So it was three days, not counting the amount of time between the speech and “entered the sanctuary”, whatever that means.
Was Eldor in geosynchronus orbit? Or was Gaia doing the day/night thing while he tried to get back? There are no stars, and there’s no view of the sun, so is Gaia in orbit around a sunlet or is it statonary? It would be Eldor’s luck if the planet was orbiting away from him. There’s probably no telescopes pointed at him, and even if there were, they wouldn’t be able to do anything to help him.
And Eldor’s “big day” outfit is a little more Sinestro or Ming than his normal Enterprise-style semi-uniform. Time to start the light show!
@ Vicious Sand:
I believe it has been stated somewhere that Gaia is a lone, stationary celestial body in an empty pocket universe. There aren’t any stars to see in the sky, and the day/night cycle is just part of the atmosphere being magically brighter on gradual rotation.
Ah yes, the mandatory big red button to start anything important.
So it was three days, not counting the amount of time between the speech and “entered the sanctuary”, whatever that means.
Was Eldor in geosynchronus orbit? Or was Gaia doing the day/night thing while he tried to get back? There are no stars, and there’s no view of the sun, so is Gaia in orbit around a sunlet or is it statonary? It would be Eldor’s luck if the planet was orbiting away from him. There’s probably no telescopes pointed at him, and even if there were, they wouldn’t be able to do anything to help him.
And Eldor’s “big day” outfit is a little more Sinestro or Ming than his normal Enterprise-style semi-uniform. Time to start the light show!
@ Vicious Sand:
I believe it has been stated somewhere that Gaia is a lone, stationary celestial body in an empty pocket universe. There aren’t any stars to see in the sky, and the day/night cycle is just part of the atmosphere being magically brighter on gradual rotation.