[quote=@Dawnscroll] [@Vec] How about this, since the universe isn't and doesn't function like ours: The Sun ISN'T A star. Stars aren't suns. There can be more than one sun, but they're very different... Every mythology in existence claimed the sun and stars were different things. Objects or people and so forth. Never DID they Say "THESE ARE THE SAME things, EXCEPT THIS one is closer and those are further away. So maybe you can be God of the sun. The big ball that lights the day, allows crops to grow, warms the planet. I'm the god of the things that twinkle in the night sky at night and tell stories through their arrangement. You don't touch mine, I don't touch yours. Sounds fair? [/quote] I believe physics do, in fact, still work in this universe (unless GMs think otherwise). Yes, magic exists as well and it can override physics, but before magic is used, physics is there, it exists. What you are describing is basically what humans and generally, every other living thing sees when they look up in the night sky, and that is the stars, which are in fact the suns of their respective solar systems. You can't just say that a Sun isn't a star and that a star isn't a sun. It just doesn't work that way. If a sun wasn't a star then what exactly would it be? And, if a star isn't a sun, how exactly does it twinkle in the night sky? :/ And one more thing. Say something happens and we travel to a completely different solar system. Would that big ball of plasma that is in the center of the system be a star or a sun? And what of the sun in our solar system when viewed from THAT solar system? Would that be a star? or a sun? You see where I'm getting at?