Here you can speculate on the game’s plot, discuss its characters, and compare notes with other players.
Traveler Returning?
 IHNIWTR Posts: 346
3/14/2019
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so what does this actually mean
like, philosophically, in the abstract
is it just a more ominous way to say what goes around comes around
-- https://www.fallenlondon.com/profile/Daniel%20Vaise
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 0bsidian Fire Posts: 117
3/19/2019
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No, it's rather specific actually. It's gone into a lot more in Sunless Seas.
And I won't spoil anymore...
-- Kharagal Mierqid - Bohemian Correspondent who is obsessed with the Language of Stars...
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 IHNIWTR Posts: 346
3/27/2019
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I got every ending in Seas, including the East, and it still felt pretty ambiguous to me
-- https://www.fallenlondon.com/profile/Daniel%20Vaise
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 earthbourn Posts: 149
3/27/2019
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It's definitely ambiguous, and odd to insist that "the traveler is always returning" while also saying your captain will never return. I think it means that when the traveler arrives, they are actually returning because, in a way, they've already been there before. Every Traveler who goes East is returning to where others have been before. The journey is cyclical. (Perhaps literally, since it's hinted that time is irregular, maybe even suspended, in the East. In this sunlit limbo, the traveler may always be present and always returning.)
-- Tenterhook - A sun-seared creature learning to be human. The Mechanist, L. - Found what she was looking for. Gone now.
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 Arcengal Posts: 196
3/28/2019
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Just did the One Last Voyage option in FL again and, as usual, I'm confused why the qualities that increase do. Considering where the voyage went, anyway. I guess I should play Sunless Sea to find out more about this phrase.
-- https://www.fallenlondon.com/profile/Arcengal
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 Arsene Posts: 2
4/1/2019
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A reference to Italo Calvino's Invisible cities, a postmodern novel which inspired Fallen London's setting. "Arriving at each new city, the traveler finds again a past of his that he did not know he had: the foreignness of what you no longer are or no longer possess lies in wait for you in foreign, unpossessed places."
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