My apologies for the misunderstanding, I just can't stand the notion of one religion being any more valid than another.
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In a way I supposed I compared to religions in real life
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I don't understand what you mean, though. Animistic religions
do exist in real life.
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however I don't think me speaking about religion was a bad thing
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It isn't a bad thing, but it's hard to compare a monotheistic religion to a religion that holds all animals as sacred.
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but still I find it fascinating that they were worshipped given the threat they pose in the game. When we learn that they were worshipped, why was this done?
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I'm sure countless Muds in the past have been killed by the very Scrabs and Paramites they revere, but native Muds didn't hold themselves higher than Scrabs and Paramites. They respected their power and their majesty.
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To give us an insight into life before the mass industrial takeover?
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Yes. Big Face relays to Abe that "Paramites and Scrabs had been sacred once, but that was before Rupture Farms turned them into lunch". Like I was saying, one of the biggest themes in Oddworld is a loss of cultural identity. The only reason that Mudokon culture isn't completely dead already is that there are enough native Muds left to carry on those traditions, and to keep that culture alive.
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Or is there some invisible force in Oddworld that we don't know of that carved out Abe's fate, or was it just all coincidence that he stumbled onto the meeting about the Mudokon pops?
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The concept of destiny is definitely an aspect of the overall story as well. Lanning talked about the original Abe's Moon cutscene beginning with a meteor shower barraging the moon and creating the Mudokon paw shape, suggesting there is a bigger force at work.