I dunno which one the 22nd book is, it's been ages since I read the books..
It was the last book of the David trilogy.
but the Blue Box was highly advanced technology, who's to say that it wouldn't have made a huge explosion or taken away the animorphs's powers if that particular box was destroyed?
For it to have taken away their powers, they would have had to remain connected to it somehow. Which I suppose is possible, but doesn't really seem too likely somehow. And it's also worth pointing out that, until book 20, they all thought that it was destroyed, including Ax. He seemed pretty surprised that it survived. Now, if he thought it had been destroyed, and destroying it would remove their powers, why didn't he ever go "Hey, wait a minute . . . "?
probably kept it intact incase an of them became nothlits...
Ax presumably would have known that the blue box does not work on nothlits.
Being able to destroy the cube wasn't the problem, as Ax says it's easily possible. Even without a Dracon Beam, a large hammer, dropping off a cliff or being sat on by a freaking Elephant would most likely do the job just fine.
You make some valid points Dino, but I'm afraid I have to disagree with you on this one. Despite all the problems the box caused, the Animorphs would have been completely screwed without it. The Auxilary Animorphs were a highly valuable asset towards the end of the war, particularly in the mission to destroy the Yeerk Pool and providing the distraction in #53 to cover up the fact that the others were already on board the ship.
Okay, so I hadn't thought about the mission to destroy the Yeerk pool. True, the Auxillaries were a valuable help in that book, and not destroying the Yeerk pool would have completely changed the outcome, probably meaning that the Animorphs lost the war. So I'll give you the point there.
But in the final battle, itself? The Auxillaries didn't actually make that much difference. Yeah, they slowed down the Yeerks by the tiniest bit while V3 picked them all off one by one. But they still would have had Doubleday's troups, which provided plenty of a distraction.
And yes, the battle would have been far different in many other ways, too. They never would have encountered Arbron, they never would have struck a deal with Tom, they never would have had Yeerks questioning en masse what the empire was doing. So Jake would have had to have found a different way aboard the Pool Ship, but I think that, with Erek's help and by tricking a few controllers, they still could have done it.
Furthermore, I think the Yeerks still would have surrendered at the end. Like it was said in book 6, only
humans continue to fight when there is no hope of victory. So I don't think the morphing power actually had anything to do with their surrender, or at least, it wasn't the biggest factor.
Oh it would have happened, but without the morphing cube there wouldn't have been the Buffa-human to help them. With his help, they might not have evaded the Yeerks long enough to take out the device that was tracking them. Even without the cube, I'm pretty sure the Yeerks could track them when they morphed.
Nope, gotta keep disagreeing with you. The Helmacrons came to earth for the blue box. Without it, they may still have been attracted by the Animorphs' morphing energy, but once they saw that the energy was only being produced by them, they would have turned around and left. Thus depriving the Yeerks of the morphing-sensor technology.
Don't know how I feel about that part, though. I actually kind of liked the first Helmacron book. But I suppose it would be worth it to ret-con #39.