The card is obviously a metaphorical representation of the Garden of Eden, and subsequently, the tempatation of Adam and Eve, followed by their expulsion from the Garden, by God. The image is metaphorical in the sense that while it is not actually depicted them getting kicked out, but is using imagery to represent this. God is depicted using all the symbolism of things holy, there's a burning (or large bush) and a fruit tree holding a snake, and of course there is Adam and Eve depicted in traditional medieval manner.
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| - The card is obviously a metaphorical representation of the Garden of Eden, and subsequently, the tempatation of Adam and Eve, followed by their expulsion from the Garden, by God. The image is metaphorical in the sense that while it is not actually depicted them getting kicked out, but is using imagery to represent this. God is depicted using all the symbolism of things holy, there's a burning (or large bush) and a fruit tree holding a snake, and of course there is Adam and Eve depicted in traditional medieval manner.
- The Lovers is the first scenario in the Elwin and Shaera campaign in Heroes of Might and Magic IV.
- The Lovers is a supplementary transformation technique, used by the Death Scythe Jinn Galland alongside his meister, Zubaidah. After emitting a considerable quantity of smoke from the nozzle of his oil lamp weapon form, the dense vapor quickly condenses into an enormous cylindrical, robotic entity with conical-shaped legs, a pair of small bat-like wings and two arms that are encircled by spikes near Djinn's shoulders. Emerging from the top of the central body is a spiral statue, depicting the embrace of a man and a woman as they are about to kiss. This body also features a large heart at its centre which, after briefly charging energy, is capable of firing a tremendously powerful beam that is strong enough to completely destroy a gigantic clown with just a single shot.
- The Lovers is a Magnus in Baten Kaitos: Eternal Wings and the Lost Ocean.
- Hal Yarrow is a lowly joat linguist living in the oppressive Haijac Union, one of the major World powers in 3050 A.C. The Haijac Union is a puritan Theocracy based on a future religion founded by a prophet called Isaac Sigmen called Serialism , an offshoot of Judeochristian beliefs mixed with a pseudo-scientific temporal theory called Dunnology. Adherence to realist actions is a matter of life and death, as citizens are rated regularly in their morals and those who consistently slip are "sent to H". Yarrow, unfortunately, is prone to unreal thinking, and he's not helped by his wife Marie, a proper, frigid, passive-agressive Sigmenite who feels forced to rat out every minor unreality to their resident gapt Pornsen, a combination of confessor and political commisary.
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| - Find Shaera's father, Gramin
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| - Hal Yarrow is a lowly joat linguist living in the oppressive Haijac Union, one of the major World powers in 3050 A.C. The Haijac Union is a puritan Theocracy based on a future religion founded by a prophet called Isaac Sigmen called Serialism , an offshoot of Judeochristian beliefs mixed with a pseudo-scientific temporal theory called Dunnology. Adherence to realist actions is a matter of life and death, as citizens are rated regularly in their morals and those who consistently slip are "sent to H". Yarrow, unfortunately, is prone to unreal thinking, and he's not helped by his wife Marie, a proper, frigid, passive-agressive Sigmenite who feels forced to rat out every minor unreality to their resident gapt Pornsen, a combination of confessor and political commisary. Eventually Yarrow's stubborn lack of specialization is his salvation, as he gets recruited (and thus saved from "H") for a top secret mission; be the resident linguist for a diplomatic expedition to Ozagen, the first inhabitable world found by the Haijac space program. Ozagen is populated by friendly, highly evolved sentient arthropods whose technological level is comparable to that of the early 20th century, derisively named wogglebugs (wogs for short) by the Haijacs; the expedition, though, is actually a genocidal mission who plans to kill the whole species using a Synthetic Plague. Wogs would join in extinction the other sentient species they used to share their planet with, a mammalian anthropoid astonishingly similar to humans. It is while exploring some ruins of these man-like aliens that Yarrow meets one misterious girl that shouldn't be there, or even exist, who makes him feel for the first time what his Sturch-appointed wife never did. This and his growing friendship with Fobo, a wog psychologist, sends him into a downward spiral of unreality. This novel launched the career of Philip Jose Farmer, won an Hugo in 1953, it is often listed as a landmark in Science Fiction... and it pretty much stopped Farmer's professional writing career for the next decade, as it was a shining example of a book ahead of its time that no publisher in The Fifties would touch with a ten foot pole (in fact, it wasn't published in book form until 1961). The Lovers is credited with introducing Sex into Science Fiction beyond the Green-Skinned Space Babe, and mixing it with Religion, Politics, Psychology and Pulp, Farmer's favourite subjects. There's another novel by Farmer sharing the same setting, Day of Timestop (a.k.a. as Timestop or A Woman A Day), but it's not actually a sequel.
- The card is obviously a metaphorical representation of the Garden of Eden, and subsequently, the tempatation of Adam and Eve, followed by their expulsion from the Garden, by God. The image is metaphorical in the sense that while it is not actually depicted them getting kicked out, but is using imagery to represent this. God is depicted using all the symbolism of things holy, there's a burning (or large bush) and a fruit tree holding a snake, and of course there is Adam and Eve depicted in traditional medieval manner.
- The Lovers is the first scenario in the Elwin and Shaera campaign in Heroes of Might and Magic IV.
- The Lovers is a supplementary transformation technique, used by the Death Scythe Jinn Galland alongside his meister, Zubaidah. After emitting a considerable quantity of smoke from the nozzle of his oil lamp weapon form, the dense vapor quickly condenses into an enormous cylindrical, robotic entity with conical-shaped legs, a pair of small bat-like wings and two arms that are encircled by spikes near Djinn's shoulders. Emerging from the top of the central body is a spiral statue, depicting the embrace of a man and a woman as they are about to kiss. This body also features a large heart at its centre which, after briefly charging energy, is capable of firing a tremendously powerful beam that is strong enough to completely destroy a gigantic clown with just a single shot.
- The Lovers is a Magnus in Baten Kaitos: Eternal Wings and the Lost Ocean.
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