Thank you all for appreciating my map. Except for you, SS, who had the disgrace not only to not post the third and final iteration of the map, but not even the second (You know I love you really). And for the record, it was Anna who spotted the major flaw of the distance between Monsaic Lines and Necrum being utterly erroneous. Not that I’m trying to shift blame – I’ve always admired her prowess in observation to notice such abstact errors.
Re: Bonewerkz being inside the FeeCo Depot, I’m not sure I follow your logic 100%. The fact that a similar green hue is present is not any form of proof or evidence at all. Neither is that we don’t see the train leaving the FeeCo Depot – we don’t see it returning after the Slig Barracks either, but I’d rather presume Abe got back in time for the next level.
Now, daring to leap back to the original topic, the Mudokon temples could be like the Sphynx, Trilithion, Nan Madol, Isle of Pines and the Yonaguni structure – erections dated before modern humankind is thought to have evolved, or else which require technology that even today we don’t have. Diarite bowls in the King’s Chamber of the Great Pyramid of Giza contains hieroglyphics so thin that it would have taken something harder than quartz, but a two-hundredth of a inch across, to carve.
Alternatively, the Mudokons used their psychic powers to aid in their construction. We know Mudokons can chant to speed the growth of trees, which can largely explain the Paramonian Temple. The Scrabanian Temple might have been carved out of a resistant rock crop. The Necrum Temples are a bit more difficult to wager a guess at, since there’s no immediate source of stone that we can see.
But like Alcar, I’d rather not be told. It’ll add to the mysticism of the Oddworld experience. I would like to know, though, how industrial factories are built. It’s not so much bemusing as merely unexplained, but I’d love to find out. I can’t imagine Mudokon construction workers, as I’d have thought they needed to be strong. I’m guessing large usage of Slig-operated cranes and machinery.
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