Unless Trollish sorcery is to be retconned, he was capable enough as a sorcerer to found a sorcerous tradition while simultaneously utilising trollish magics. Now, this could all be explained as as misapplied worship, but I don't think so.
Mind you, I think this is unusual and difficult enough that it doesn't need to be in the rules - Arkat was astonishing in his ability to perform this sort of act. And tough enough that lots of -20 penalties didn't slow him down much.
>Where is the evidence that any individual God Learner was able to
>successfully perform more than one type of worship? It seems to me that they
>viewed and manipulated the whole Gloranthan cosmos from one
>materialist/reductionist perspective. The ones who couldn't, formed
>breakaway factions (e.g. Kralorela, Six Legged Empire).
I generally agree - though the God Learners where probably partial to a bit of misapplied veneration now and then (or even as a more or less steady diet, in some cases). I certainly don't think that the God Learners where interested in mysticism or ecstatic worship - they were interested in other cultures otherworlds, but not their values.
>Where is the evidence that Arkat, a noted traitor and turncoat, ever
>worshipped in two different ways at the same time? He is famous for burning
>his bridges behind him, being chucked out of every club he ever joined --
>not for successfully amalgamating different traditions by performing
>perfectly in two or more religious modes simultaneously.
I always figured the troll sorcerers to be as good an example of integrating sorcery and divine worship as you could get. YMMV.
Cheers David
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