Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Literature / TheSisterVerseAndTheTalonsOfRuin

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ShoutOut: Enough that James starts pointing them out. To name a few: ''[[Website/SCPFoundation the SCP Series]]'', ''Film/JacobsLadder'', ''VideoGame/SilentHill2'', ''VisualNovel/SayaNoUta'', ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', ''VisualNovel/KatawaShoujo'', ''VideoGame/PathOfExile'', ''VideoGame/EveOnline'', ''VideoGame/{{Starcraft}}'', ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', ''Film/MadMax'', ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'', ''Literature/TheKingInYellow'', and ''Film/{{Martyrs}}''.

to:

* ShoutOut: Enough that James starts pointing them out. To name a few: ''[[Website/SCPFoundation the SCP Series]]'', ''Film/JacobsLadder'', ''VideoGame/SilentHill2'', ''VisualNovel/SayaNoUta'', ''VisualNovel/TheSongOfSaya'', ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', ''VisualNovel/KatawaShoujo'', ''VideoGame/PathOfExile'', ''VideoGame/EveOnline'', ''VideoGame/{{Starcraft}}'', ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', ''Film/MadMax'', ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'', ''Literature/TheKingInYellow'', and ''Film/{{Martyrs}}''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:


* ShoutOut: Enough that James starts pointing them out. To name a few: ''[[Wiki/SCPFoundation the SCP Series]]'', ''Film/JacobsLadder'', ''VideoGame/SilentHill2'', ''VisualNovel/SayaNoUta'', ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', ''VisualNovel/KatawaShoujo'', ''VideoGame/PathOfExile'', ''VideoGame/EveOnline'', ''VideoGame/{{Starcraft}}'', ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', ''Film/MadMax'', ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'', ''Literature/TheKingInYellow'', and ''Film/{{Martyrs}}''.

to:

* ShoutOut: Enough that James starts pointing them out. To name a few: ''[[Wiki/SCPFoundation ''[[Website/SCPFoundation the SCP Series]]'', ''Film/JacobsLadder'', ''VideoGame/SilentHill2'', ''VisualNovel/SayaNoUta'', ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', ''VisualNovel/KatawaShoujo'', ''VideoGame/PathOfExile'', ''VideoGame/EveOnline'', ''VideoGame/{{Starcraft}}'', ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', ''Film/MadMax'', ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'', ''Literature/TheKingInYellow'', and ''Film/{{Martyrs}}''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Up To Eleven is a defunct trope


It's very much a story about violence, and it has [[UpToEleven plenty]] to go around. It's divided into three acts, each introducing a new set of characters who have to wade through an ocean of MindScrew and {{Gorn}} as they try and piece together what’s actually happening to them. [[TraumaCongaLine It doesn’t quite work out]].

to:

It's very much a story about violence, and it has [[UpToEleven plenty]] plenty to go around. It's divided into three acts, each introducing a new set of characters who have to wade through an ocean of MindScrew and {{Gorn}} as they try and piece together what’s actually happening to them. [[TraumaCongaLine It doesn’t quite work out]].



* MindScrew: The overall arc has a lot of this, but when reality breaks down near the end of act 1, [[UpToEleven things get weird]].

to:

* MindScrew: The overall arc has a lot of this, but when reality breaks down near the end of act 1, [[UpToEleven things get weird]].weird.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Editing body


It's very much a story about violence, and it has [[UpToEleven plenty]] to go around. It's divided into three acts, each introducing a new set of characters who have to wade through an ocean of MindScrew and {{Gorn}} as they try and piece together what’s actually happening to them.

[[TraumaCongaLine It doesn’t quite work out]].

to:

It's very much a story about violence, and it has [[UpToEleven plenty]] to go around. It's divided into three acts, each introducing a new set of characters who have to wade through an ocean of MindScrew and {{Gorn}} as they try and piece together what’s actually happening to them.

them. [[TraumaCongaLine It doesn’t quite work out]].
out]].

