Comment author: yaeiou 04 March 2015 09:30:52PM 1 point [-]

I'm not sure how Quirrell's last plot could still come to fruition. Slytherin have won the house cup and one of the professors awarding house points to Ravenclaw at this stage would feel like Quirrell's plotting had failed.

Comment author: Oshi 04 March 2015 09:33:03PM 10 points [-]

Unless they award the points in response to Voldy being killed by Hermione. Which means even in dying, Quirrel wins.

Comment author: William_Quixote 04 March 2015 08:33:31PM 6 points [-]

It's a nice story. But it won't work.

Harry wants folks to think LV killed the death eaters and not him. But he has trained Draco too well. Given priors on someone defeating Voldemort you would assume it's Harry, DD, or QQ in that order. Draco knows Harry and QQ were up to something because he and several other kids bumped into them and had a scuffle at the third floor corridor. If that wasn't entirly obliviated away, Draco will figure out that Harry was involved.

Comment author: Oshi 04 March 2015 08:35:09PM 5 points [-]

For some reason I was thinking Harry was under his invisibility cloak until pretty much everyone involved in that charade was unconscious. Am I misremembering?

Comment author: TheMajor 03 March 2015 08:56:46PM *  0 points [-]

What about a Voldemort who comes back and just Avada Kedavras Harry on sight? This would finally do justice to Voldie's superior power and intelligence, and take only one paragraph.

I was indeed thinking of spells or artefacts we don't know about (or perhaps clever combinations/side-effects of magic we do know about). If Horcruxes are indeed images of the caster impressed upon the world then perhaps it might be possible to construct them in such a way that they become active unless repressed by the original? That would solve Voldies stuck-in-a-plaque-for-decades problem as well.

Comment author: Oshi 03 March 2015 09:02:03PM 0 points [-]

Would you consider the story ending with Voldemort, up to that point presumed dealt with, suddenly showed up and killed Harry with no chance for recourse?

It would be a quick resolution, but despite what Harry thinks as he matures, he is in fact living inside a narrative. I don't believe that the story would end on such a down note. I could well be wrong, but that is what I choose to believe.

Comment author: Jost 03 March 2015 07:20:25PM 1 point [-]

Wasn’t that resolved in chapter 79?

Comment author: Oshi 03 March 2015 08:16:32PM 1 point [-]

Yeah it was resolved when Dumbledore revealed that he was the one who gave it to Harry to Snape/McGonnagle. Snape reported to Potter that he used it and it went to an empty house in London.

Comment author: Velorien 03 March 2015 07:55:49PM 0 points [-]

Fame is harmful, not helpful, to Harry's goals.

Is that true? Harry wishes to reform or replace the government of Magical Britain, and being the hero who defeated Voldemort twice would make that a lot easier (as Voldemort himself acknowledged). Turning Hermione into the Girl-Who-Lived dilutes that effect, and also brings all his fame-related problems down upon her.

Comment author: Oshi 03 March 2015 08:14:44PM 4 points [-]

Harry at this point trusts Hermione's judgement far more than his own. Putting Hermione in the position of power as the girl-who-lives-again pushes her into the forefront, letting her be the head that Magical Brittain needs, leaving him to go about his business determined to not destroy the world, as his unbreakable vow requires.

Comment author: TheMajor 03 March 2015 07:20:16PM 4 points [-]

So did Harry just outsmart himself? Are we really expecting the clever Lord Voldemort to not have something in place to recover from obliviation? Harry seemed to appropriately judge the importance of this spell about half a second after he first heard of it, but Tom Riddle doesn't realise at all?

Comment author: Oshi 03 March 2015 08:11:55PM 4 points [-]

I'm sure he realizes it, but Harry literally obliviated everything in his memory, which would presumably include knowledge of any anti-obliviation counter measures (like the signals that were mentioned early on).

Unless there's some spell or artifact we haven't heard of before now that blocks/reverses Obliviation, I am going with it worked. And from a meta perspective, we know the story is winding down, so Voldie coming back with his full memory and then having another showdown with a different solution seems highly unlikely.

Comment author: skeptical_lurker 03 March 2015 07:55:50PM 1 point [-]

Well, I don't know how shields work in this setting, but one possibility is that shields do not let anything magical through, which would stop transfigured materials. Shields do stop bullets, so... is it a matter of speed? Do shields stop fast things like bullets, but let slow things such as knives through?

If carbon nanotubes work, then wizards who are not familer with the latest muggle science could still stab each other with very thin (to the point of near invisibility) diamond blades.

Comment author: Oshi 03 March 2015 08:08:07PM 2 points [-]

That sounds entirely too much like Dune to me. That's enough reason for me to doubt shields work that way.