now, how can the answer to this question be revealed as a surprise, if the answer is that Q=V? The only way of making a mystery of it is to plant suggestive hints that Q=V and then, when the time comes, reveal Q != V.
Or, plant suggestive hints that Q=V, assume you’ll think it’s a red herring, then reveal Q=V. If there’s only one possible answer to a mystery, then it isn’t a mystery!
There’s only so many levels of bluffing that can fit into the cognitive space around the fic. Cf. the Unexpected Execution and the Blue-Eyed Monks. And look at all the people who are convinced already that Q=V. It will be a surprise to them if they turn out to be wrong.
And of course there’s this, from chapter 12:
Harry caught a glimpse of the back of his head, and it looked like Professor Quirrell might already be going bald, despite his seeming youth.
HPMOR!Quirrell doesn’t hide the back of his head, which is oddly bald! It’s a Significant Detail! A Clue! But Everyone is Ignoring it!
Just to amplify that, there has to be a reason that Rowling!Voldemort hides on the back of Q’s head. (Ok, the meta-reason might be that Rowling just thought this would be really creepy and didn’t think about what would actually be smart for V to do, but that’s Rowling!Potterverse all over: brilliant façade, nothing behind it.) So that reason, even if EY has to invent it on Rowling’s behalf (“Rowling!V is stupid” isn’t good enough), has to still apply. For EY!Voldemort to be in control of Quirrell some other way cannot be justified just by saying that EY!V is smarter and found a way. Specific differences need specific explanations.
When Dumbledore is entertaining the possibility that shade!Voldemort possessed Hermione he doesn’t say “But we know that’s not the case because the back of her head isn’t deformed.”
More generally, there’s been lots and lots of specific changes to how magic in general and certain magics in particular work. Forex: in canon there’s no such thing as “magical exhaustion”. Basically everything about Transfiguration is different. Combat is different, and far more detailed.
Given that AB has correctly surmised who Q is, and AB’s knowledge of Q is correct, circumstantial evidence that Q=V would be that Q re-establishes contact with his family and then they are all killed by V.
I currently believe that Q is V in some significant way, but they are not ‘the same person’ either.
Beware the Löbian death spiral.
Lbh ner ersreevat gb qr-choyvfurq zngrevny, juvpu nf sne nf V’z pbaprearq qbrf abg rkvfg. Nalguvat gung Ryvrmre unf jvguqenja sebz pnaba, ur vf serr gb punatr ng jvyy. Zl vzcerffvba (V qba’g ernq zbfg bs gur UCZBE guernqf) vf gung gung pbzzrag bs Ryvrmre’f, juvpu ab ybatre rkvfgf, vf gur fbyr fbhepr sbe D=I. V nyfb abgr gung gur Cvbarre vapvqrag unccrarq jryy orsber gur riragf bs UCZBE; jurgure D jnf= I gura V qba’g unir na bcvavba ba.
I gave in-world reasons, based purely on published HPMOR canon, for thinking Q != V. A meta-consideration tending in the same direction is this. In Rowling canon, Q=V, but this is a dramatic reveal at some point in the first volume. Readers coming to HPMOR having read Rowling, seeing that this is an alternate version of the Potterverse, will immediately be wondering how all the characters of the two parallel universes correspond to each other. Hence the question, as soon as Quirrell appears: is Q V? Now, how can the answer to this question be revealed as a surprise, if the answer is that Q=V? The only way of making a mystery of it is to plant suggestive hints that Q=V and then, when the time comes, reveal Q != V.
Anyway, I’m right or I’m wrong, and the story itself will give the real answer soon enough.
What makes you think it’s supposed to be a surprise or a mystery? Maybe it’s supposed to be obvious.
Or, plant suggestive hints that Q=V, assume you’ll think it’s a red herring, then reveal Q=V. If there’s only one possible answer to a mystery, then it isn’t a mystery!
There’s only so many levels of bluffing that can fit into the cognitive space around the fic. Cf. the Unexpected Execution and the Blue-Eyed Monks. And look at all the people who are convinced already that Q=V. It will be a surprise to them if they turn out to be wrong.
And of course there’s this, from chapter 12:
HPMOR!Quirrell doesn’t hide the back of his head, which is oddly bald! It’s a Significant Detail! A Clue! But Everyone is Ignoring it!
I took that particular passage as evidence that Rational!Voldemort is not so incompetent as to risk discovery through hat-removal.
I reject this explanation simply because it isn’t an interesting explanation.
Just to amplify that, there has to be a reason that Rowling!Voldemort hides on the back of Q’s head. (Ok, the meta-reason might be that Rowling just thought this would be really creepy and didn’t think about what would actually be smart for V to do, but that’s Rowling!Potterverse all over: brilliant façade, nothing behind it.) So that reason, even if EY has to invent it on Rowling’s behalf (“Rowling!V is stupid” isn’t good enough), has to still apply. For EY!Voldemort to be in control of Quirrell some other way cannot be justified just by saying that EY!V is smarter and found a way. Specific differences need specific explanations.
When Dumbledore is entertaining the possibility that shade!Voldemort possessed Hermione he doesn’t say “But we know that’s not the case because the back of her head isn’t deformed.”
More generally, there’s been lots and lots of specific changes to how magic in general and certain magics in particular work. Forex: in canon there’s no such thing as “magical exhaustion”. Basically everything about Transfiguration is different. Combat is different, and far more detailed.
Given that AB has correctly surmised who Q is, and AB’s knowledge of Q is correct, circumstantial evidence that Q=V would be that Q re-establishes contact with his family and then they are all killed by V.
I currently believe that Q is V in some significant way, but they are not ‘the same person’ either.