Those of you who didn’t read canon before reading this, there’s a corresponding incident in the first book which I think would add to your understanding of this incident. Quirrell sneaks a troll into the school, but Harry, Ron, and Hermione are improbably able to defeat it using the first thing the Weasleys try here (smacking it with its own club). The difficulty level of that encounter was clearly calibrated to the characters’ strengths in a way common in heroic stories and I think Eliezer was deliberately subverting that expectation. (He’s made this point in the sequences on a few occasions—something about how it’s allowed for Nature to just throw problems at humanity that are too hard for it—although I can’t find a quote at the moment.) I particularly appreciated how Harry only used tools that he had deliberately prepared in advance, sometimes way in advance, e.g. the healer’s kit.
I also wonder where Fawkes was while this was happening. You’d think he would’ve found his way to either Harry or Hermione.
I have a mild complaint about all these cameos. Some of the names of the people who end up getting cameos don’t fit in the Harry Potter universe to my ear and they stick out really noticeably. One of the first things I’d do if I were hypothetically rewriting HPMoR for publication is to come up with a consistent and meaningful naming scheme.
The difficulty level of that encounter was clearly calibrated to the characters’ strengths in a way common in heroic stories and I think Eliezer was deliberately subverting that expectation.
I think it’s ironic that at the begining of the update, Harry refers to Filch as a “low-level random encounter whom [he] often breezed past wearing his epic-level Deathly Hallow”.
but Harry, Ron, and Hermione are improbably able to defeat it without doing much in particular.
I haven’t read much Hary Potter fanfiction, but what I have, including HPMoR, tends to up the difficulty considerably, and makes this apparent by having the characters use the same trick that Ron knocked out the canon troll with to little or no effect. (In this case, Eliezer made it clear in Quirrel’s first class that that trick would be dreadfully unlikely to work.) Is this a trend in HP fanfiction (in which case, it seems to fall into the class of “taking HP fanfiction tropes and doing them better” that Eliezer’s been following)? Or is my sample size too small?
I’m sad now.
Those of you who didn’t read canon before reading this, there’s a corresponding incident in the first book which I think would add to your understanding of this incident. Quirrell sneaks a troll into the school, but Harry, Ron, and Hermione are improbably able to defeat it using the first thing the Weasleys try here (smacking it with its own club). The difficulty level of that encounter was clearly calibrated to the characters’ strengths in a way common in heroic stories and I think Eliezer was deliberately subverting that expectation. (He’s made this point in the sequences on a few occasions—something about how it’s allowed for Nature to just throw problems at humanity that are too hard for it—although I can’t find a quote at the moment.) I particularly appreciated how Harry only used tools that he had deliberately prepared in advance, sometimes way in advance, e.g. the healer’s kit.
I also wonder where Fawkes was while this was happening. You’d think he would’ve found his way to either Harry or Hermione.
I have a mild complaint about all these cameos. Some of the names of the people who end up getting cameos don’t fit in the Harry Potter universe to my ear and they stick out really noticeably. One of the first things I’d do if I were hypothetically rewriting HPMoR for publication is to come up with a consistent and meaningful naming scheme.
I think it’s ironic that at the begining of the update, Harry refers to Filch as a “low-level random encounter whom [he] often breezed past wearing his epic-level Deathly Hallow”.
I haven’t read much Hary Potter fanfiction, but what I have, including HPMoR, tends to up the difficulty considerably, and makes this apparent by having the characters use the same trick that Ron knocked out the canon troll with to little or no effect. (In this case, Eliezer made it clear in Quirrel’s first class that that trick would be dreadfully unlikely to work.) Is this a trend in HP fanfiction (in which case, it seems to fall into the class of “taking HP fanfiction tropes and doing them better” that Eliezer’s been following)? Or is my sample size too small?
I think most Harry Potter fanfiction doesn’t have a difficulty level as such. Your sample is probably extremely unrepresentative.