Planned out from the start, but there’s bound to be blank spots.
I don’t think there’ll be any real ponies in here (which is a shame), but there’s a good chance Harry won’t be able to bring back Hermione until he’s cracked magic to the point where people can take arbitrary forms, and Hermione becomes an alicorn for a few paragraphs just to test it out.
Actually, this sounds increasingly probable the more I think about it. Troll regeneration is.. a form of continuous self-transfiguration. Some combination of that and however-the-heck animagus forms work might be the key to bringing her back—the regeneration to fix the bodily damage, the animagus bit to get her mind back (or convince magic that it’s back, I suppose).
Let’s call it.. um, 20% that self-transfiguration is involved with her resurrection (a number that includes the chance of resurrection), and 30% that alicorns are at least temporarily involved.
I had a similar thought—”Harry cracks magic to the point where people can take arbitrary forms”—and actually, I’d put the probability at >50%. In fact, I am slightly worried Eliezer will be disappointed in everyone who didn’t immediately realize he was almost certainly telling the truth. He doesn’t strike me as the type to say false things as a joke without a clearer warning that it is a joke. Unless someone can find an example of him doing that previously.
Planned out from the start, but there’s bound to be blank spots.
I don’t think there’ll be any real ponies in here (which is a shame), but there’s a good chance Harry won’t be able to bring back Hermione until he’s cracked magic to the point where people can take arbitrary forms, and Hermione becomes an alicorn for a few paragraphs just to test it out.
Actually, this sounds increasingly probable the more I think about it. Troll regeneration is.. a form of continuous self-transfiguration. Some combination of that and however-the-heck animagus forms work might be the key to bringing her back—the regeneration to fix the bodily damage, the animagus bit to get her mind back (or convince magic that it’s back, I suppose).
Let’s call it.. um, 20% that self-transfiguration is involved with her resurrection (a number that includes the chance of resurrection), and 30% that alicorns are at least temporarily involved.
I had a similar thought—”Harry cracks magic to the point where people can take arbitrary forms”—and actually, I’d put the probability at >50%. In fact, I am slightly worried Eliezer will be disappointed in everyone who didn’t immediately realize he was almost certainly telling the truth. He doesn’t strike me as the type to say false things as a joke without a clearer warning that it is a joke. Unless someone can find an example of him doing that previously.