Followed by ''Literature/TheSisterVerseAndTheDevouringGlass''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Added more description


The story is divided into three acts, each introducing a new set of characters who have to wade through an ocean of MindScrew and {{Gorn}} as they try and piece together what’s actually happening to them.

to:

The It's very much a story is about violence, and it has [[UpToEleven plenty]] to go around. It's divided into three acts, each introducing a new set of characters who have to wade through an ocean of MindScrew and {{Gorn}} as they try and piece together what’s actually happening to them.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Changed phrasing


[[TraumaCongaLine It doesn’t end well]].

to:

[[TraumaCongaLine It doesn’t end well]].
quite work out]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Updating cover


[[quoteright:286:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/nc_tvt.jpg]]

to:

[[quoteright:286:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/nc_tvt.jpg]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/cover_f2_tvt.jpg]]

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ShoutOut: Enough that James starts pointing them out. To name a few: ''[[Wiki/SCPFoundation the SCP Series]]'', ''Film/JacobsLadder'', ''VideoGame/SilentHill2'', ''VisualNovel/SayaNoUta'', ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', ''VisualNovel/KatawaShoujo'', ''VideoGame/PathOfExile'', ''VideoGame/EveOnline'', ''VideoGame/{{Starcraft}}'', ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', ''Franchise/MadMax'', ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'', ''Literature/TheKingInYellow'', and ''Film/{{Martyrs}}''.

to:

* ShoutOut: Enough that James starts pointing them out. To name a few: ''[[Wiki/SCPFoundation the SCP Series]]'', ''Film/JacobsLadder'', ''VideoGame/SilentHill2'', ''VisualNovel/SayaNoUta'', ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', ''VisualNovel/KatawaShoujo'', ''VideoGame/PathOfExile'', ''VideoGame/EveOnline'', ''VideoGame/{{Starcraft}}'', ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', ''Franchise/MadMax'', ''Film/MadMax'', ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'', ''Literature/TheKingInYellow'', and ''Film/{{Martyrs}}''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Updating cover


[[quoteright:286:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tvt_tor_cover.jpg]]

to:

[[quoteright:286:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tvt_tor_cover.org/pmwiki/pub/images/nc_tvt.jpg]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Changed an entry


* TrainingFromHell: Implied to have been what happened to Paige.

to:

* TrainingFromHell: Implied to have been what happened to Paige. This is also technically the fate of the ascendants, given that a side effect of their reincarnation cycles is the tempering of their flesh.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Changing an entry


* HeroicBSOD: [[spoiler: When Kal finds out that his daughter was taken, he goes back to the mines of Octavia and absorbs the souls of any guards who stand in his way – something he previously refused to do, which led to him losing his daughter.]]

to:

* HeroicBSOD: [[spoiler: When Kal finds out that his daughter was taken, he goes marches straight back to the mines of Octavia and absorbs the souls of soul drains any guards who stand in his way – something he previously refused to do, which led to him losing his daughter.daughter in the first place.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Editing an entry


* TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt: [[spoiler: Implied to be the consequence of the wall’s destruction, but given that there’s three books left, it’s bound to be a slow apocalypse.]]

to:

* TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt: [[spoiler: Implied to be the consequence of the wall’s destruction, but given that there’s three books left, it’s bound to be a slow apocalypse.]]]] This is also a potential result of Diana's story, because if she becomes an ascendant, her reality and everyone in it will either cease to exist, or be reinserted into another story.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Editing an entry


* DramaticIrony: Used sparingly in act 1 between John and Paige. Also a consequence of reading the documents.

to:

* DramaticIrony: Used sparingly in act 1 between John and Paige. Also Early on, John visits an address in search of a killer. The killer, revealed as Paige to the audience in a previous scene, answers the door and impersonates the owner of the home while the real owner is tied up in the basement. This trope is also an inevitable consequence of reading the documents.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Modifying entry


* TheCracker: Diana and Elliot make a living off black hat hacking.

to:

* TheCracker: Diana and Elliot make a living off black hat hacking. Their heist in the story has them acquiring and selling the password hashes of a banking conglomerate.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Changing an entry


* ShoutOut: Enough that James starts pointing them out. To name a few: ''[[Wiki/SCPFoundation the SCP Series]]'', ''Film/JacobsLadder'', ''VideoGame/SilentHill2'', ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', ''VisualNovel/KatawaShoujo'', ''VideoGame/PathOfExile'', ''VideoGame/EveOnline'', ''VideoGame/{{Starcraft}}'', ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', ''Franchise/MadMax'', ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'', ''Literature/TheKingInYellow'', and ''Film/{{Martyrs}}''.

to:

