PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Oracle Drive
rdfs:comment
  • One of the possible questions in Captain Cryptic's Confounding Quiz reveals that the Oracle Drive is a piece of technology left by the ancient fal'Cie and the Academy referred to it as a sensory perception device before it was given its official name. The fal'Cie seen in Paddra Ruins and the Oracle Drive cooperate to play back memories, and presumably work together with the seeress to record them. In the "Ortlinde's Bloom" fragment, it is said the fal'Cie channels the visions of the seeress and records what she sees. In the "Spinning Moonstone" fragment entry, Mog says fragments are made of the same crystal that is inside the Oracle Drive, and that is how they can hold memories. Moogle Hunt's animation is the same as that shown when the Drive communicates with the Paddra Ruins fal'Cie to a
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:final-fantasy/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:finalfantasy/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • One of the possible questions in Captain Cryptic's Confounding Quiz reveals that the Oracle Drive is a piece of technology left by the ancient fal'Cie and the Academy referred to it as a sensory perception device before it was given its official name. The fal'Cie seen in Paddra Ruins and the Oracle Drive cooperate to play back memories, and presumably work together with the seeress to record them. In the "Ortlinde's Bloom" fragment, it is said the fal'Cie channels the visions of the seeress and records what she sees. In the "Spinning Moonstone" fragment entry, Mog says fragments are made of the same crystal that is inside the Oracle Drive, and that is how they can hold memories. Moogle Hunt's animation is the same as that shown when the Drive communicates with the Paddra Ruins fal'Cie to activate its display. In the "Pathos Jewel" fragment entry, Maqui explains the crystal resonates with the thoughts of nearby people and reconstructs them in its atomic structure. The memories are recorded by injecting energy into the crystal to freeze the structure into place; if one concentrates on thinking something and then runs a current through the crystal lattice, it is possible to trap the images from inside someone's head. Maqui says scientists have even figured out how to date the recordings.