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@dzb10035 I sometimes encountered them, but only got results with two, Luham and Ushakil. I attribute that to the fact that the Jinn have different personalities, and I think those two liked me. Their powers are amazing; for example, with Luham, random people offered me sex in the street, and with Ushakil, everyone treated me like I was a model or a god
I was lurking and ran across this thread - excellent conversation, people. You got me excited enough to buy the book.
My question, for those of you who have read this far, and especially for @maguslyon since you've been working it, is how did you reconcile the picture of the Seal of Command on p. 180 with its description on p. 183? There seem to be a lot of discrepancies. Namely:
It says the circle is broken at three points, although in the picture it is only broken at one point.
3. Directional Glyphs - I only recognized one of the characters in the picture.
4. The Mark of Presence - that seems to be absent from the picture.
I pushed the wrong button and I'm playing Beat the Clock to edit this post. TIA.
Post automatically merged:
I should probably add that he said beginners could use the book, so I'm assuming the issues with the Seal of Command aren't a blind. Blinds seem to be a thing of the past, anyway, and rightfully so. Gatekeeping is a bore.
@dzb10035 I understand your concerns about AI. Early in the book it did start to seem a bit like word salad. I think that was because there was some repetitiveness, but repetition can be good pedagogy. As you pointed out, this book is very consistent, and IMO it's also very complex. After reading this far, I find it hard to believe that AI could manage this level of both consistency and complexity.
On the other hand, he published six books on 2025, and one in 2022, and none so far in 2026, at least not that I see on Amazon. So, I wonder if he might have used AI to assist in his personal 'gimoire dump' last year.