• @tomi000
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    181 year ago

    Is it realistic though to not have any advancement in technology or warfare in 5000 years? How could they be weaker than before? That sounds insane

    • @Phrodo_00
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      661 year ago

      Middle Earth’s magic is in decay by the third age. The elves are literally leaving it, and there are way less of them. Men also only live to ~80 instead of living for hundreds of years like they did in Numenor. Middle Earth eventually becomes a world like ours.

      • @Pogbom
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        401 year ago

        a world like ours.

        I find it absolutely hilarious picturing Frodo trying to place an Amazon order, or getting kicked out of his hobbit hole because of inflation.

        • @Graphy
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          1 year ago

          iirc Frodo sold Bag End to the Sackville-Bagginses for a not great price and (fake) moves to a sketchier neighborhood where you had to lock your doors lol.

          So Frodo being priced out of his childhood home isn’t far off.

          • @[email protected]
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            151 year ago

            To be fair that was because he wasn’t sure he was coming back from his journey, not because he couldn’t have gotten a good deal if he haggled. He also got it back for free after Saruman was killed, so pretty good deal in the end anyways.

      • @tomi000
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        61 year ago

        Thanks for explaining

        • @daemoz
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          101 year ago

          Furthermore men were no longer as “pure” in the 2nd/3rd age legends. The numenorians initially lived hundreds of years, were stonger had a more advanced civ. Etc. It all crumbled and then even those that survived and rebuilt mixed with humans that resulted in shorter lifespans, etc. By the movies it was basically the dark ages.

      • Tar_Alcaran
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        21 year ago

        Decay and waning are the major themes of Tolkien’s Legendarium. Magic runs out, great creations cannot be repeated, there is no progress and effort once spent cannot be regained.

    • amio
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      461 year ago

      No, not really. The trope is called “medieval stasis” (in TVT terms anyway) and is fairly common in high fantasy, though. The setting is supposed to be swords and horses, with notes of “technology bad” - which makes sense because what passes for tech in Middle Earth is mostly Saruman fucking around with orcs and that sort of thing.

      As for weakening, a lot of that had to do with other things than just technological stagnation.

    • @Jimmyeatsausage
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      271 year ago

      The war was so hard on elves that the entire race was in decline, and most of them had already fled Middle Earth for Valinor by the time of the movies. At least 2 of the greatest dwarven cities were destroyed…1 by a dragon and one by a Balrog. Humanity was divided, and the greatest human city had been without a legitimate ruler for centuries. On top of all that, the most powerful wizard, who should have been a bulwark against Saurons return, was a double-agent and had likely been undermining the other races for decades or longer. Middle Earth was basically the remains of the Roman Empire during the Dark Ages

      • Tar_Alcaran
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        21 year ago

        The war was so hard on elves that the entire race was in decline

        That’s the whole thing for the elves, and really the entire LOTR saga. Everything declines, fades, weakens and runs down. But the elves especially never “grow” or improve.

      • @tomi000
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        11 year ago

        Thanks for the detailed description. The comparison is a bit odd though, from the roman empire to today its only 2000 years and I think some of the smallest nations could easily crush the roman empire today. I cant even imagine what will be in another 3000 years. But as others have pointed out, there seems to be no technological advancement in Middle Earth so I guess thats a major factor.

        • @qarbone
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          21 year ago

          Well, how much had technology advanced in the 5000 years before the Roman Empire?

          • @tomi000
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            11 year ago

            A lot actually if you really compare the technologies, also the romans could haveeasily beat any army 5 times their size from 5000 years before.

            • Tar_Alcaran
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              21 year ago

              You don’t even need 5000 years. Colonial forces regularly beat 10:1 odds against natives, and they very obviously lived at the same time. The battle of Ulundi saw the british win with 20 deaths, against a force of 15.000 Zulu warriors. Even the famous British defeat at Islandlwana saw the Zulu impi suffer tripple the British casualties.

    • @graymess
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      161 year ago

      Especially considering how long some of the races live. Imagine how specialized in a specific field of science an elf could be when it can study a subject for hundreds of years.