also, afaiu, gollhum was a bipolar 500+ yo hobbit that resisted the ring's will to be brought back to sauron. Even without the ring or apparently any medication, he can heal from heavy wounds almost immediately
maybe raw fish is good for you
@rlemon I'm considering it
honestly, the movies didn't catch my attention that much. They were interesting, and I definitely see how they're a classic (actually, are they a classic?), but I'm not going to be like "oh, if only i were gandalf" or similar
I still love the universe that tolkien created, with the politics, races, magic, and all
which is also why game of thrones is really nice
and why the foundation cycle books were so good
I think the word I'm looking for is "fiction"
but I don't care as much about the adventures as I do about the implication of arbitrary changes from the rules of our universe
"there's this kind of magic" → "an order of wizards is created, there are wizard politics, someone tries to take all the power with magic, everyone is affected"
"humanity survived for billions more years" → "spread throughout the galaxy, science is top notch, there are politics, the politics create situations" (foundation cycle)
it seems pretty mad to me that the lotr series has magic, but in all those ages, nobody discovered electricity
I like to think of electricity as this civilization's twist
which eventually leads to feasible computers, which lead to so many interesting implications
is that still fiction? What's the name for the kind of thing I'm interested in?
but for example, I didn't enjoy "the expanse" tv series, where humanity is spread throughout the solar system. It creates some interesting politics, but maybe I didn't find it realistic, or not used enough?
maybe it's not what I enjoy
maybe it does need some adventure which actually feels like adventure