* ShoutOut: Enough that James starts pointing them out. To name a few: ''[[Wiki/SCPFoundation the SCP Series]]'', ''Film/JacobsLadder'', ''VideoGame/SilentHill2'', ''VisualNovel/SayaNoUta'', ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', ''VisualNovel/KatawaShoujo'', ''VideoGame/PathOfExile'', ''VideoGame/EveOnline'', ''VideoGame/{{Starcraft}}'', ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', ''Franchise/MadMax'', ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'', ''Literature/TheKingInYellow'', and ''Film/{{Martyrs}}''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Adding link


''The Sister Verse and the Talons of Ruin'' is the first book in ''the Sister Verse'' series by Amelie C. Langlois. It follows John, a detective who is being slowly driven insane by a shapeshifting entity known as [[EldritchAbomination the Lord in White]], who created his reality for the sole purpose of making him suffer.

to:

''The Sister Verse and the Talons of Ruin'' is the first book in ''the Sister Verse'' series by [[Creator/AmelieCLanglois Amelie C. Langlois.Langlois]]. It follows John, a detective who is being slowly driven insane by a shapeshifting entity known as [[EldritchAbomination the Lord in White]], who created his reality for the sole purpose of making him suffer.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Added two entries

Added DiffLines:

* {{Autocannibalism}}: John starts eating his own fingers and licking up blood when the Lord in White possesses him on the highway.


Added DiffLines:

* ImAHumanitarian: The Sisters of Ruin butcher men for their meat. Jacob eats some when invited to by Alasha, much to everyone's amusement, but he doesn't realize what it is.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Adding an entry

Added DiffLines:

* EmptyShell: [[spoiler: John is reduced to this at the end of act 1, when the Lord in White breaks his mind through constant physical and psychological torture.]] Likewise, this is probably the consequence of any ascendant's story in the Sister Verse.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Fixing a link


* Dystopia: Diana's world in act 3. Trent's world in act 1 was slowly progressing toward this, at least until the universe implodes.

to:

* Dystopia: {{Dystopia}}: Diana's world in act 3. Trent's world in act 1 was slowly progressing toward this, at least until the universe implodes.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Fixing a link


* Shapeshifting: Constantly used by the Lord in White, most notably to [[spoiler: impersonate Echo in act 2.]]

to:

* Shapeshifting: {{Shapeshifting}}: Constantly used by the Lord in White, most notably to [[spoiler: impersonate Echo in act 2.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Removing subjectives


* CompleteMonster: Paige and Ragnar. The Lord in White and its darklings, full stop.



* IronWoobie: Kal, who started out as a good guy who only wanted to protect his daughter from the world.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Creating work page

Added DiffLines:

[[quoteright:286:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tvt_tor_cover.jpg]]

->''"Blood is the river that flows between worlds."''

''The Sister Verse and the Talons of Ruin'' is the first book in ''the Sister Verse'' series by Amelie C. Langlois. It follows John, a detective who is being slowly driven insane by a shapeshifting entity known as [[EldritchAbomination the Lord in White]], who created his reality for the sole purpose of making him suffer.

The story is divided into three acts, each introducing a new set of characters who have to wade through an ocean of MindScrew and {{Gorn}} as they try and piece together what’s actually happening to them.

[[TraumaCongaLine It doesn’t end well]].

----
!!''The Sister Verse and the Talons of Ruin'' contains examples of:

