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Talor

Talor was a minor god in the Thauzunian Orthodoxy, associated with chance, uncertainty, and risk-taking behavior. In pre-Fall belief, Talor did not govern fate or destiny, but probabilistic outcomes—events influenced by incomplete information, imperfect control, and variability. His domain acknowledged that not all outcomes could be predicted or managed, even within highly structured systems.
  Orthodox doctrine treated chance as a factor to be accounted for rather than embraced. Talor represented risk exposure, not fortune. Activities associated with him included gambling, speculation, and high-risk decision-making where outcomes were uncertain. These practices were not forbidden, but they were discouraged unless risk was understood and contained. Reckless exposure to chance was considered a failure of planning.
  Talor was closely associated with economic speculation, competitive contests, and situations where gain and loss were closely linked. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized that chance amplified existing conditions: well-prepared systems could absorb loss, while fragile ones collapsed under it. Talor’s influence reinforced the Orthodoxy’s preference for predictability and redundancy over reliance on luck.
  No knowledge of Talor survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to his name, role, or conceptual presence in modern Vey’Zari society. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its collapse, all formal understanding of Talor vanished. He is not remembered, mythologized, or symbolically preserved in any form.
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