ext_61113 ([identity profile] theaeblackthorn.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] hh_clubs2011-11-12 05:54 pm
Entry tags:

Wizarding Games: What if



What if...


Details: What if one slight decision at any point in the Harry Potter books had been different? What if Dean Thomas' father had told Dean's mother why he left the family to protect them? What if Ariana was standing one foot to the right had never been killed? What if Ariana had decided to stay indoors instead of going outside and meeting those Muggles in the first place? What if Kreacher had gone crazy and killed the baby Regulus meaning Sirius was the only child of the Blacks?

Have a think and a debate/disscussion about how small/big a change could have changed something ridic big/not at all. Uh. Be creative! try to find something different or interesting to change, you can use the ones above if you must.

Steps:
1. Pick a thing from HP to change
2. Explain how you think this would have changed the way the story unfolded, and if it'd change the outcome at all. Maybe the differences in the world once the story was over? (min 100 words)
3. Discuss/debate with other people about yours and theirs. Do you think it wouldn't have made the changes they think it would? Explain why. Do you agree and see some other changes that would have occurred, let them know :) (min 30 words and you can't just wholeheartedlyagree and gush at them)


Rules:

1. Don't pick the same one as someone else. If someone has already picked something then reply to their comment discussing/debating
2. Don't cause drama. Prove you can all civilly debate and discuss stuff.
3. Take heed of the word limits (100 words for first comment, 30 words for additional replies with a point that add to the discussion/debate)
4. Try not to make it a silly thing e.g. Harry ate some toast one morning instead of cereal and therefore the world ended.

Points: 10pts for your 100 word comment, 2pts per 30 word comment with a point. 30pts cap. 10pts for any crystal ball if you earn over 15pts. Dont' forget to register your bonus items in this post.
Deadline: 26th November 5pm UTC Converter
Submit

First comment




Also? Not a member? Want to join? Go here!

[identity profile] faeriesfolly.livejournal.com 2011-11-12 08:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Agreed. Harry and Ron would have died several times over without Hermione's help. I think Hermione as a character is even written much more as a Ravenclaw than a Gryffindor. Personally, I think JKR only includes her in Gryffindor to keep her hero alive and round out the trio, but forgot to make her fit Gryffindor's traits more than Ravenclaw's.

Morgan//Slytherin//6

[identity profile] naushika.livejournal.com 2011-11-13 09:50 am (UTC)(link)
I've had some, ahem, heated arguments with people over this before but yeah, I agree with you. I always wondered how it was Hermione ended up in Gryffindor. Usually the opposing argument I hear is that she had Gryff traits that wouldn't emerge until later, but then - why Dumbledore's remark about sorting too early? I think Hermione's more Gryffindorish traits were more of a result of being surrounded by Gryffindors all the time. If she had been sorted into Ravenclaw, I just can't see Hermione getting involved with Harry and Ron at all. Perhaps later, with the DA, but not before.

Noelle // Slytherin // 5

[identity profile] pinksonia.livejournal.com 2011-11-13 02:49 pm (UTC)(link)
I've always thought it is because you are not necessarily sorted based on the qualities you have, but the qualities you value. So you could have no natural intelligence what so ever, but if you thought learning was the most important thing you could do, you would still be a Ravenclaw (you would just have to work super hard).

So Hermione's line in SS/PS "Books! And cleverness! There are more important things -- friendship and bravery." is really the biggest clue to her sorting. She may possess and use the intelligence of a Ravenclaw, but she values bravery more.

Allison/Ravenclaw/1

[identity profile] ivory88s.livejournal.com 2011-11-23 11:42 pm (UTC)(link)
That's a really interesting point about what qualities you value more than what qualities you have. There was some debate in an above thread about Crabbe and Goyle not really personifying a Slyterin but being sorted into it. This is a good explanation - they valued those traits, even if they, themselves, weren't exactly ambition or cunning.

Malory//Ravenclaw//5