* AfterTheEnd: Everything but act 1. The Lord in White and the darklings have already destroyed civilization and much of its infrastructure. The characters seen in the story are the ones still trying to recover from it, even hundreds of years later.
* AnyoneCanDie: Most characters have a very short life-expectancy, but a few get better.
* ApocalypticLog: The Willow and the Flame. Records from Mercury Station and Project Merlin in act 1 also get progressively more dire as the scientists realize what they're actually dealing with.
* TheAssimilator: The Sister Verse and its avatar, the Lord in White.
* BeneathTheEarth: The waygate beneath Octavia.
* BlankSlate: Implied to be the fate of everyone trapped in the Sister Verse. Jacob also somewhat fits this, [[spoiler: being a composite of dead halaani.]]
* BloodKnight: Ragnar, the Lord in White, and ''all'' the Sisters of Ruin.
* BreakingTheFourthWall: [[spoiler: The Lord in White is completely aware that it’s in a fictional universe, and is implied to have the power to rewrite parts of the story, being the avatar of the Sister Verse. It often refers to the reader directly, as well as real world occurrences and future in-universe events, to the point that it literally recites lines from the book. The documents interspersed throughout the text follow conventions that hint at them not being entirely real, such as almost every number being a component of the perfect number 6, and the total number of sixes being divisible by 3. This, combined with the artifice of constant references, makes the reader doubt whether anything after act 1 is even happening, or if it’s just another one of John’s lives.]]
* ByronicHero: Diana is a violent and selfish person who has no problem with killing anyone she even remotely dislikes, often lapsing into the territory of VillainProtagonist.
* ChekhovsArmoury: A lot of details are set up in advance, and then show up again in a later chapter or act. This is essentially the purpose of the documents, apart from providing backstory.
* TheChessmaster: The Lord in White and the Astral Lords. Jin is implied to be this, though arguably failed.
* CombatTentacles: Some of the Lord in White’s more bizarre forms.
* CompleteMonster: Paige and Ragnar. The Lord in White and its darklings, full stop.
* ConditionedToAcceptHorror: John and the darklings. Diana, to some degree.
* TheConspiracy: Literally everything.
* TheCorruption: The Lord in White, and the blood of the Astral Lords, both of which seem to turn everything into horrific monsters.
* CosmicHorrorReveal: When the Lord in White starts formally showing up, but the Mercury Station documents imply it beforehand.
* CosmicHorrorStory: What the story is eventually revealed to be.
* CosmicPlaything: All the characters do very little of their own free will, and it’s implied that the Lord in White [[spoiler: has control over all the events of the story.]] Diana would like to be free of this, though it’s unclear if Singer’s plan will pull through.
* TheCracker: Diana and Elliot make a living off black hat hacking.
* CrapsackWorld: And how.
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: This happens a lot, in vivid detail. It’s probably a lot harder to find instances of clean deaths in the story.
* DarkAndTroubledPast: ''Literally every character''. The Lord in White makes fun of John and Diana for this, even though [[spoiler: it essentially created them.]]
* DeathIsCheap: Played with. [[spoiler: Everyone's copy dies in the first part of act 1. They wake up physically intact in the second part, and apart from Ragnar, remain that way until the Lord in White shows up. Otherwise, people in the Glade technically can’t die unless they're psychopaths, but whatever they ultimately wind up as usually bears no physical or mental resemblance to the original.]]
* DownerEnding: [[spoiler: Almost everywhere. The last act has a brief hope spot, but even that has sinister undertones.]]
* DramaticIrony: Used sparingly in act 1 between John and Paige. Also a consequence of reading the documents.
* DrivenToSuicide: Diana’s introduction, but Singer saves her. Rousseau, sort of.
* DugTooDeep: The salt mines of Octavia, revealing one of the waygates to the Dreadlands.
* Dystopia: Diana's world in act 3. Trent's world in act 1 was slowly progressing toward this, at least until the universe implodes.
* EldritchAbomination: The Lord in White and the Astral Lords, though it’s hard to find things in the Dreadlands that ''don’t'' fit this.
* EldritchLocation: The Glade, and anywhere that’s been around the Lord in White for too long. Arguably the Sister Verse as a whole.
* TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt: [[spoiler: Implied to be the consequence of the wall’s destruction, but given that there’s three books left, it’s bound to be a slow apocalypse.]]
* {{Foreshadowing}}: Everywhere. Characters, settings, and events in the story are often briefly mentioned or alluded to in some way long before being formally introduced.
* GardenOfEvil: The Glade, in some incarnations, appearing as a foggy, blue hedge maze that gets progressively more disturbing the further you go, or a forest made out of liquid meat.
* GenderBender: The ascendants that destroyed most of Jacob’s world prior to the events of act 2 intentionally assumed the forms of women to cause infighting among the humans.
* GoodIsNotNice: John is an asshole to almost everyone he meets, and is incredibly unstable, but is ultimately a good person.
