Shit. Thanks so much for the awesome analysis everyone, I had no idea I'd get this amount of feedback. If I'm not too late to the party, I'l addd in a bit more info considering the large amount of responses.
The fantasy side of this series is a massive amount of interaction between man (and all various sapient life) and Gods. Very powerful physical God's that spend a lot of time waring with eachother; and all together against the oldest God in reality. this infinitely-old God is so very sick of being alive, he is planning to destroy the universe around him in a final attempt to die. The point of the star- water thingo is part of a larger prophecy -?With a flick of an eye a Moon burns,
A Sun drowns,
The Sand writhes
and a Man becomes a God? - that is engineered to temporarily make the protagonist a 'God' in order to pose a significant threat to the old suicidal God and distract him long enough for something to be done to remove him from reality. The incredible energy of a sun dying in a planet of water (held together by the gods as a sort of universal water hole) simultaneously accompanied by various other events occurring is harnessed and used to birth a new god.
There was heaps I hadn't taken into account here, ie the total obliteration of the water world- turning into supermassive amount of steam-, which has really helped me along both scientifically and visually. Thanks everyone; btw TheIronRuler, I will endeavour to get some lesbian elves in there