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Jan 13 2008 12:30am
What is your favorite race in fiction and why?

Mine would be the Aiel race from the Wheel of Time series.

The reason I like them so much is because they are excellent warriors trained in hand to hand combat as well as being experts with a bow and a short spear/buckler. They also have a interesting social hierarchy and they place a lot of value in honor and respect. Also the things they say before a battle and their customs are pretty cool.


Try to give good reasons for why you like your choice not just " They're cool"
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Jan 13 2008 11:28am
Blain the living Monorail in The darktower series...I think he's AI not a species but he's such a nutter that i think he's great plus hes really clever and likes riddles
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Jan 14 2008 02:25am
Ill agree with Aiel, though not past book 6 yet, they are definately people not to be messed with
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Jan 14 2008 07:34am
Jhagut tyrants from the Malazan Book of the Fallen.
Nice litltle excerpt here for you.

Quote
'Struggling in his mother’s wake, it was Raest’s first lesson in power. In
the hunt for domination that would shape his life, he saw the many ways
of the wind – its subtle sculpting of stone over hundreds and then
thousands of years, and its raging gales that flattened forests – and found
closest to his heart the violent power of the wind’s banshee fury.
Raest’s mother had been the first to flee his deliberate shaping of
power. She’d denied him to his face, proclaiming the Sundering of Blood
and thus cutting him free. That the ritual had broken her he disregarded.
It was unimportant. He who would dominate must learn early that those
resisting his command should be destroyed. Failure was her price, not
his.
While the Jaghut feared community, pronouncing society to be the
birthplace of tyranny – of the flesh and the spirit – and citing their own
bloody history as proof, Raest discovered a hunger for it. The power he
commanded insisted upon subjects. Strength was ever relative, and he
could not dominate without the company of the dominated.
At first he sought to subjugate other Jaghut, but more often than not
they either escaped him or he was forced to kill them. Such contests held
only momentary satisfaction. Raest gathered beasts around him, bending
nature to his will. But nature withered and died in bondage, and so
found an escape he could not control. In his anger he laid waste to the
land, driving into extinction countless species. The earth resisted him,
and its power was immense. Yet it was directionless and could not overwhelm
Raest in its ageless tide. His was a focused power, precise in its
destruction and pervasive in its effect.
Then into his path came the first of the Imass, creatures who struggled
against his will, defying slavery and yet living on. Creatures of boundless,
pitiful hope. For Raest, he had found in them the glory
of domination, for with each Imass that broke he took another. Their
link with nature was minimal, for the Imass themselves played the game
of tyranny over their lands. They could not defeat him.
He fashioned an empire of sorts, bereft of cities yet plagued with the
endless dramas of society, its pathetic victories and inevitable failures.
The community of enslaved Imass thrived in this quagmire of pettiness.
They even managed to convince themselves that they possessed freedom,
a will of their own that could shape destiny. They elected champions.
They tore down their champions once failure draped its shroud over
them. They ran in endless circles and called it growth, emergence, knowledge.
While over them all, a presence invisible to their eyes, Raest flexed
his will. His greatest joy came when his slaves proclaimed him god –
though they knew him not – and constructed temples to serve him and
organized priesthoods whose activities mimicked Raest’s tyranny with
such cosmic irony that the Jaghut could only shake his head.
It should have been an empire to last for millennia, and its day of
dying should have been by his own hand, when he at last tired of it.
Raest had never imagined that other Jaghut would find his activities
abhorrent, that they would risk themselves and their own power on
behalf of these short-lived, small-minded Imass. Yet what astonished
Raest more than anything else was that when the Jaghut came they came
in numbers, in community. A community whose sole purpose of
existence was to destroy his empire, to imprison him.
He had been unprepared.
The lesson was learned, and no matter what the world had become
since that time, Raest was ready for it. His limbs creaked at first, throbbing
with dull aches bridged by sharp pangs. The effort of digging
himself from the frozen earth had incapacitated him for a time, but
finally he felt ready to walk the tunnel that opened out into a new land.
Preparation. Already he’d initiated his first moves. He sensed that others
had come to him, had freed the path of Omtose Phellack wards and seals.
Perhaps his worshippers remained, fanatics who had sought his release for
generations, and even now awaited him beyond the barrow.
The missing Finnest would be his first priority. Much of his power had
been stored within the seed, stripped from him and stored there by the
Jaghut betrayers. It had not been carried far, and there was nothing that
could prevent his recovering it. Omtose Phellack no longer existed in the
land above – he could feel its absence like an airless void. Nothing could
oppose him now.
Preparation. Raest’s withered, cracked face twisted into a savage grin,
his lower tusks splitting desiccated skin. The powerful must gather other
power, subjugate it to their own will, then direct it unerringly. His moves
had already begun.
He sloshed through the slush now covering the barrow’s muddy floor.
Before him rose the slanted wall that marked the tomb’s barrier. Beyond
the lime-streaked earth waited a world to be enslaved. Raest gestured
and the barrier exploded outward. Bright sunlight flared in the clouds of
steam rolling around him, and he felt waves of cold, ancient air sweeping
past him.
The Jaghut Tyrant walked into the light.'
(GotM, UK Trade, p.435-6)

'Raest spread his arms wide and unleashed his Warren. His flesh split as power flowed into him. His arms shed skin like ash. He both felt and heard hills crack all around
him, the snapping of stone, the sundering of crags. To all sides the horizons blurred as dust curtained skyward.'(GotM, UK Trade, p.438)
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Feb 9 2008 03:32pm
My favorite race in the fantasy genre is definitely the Aiel.

My favorite race in science fiction is the Xeelee from Stephen Baxter's novels. They're extremely technologically advanced in comparison to the rest of the universe they inhabit and have an interesting biology (consisting of space-time flaws among other things). The other races of the universe, including humans, are warring over abandoned Xeelee artifacts, unaware of the fact that the Xeelee, for all of their power, are actually escaping the universe

There's obviously more to the story but I don't feel like going into more detail.
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Feb 9 2008 09:41pm
I like the sartan or the patryns from the death gate cycle series , by margeret weis and tracy hickman. Idk how to best explain it if u dont know what it is.
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Feb 23 2008 09:14am
Dark Elves (Drow) from the R.A. Salvatore's "Drizzt" Collection.

They are pretty much ace, good fighters, good mages, and big slice of evil pie. Everything you need in a fantasy race wink.gif
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Feb 25 2008 04:51am
the smurfs
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