I read The Hobbit and the LotR series some 15-20 years ago, and I hated them. Sauron was a chump who never actually did anything, the protagonists felt like they were all thoroughly coated in plot armor, too much Tom Bombadil, etc. But playing Angband piqued my interest in that lore again, so I decided to take a chance on reading The Silmarillion. So far, I've gotten through the first major part (from "Ainulindale" to "Of the Voyage of Earendil and the War of Wrath"), and I've actually enjoyed it. I mean, sure, there are still annoying parts (like the chapter dedicated to describing the then-current geography), but it's still been leaps and bounds better than the big 4.
Way-to-short reactions to the most notable characters thus far: Eol was a total badass and by far the coolest character thus far, though I've got to give some props to Ungoliant, Gothmog, Arien, Fingolfin, Huan, Glaurung, and Turin. Feanor and Thingol were massive tools, and despite the text's claim that he was "no weakling or craven", Maeglin acted more like a beta-Wormtongue than the defiant figure of strength that was his father. Disappointed in how little Ancalagon was involved (I'd think that the greatest of the dragons, powerful enough to hold back the army of the Valar, would get more than an introduction and a death in a page's span ), but alas. Oh, and I was surprised that Thuringwethil was an actual character.
Just wondering if playing Angband got anyone else to try reading Tolkien.
Way-to-short reactions to the most notable characters thus far: Eol was a total badass and by far the coolest character thus far, though I've got to give some props to Ungoliant, Gothmog, Arien, Fingolfin, Huan, Glaurung, and Turin. Feanor and Thingol were massive tools, and despite the text's claim that he was "no weakling or craven", Maeglin acted more like a beta-Wormtongue than the defiant figure of strength that was his father. Disappointed in how little Ancalagon was involved (I'd think that the greatest of the dragons, powerful enough to hold back the army of the Valar, would get more than an introduction and a death in a page's span ), but alas. Oh, and I was surprised that Thuringwethil was an actual character.
Just wondering if playing Angband got anyone else to try reading Tolkien.
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