Posted July 31, 2011
Now GOG offers Planescape Torment for sale once again, I see a lot of people discovered the best RPG ever made and many old fans return to play it once more. I also played it once more with all mods and enjoyed even more than 10 years ago. I even got my hands on the book and read it through. The book was based on one of the first scripts used when the game went into production and can be considered canon to the story. Even though the book is a slimmed version of the game, it finally fills in the last plothole I've always wondered about. I thought I would share it with the other fans here.
After the Nameless One merges with his mortality, he find himself fighting in the Blood War. Why he suddenly was summoned there, remains a mystery. I figured he had to go there to pay for crimes in his past lives or something, but the final chapter of the book actually sheds light on this. I guess the developers cut this part from the game because of deadlines. Anyway, here is the passage from the book explaining the final scene:
After regaining his mortality, Thane (as the Nameless One is called in the book) finds himself back with Fhjull Forked-Tongue. Fhjull start the conversation:
“Interesting.” Then his eyes darted back to Thane. I’ve watched you for eight hundred and thirty years, waiting for you to make yourself whole. At times, I must admit, I despaired or ever claiming what was lawfully mine. But seeing you here, now – my patience is rewarded a thousand fold. I am redeemed. Perhaps I will even return to Baator.”
…
Thane felt the need to take control and brandished his sword at the fiend. He realized immediately that it would do no good, but the slim tube looked just like the one he’d recovered for Pharod. It was his, and he wanted it back. How did it fall into Fhjull’s possession? The king of the collectors had said he took jobs for Blood War generals, said he was in tight with the fiends. Pharod had even seemed to expect Thane somehow, as if … [Fhjull can read his mind]
“As if he’d been told that along would come a dead man, the only person who could retrieve something that has been stolen from me and placed beyond my reach.” The amnizu twirled the steel cylinder in his sleek fingers, then cracked it in half. Out slid a tightly rolled piece of worn parchment, which the fiend spread open.
“Let’s read another story,” he began. “A young man signed a deal with me, long ago-this contract you see before you now. We came to his world to gain new recruits for our Blood War armies. The folk of his pitiable village were of poor stock, but all we really wanted were warm bodies, convenient targets to distract the tanar’ri. He was quite amusing, organizing the resistance. And, of course, I knew from the moment I saw the fire in his eyes that I had to break him. When the sacrificial fool offered to buy the town’s safety with his own servitude, well.. it was a plot twist more perfect than any I could have written. The righteous man’s fall was a demoralizing blow to the village. The sight of their leader brought low shattered the spirit of his people far more painfully than a mere tour of duty on the Lower Planes ever could.” The fiend uncrooked three of his long fingers. “Three guesses who that man was. The first two don’t count.”
Thane remembered everything now. His village had been unable to repel the invading baatezu. He’d agreed to fight in the Blood War if the fiends spared the others. The deal was deliverable at his death, and he’d scoured his world for a means of forestalling that end. A wizard had sent him to the planes in search of a way to trick the baatezu, to wriggle out of the damnable contract. He’d thought he’d finally succeeded when Ravel Puzzlewell took away his mortality. He hadn’t counted on the trauma of death and rebirth wiping clean his past, on his misguided need to discover what he was missing, to find the truth of existence. He’d freed himself from the fiend’s clothes and walked right back into them again.
There is it. The chapter goes on explaining more details and how Fhjull secretly helped and nudged the Nameless One into the right direction in his search. I really wished the developers had added this final part into the game, since it's quite a shocking and interesting ending.
I hope you enjoyed it :) If you don't own the book and you want some more details on the origional script, feel free to ask.
After the Nameless One merges with his mortality, he find himself fighting in the Blood War. Why he suddenly was summoned there, remains a mystery. I figured he had to go there to pay for crimes in his past lives or something, but the final chapter of the book actually sheds light on this. I guess the developers cut this part from the game because of deadlines. Anyway, here is the passage from the book explaining the final scene:
After regaining his mortality, Thane (as the Nameless One is called in the book) finds himself back with Fhjull Forked-Tongue. Fhjull start the conversation:
“Interesting.” Then his eyes darted back to Thane. I’ve watched you for eight hundred and thirty years, waiting for you to make yourself whole. At times, I must admit, I despaired or ever claiming what was lawfully mine. But seeing you here, now – my patience is rewarded a thousand fold. I am redeemed. Perhaps I will even return to Baator.”
…
Thane felt the need to take control and brandished his sword at the fiend. He realized immediately that it would do no good, but the slim tube looked just like the one he’d recovered for Pharod. It was his, and he wanted it back. How did it fall into Fhjull’s possession? The king of the collectors had said he took jobs for Blood War generals, said he was in tight with the fiends. Pharod had even seemed to expect Thane somehow, as if … [Fhjull can read his mind]
“As if he’d been told that along would come a dead man, the only person who could retrieve something that has been stolen from me and placed beyond my reach.” The amnizu twirled the steel cylinder in his sleek fingers, then cracked it in half. Out slid a tightly rolled piece of worn parchment, which the fiend spread open.
“Let’s read another story,” he began. “A young man signed a deal with me, long ago-this contract you see before you now. We came to his world to gain new recruits for our Blood War armies. The folk of his pitiable village were of poor stock, but all we really wanted were warm bodies, convenient targets to distract the tanar’ri. He was quite amusing, organizing the resistance. And, of course, I knew from the moment I saw the fire in his eyes that I had to break him. When the sacrificial fool offered to buy the town’s safety with his own servitude, well.. it was a plot twist more perfect than any I could have written. The righteous man’s fall was a demoralizing blow to the village. The sight of their leader brought low shattered the spirit of his people far more painfully than a mere tour of duty on the Lower Planes ever could.” The fiend uncrooked three of his long fingers. “Three guesses who that man was. The first two don’t count.”
Thane remembered everything now. His village had been unable to repel the invading baatezu. He’d agreed to fight in the Blood War if the fiends spared the others. The deal was deliverable at his death, and he’d scoured his world for a means of forestalling that end. A wizard had sent him to the planes in search of a way to trick the baatezu, to wriggle out of the damnable contract. He’d thought he’d finally succeeded when Ravel Puzzlewell took away his mortality. He hadn’t counted on the trauma of death and rebirth wiping clean his past, on his misguided need to discover what he was missing, to find the truth of existence. He’d freed himself from the fiend’s clothes and walked right back into them again.
There is it. The chapter goes on explaining more details and how Fhjull secretly helped and nudged the Nameless One into the right direction in his search. I really wished the developers had added this final part into the game, since it's quite a shocking and interesting ending.
I hope you enjoyed it :) If you don't own the book and you want some more details on the origional script, feel free to ask.
Post edited July 31, 2011 by Hezus