Subject: Yahtzee! Am I doing this right?
Author:
Posted on: 2023-06-30 14:06:22 UTC

Sugar, man? Frigging sugar?

Yeah, it was an offhand mention in the books that the potion tastes horrible but couldn't be adjusted for taste as sugar would render the whole potion ineffective. So sabotaging the potion instead of just having Lupin miss a dose felt like less people holding the idiot ball where the potion was concerned. I mean, it's not as if Sev was drinking the potion herself...

Sev modified Pettigrew’s memories . . . meaning to convince him that Lily and Harry were really dead, I imagine?

So Peter was originally the one to kill Harry and Lily, since Gaunt assumed Sev would jump at the chance to kill James. Sev finds out Lily (and Harry) were also marked for death, and she forces Peter to switch assignments with her. Peter kills James, and then tells Sirius that Sev was the one who killed all of the Potters. Sev finds Peter and modifies his memories to believe he was actually the one who killed all of the Potters. Gaunt basically gets the report, then, that Peter had gone a bit zealous and wiped out the Potters entirely, and so he has further use for Peter by asking him to spy on the Weasleys.

So then Peter fakes his death (which is how Lupin finds his clothes and finger at the Point of Despair) and goes off to hide as a rat with the Weasleys. Roll ahead to 1991 and suddenly Lily and Harry are alive again, so Peter figures out that Sev modified his memories to make him think he killed all of the Potters. Hence his revenge plot. He's definitely got... more initiative... than the canon version! But then again, this variation of Peter is basically a blackpilled incel, so...

The concrete slab of chocolate in the Hospital Wing is actually a detail from the books, iirc...

(I think maybe you meant bl10 on this chapter’s warning?)

I did, womp womp.

Sounds like he convinced Lucius to get the Wizengamot to commute Buckbeak’s sentence, to release?

Yeah, he had a fight with Lucius over the spring holidays over Buckbeak, using Harry's rationale that killing Buckbeak wouldn't make Hagrid's class any safer, therefore their beef is with Hagrid, not Buckbeak. Which, I mean, given how Hagrid's classes turned out in the books... dude's a nice guy, but his pedagogical skills need work. It's clear he misjudges how dangerous certain creatures are, because his bigger size and strength gives him extra hardiness against dangerous creatures--tiny frail kids and teenagers can't handle these monsters in the same way, and his inability to see that hampers his judgement on what's appropriate in class. An entire year of Flobberworms is way too much; followed by a year of an experimental monstrosity like the Blast-Ended Skrewts, and it's a miracle Harry got Exceeds Expectations on his Care of Magical Creatures O.W.L.

In any case, I think Hagrid's strengths (pun intended?) lie more in diplomacy with the creatures of the Forbidden Forest. He's best friends with the leader of the Acromantula colony, and at least in this verse he's Dumbledore's envoy with the Centaur herd, too. So I want to strengthen that side of him, rather than insist he's a good teacher when he objectively, even by the book characters' admissions, isn't.

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