![]() ![]() With the exception of being on the battlefield, Hell perhaps had few too little chances at capturing Angels.Hell didn’t have much opportunities to corrupt their foes:.However, Imperius wanted nothing more than to slay Diablo, despite the former option giving Heaven a better chance at victory in the Eternal Conflict. After battling Diablo and successfully subduing him, they had the perfect chance at sealing Diablo and in turn change the flow of the Eternal Conflict greatly in Heaven’s favor. We’ve actually seen a bit of this on the Angels end as well.There’s always the possibility that while the Lords of Hell had played with the idea of corrupting their eternal foes only a few of them were actually for it while the rest of the demon lords just wanted to destroy the angels.Hell wasn’t united on the idea of corrupting their foes:.Quick note: A few of these reasons may or mayn’t correlate with one another: I can think of a few reasons as to why (these reasons are of course, merely speculations): Why didn’t Hell choose to corrupt Heaven and bring an end to the Eternal Conflict? This means that if Hell wanted to corrupt Heaven’s forces, then they had plenty of time to make use of such a stratagem. In fact, I’m of the belief the entire time span of Sanctuary’s existence merely makes up a speck of the grand total duration that the Eternal Conflict was waged. Something that I think is worth mentioning is that while Rathma and his followers, the necromancers, along with a number of other things within Sanctuary helped to maintain the balance between Heaven and Hell they had not always existed. I doubt that many angels are corrupted in such a permanent manner, since Tyreals fall required a certain level of conflict between the angels and they are often united against the evils. Regarding Izual, I’m pretty sure his corruption was his own doing (similar to tyreals) in the sense that Izual acknowledges that he betrayed the heavens in D2 by providing the soul stones to the evils, although I don’t think I’ve heard the reasons why (he might have wanted to destroy sanctuary, but since the angels stopped any involvement, he then turned to the evils to do the job instead). It would be better to say the forces of evil are stronger than the forces of good, but good remains united in the face of evil so when evil fights amongst itself it loses the advantage it had and is beaten back. Instead they are at a constant war, which means they are equal.Īccording to D3 the evils can generally overpower the angels, however, whenever the evils are at the door to heaven they turn on themselves to see which one claims glory. ![]() The forces of good and evil, in the Diablo universe, should be at an equilibrium, right? Otherwise one of the sides would’ve overcome the other. Rathma is the patron of the necromancers, and he values the Balance of light and dark above all things." He studied the cycle of life and death and taught it to those willing to venture into his subterranean habitat. "Finally, we come to Rathma, a brooding, solitary being who sought out the deep recesses of the world. He then established the Priests of Rathma along with founding necromancer, ensuring the Balance would forevermore have its protectors even if the world could not remember the events that nearly destroyed it. Subsequently, he was one of the few residents of Sanctuary able to recall the events of the war, which was assumed to be an allowance for the original nephalem due to their highly advanced ages by that time. Rathma was a key participant in the Sin War, acting in the shadows alongside the mystical being Trag’Oul to sabotage both his parent’s causes and preserve the Balance by ensuring that neither his parents nor their respective races could dominate the future of the world. ![]() Rathma’s parents were the ringleaders of Sanctuary’s creation, Lilith and Inarius he balked against their different yet equally domineering ways from an early age. Rathma, whose birth name was Linarian, is a first-generation nephalem and tutor to the first Necromancer of his namesake’s order, the Priests of Rathma. ![]()
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