A single chapter explains the recent plot

Because of the recent plot, there has been a controversy, so I have to open a single chapter to explain.

First of all, definitely my pot, there's no doubt about it.

A load of pots, crows and crows occupy eight buckets.

The writing is not enough, and I want to change the plot of the original work...... Making a plot change based on the appearance of the protagonist and producing a butterfly effect will naturally confuse many readers.

I've always believed that if you can't make the reader understand the plot, that's only the author's problem.

So, let's go back to the recent plot.

Before we get into that, let's be clear about two issues, which can also be said to be the two defining rules for Ravenclaw rings.

First, the scope of use.

This has been mentioned repeatedly since the Ravenclaw Bronze Ring, and the scope of the time loop can only be found within Hogwarts.

This has also been explained in the previous chapters, so I won't go into too much detail here.

In other words, because of Ravenclaw's magic, William couldn't leave Hogwarts.

Once you leave, you die.

As to why Ravenclaw did this, this involves another foreshadowing throughout the text, which will be explained later.

Second, get out of the conditions of the time loop.

Before William enters the cycle, he will have an idea, a goal, in his heart.

It's a bit like a room with requirement, where you have to make a request in your heart for the room to appear and take the shape you want.

Once you have a goal, if William can't complete it, you can't leave the time loop.

This issue was mentioned during the Tywin incident.

The goal was to gain insight into the events of Tywin and how he died.

The same was true of Voldemort Quirrell the following year.

If you can't achieve this goal, you can't leave the time loop.

In order to increase his strength, William generally deliberately did not complete it in the early stage in order to improve his personal strength.

That is, the various manipulations of the time loop.

But this is all subjective and deliberately not completed, and there is an objective inability to complete.

So what are the forms of this kind of objective incompletion?

We combine the first condition, William can't leave Hogwarts.

Therefore, this goal cannot be related outside of Hogwarts.

Once it came to Hogwarts, William couldn't leave the school and couldn't finish it.

For example, William set his goal of going to the Ministry of Magic, and he couldn't do it.

After acquiescing to these two rules, let's go back to the recent plot.

Harry, Krum, and Ron are all dead, and the bodies are all inside Hogwarts.

Both William and Dumbledore thought that the whole thing was happening inside Hogwarts.

What William had to do was to find out the causes of death of several people.

This is his goal, and it is a sufficient necessity to get out of the cycle.

However, in the time loop, William discovers that Krum has been taken away by the Sparkling Phantom Transfer.

Twinkle only listens to Barty Jr., who is back with Voldemort.

Voldemort had no reason to need Krum, all he needed was Harry.

As a result, William deduced that Harry was no longer at Hogwarts.

These speculations have been repeatedly mentioned more than once in the previous article, and there are no loopholes in logic.

This, then, brings up a paradox.

William needs to investigate the deaths of several people, but Harry is no longer at school.

William had to get out.

But because of the first rule, he couldn't leave.

This is an objective unfinished task, stuck in a time loop.

Then, you can only go to Vivien to make a deal.

This deal cannot be avoided, and only she can crack the magic of Ravenclaw and get William out.

When you can only trade with one person, they are in the market, and there is information asymmetry, and it is possible to be cheated.

Also, as mentioned earlier, Dumbledore didn't want William to stop Voldemort.

The reason is also simple, because Voldemort is not inside Hogwarts.

If William sets such a goal, he will be stuck in a time loop.

But now William has to face Voldemort again, and the two are not contradictory.

It wasn't William who wanted to go, but Harry was with Voldemort and he had to go.

Take advantage of the fishing time to explain, and ask for a recommendation ticket by the way.

The crow is such a lifelong request.