* {{Gorn}}: It’s hard to find scenes in the book that aren’t vividly describing acts of violence, and some of the fight scenes go on for several pages. The Lord in White references this in-universe while possessing Callisto.
* HeroicBSOD: [[spoiler: When Kal finds out that his daughter was taken, he goes back to the mines of Octavia and absorbs the souls of any guards who stand in his way – something he previously refused to do, which led to him losing his daughter.]]
* HollywoodHacking: Averted fairly well in act 3. There’s some use of future technology, like the bolt drives, but its function is usually just a more efficient analog to something that already exists.
* HumanitysWake: The raathi, the Crest, and the halaani.
* HumansAreBastards: The story definitely leans more toward this. Almost everyone is completely nihilistic, and anybody who isn’t gets a harsh reality check sooner or later.
* IHaveManyNames: The Lord in White, Mercury, the Red Willow, Xil-Nasha.
* TheIlluminati: Implied in act 1 through Jin.
* IronWoobie: Kal, who started out as a good guy who only wanted to protect his daughter from the world.
* KansasCityShuffle: The plot surrounding the wall is essentially a massive sequence of these, caught between multiple players.
* LaserGuidedAmnesia: Jacob. [[spoiler: John for the first bit of act 3.]]
* LostTechnology: The Sisters of Ruin scavenged their weapons and vehicles from the fallen cities and military bases, and modified them to their own ends.
* LovecraftianSuperpower: The “magic” of the Lord in White and its darklings revolves around this, usually using some form of extreme body horror as a weapon.
* LovecraftLite: Straddles the line. There are a lot of hopeful moments, but they almost ''never'' work out. [[spoiler: Diana got the Talons of Ruin, but billions of people died in the process, including most of the halaani race, and whether or not Singer’s plan can actually succeed is a matter of debate.]]
* LowCultureHighTech: The Sisters of Ruin are a collective of cannibalistic [[BloodKnight Blood Knights]] who use scavenged technology.
* MindRape: The Lord in White in a nutshell. The Astral Lords do this out of indifference, and the dream eater that Kal encountered also arguably counts when it makes him relive his childhood while it’s eating all his friends.
* MindScrew: The overall arc has a lot of this, but when reality breaks down near the end of act 1, [[UpToEleven things get weird]].
* MiseryBuildsCharacter: Literally. Flesh that falls under the Lord in White’s influence is tempered by pain, granting it the superhuman durability and strength that John and the darklings have.
* MoreThanMindControl: A recurring theme in the story. John, Kal, and Exoniga are the most frequent victims. Diana is in it for the long game.
* {{Muggles}}: The citizens of the fifth sphere in act 1 ''really'' hate the marks, and seem to be perfectly fine with leveling entire city blocks just to stamp them out.
* MushroomSamba: Mercury Station and the Glade are like this, but not because of drugs. Act 3’s journey through the Dreadlands reads like this, thanks to the Lord in White blending all the worlds together. It's implied that John had a little too many of these in his past.
* MysticalPlague: What people initially think is happening when they start getting possessed by the Lord in White.
* NiceJobBreakingItHero: [[spoiler: The ending of act 3, but it’s apparently for the best.]]
* OneWorldOrder: Just about every corrupt government in the story.
* PiecesOfGod: Xil-Nasha translates to “the shard,” because the Lord in White was [[spoiler: split apart by the materialization of the wall.]]
* {{Precursors}}: The Crest are implied to have been a distant evolutionary state of humanity wiped out by the Lord in White. They made the Dreadlands, and much of the ruined infrastructure that still remains in it.
* ProperlyParanoid: John thinks he’s constantly being watched. He is.
* PsychologicalHorror: The Lord in White tortures its victims with this by forcing them into vivid hallucinations. The Astral Lords do the same to Diana, albeit probably unintentionally.
* RapeAsBackstory: John was mercilessly abused by his father [[spoiler: at the Lord in White’s request]], so his hallucinations tend to be uncomfortably sexual. Paige is implied to have suffered a similar fate, though it's difficult to say what actually happened.
* RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil: John's mindset when he sees what the Lord in White likely did to a little boy in the town of Antigone, likely because it reminds him of his father.
* RewatchBonus: The story is difficult to completely understand on the first go, and a lot of the scenes read completely different if you know what's going to happen.
* ScavengerWorld: The Dreadlands, and Jacob’s universe.
* Shapeshifting: Constantly used by the Lord in White, most notably to [[spoiler: impersonate Echo in act 2.]]
* ShoutOut: Enough that James starts pointing them out. To name a few: ''[[Wiki/SCPFoundation the SCP Series]]'', ''Film/JacobsLadder'', ''VideoGame/SilentHill2'', ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', ''VisualNovel/KatawaShoujo'', ''VideoGame/PathOfExile'', ''VideoGame/EveOnline'', ''VideoGame/{{Starcraft}}'', ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', ''Franchise/MadMax'', ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'', ''Literature/TheKingInYellow'', and ''Film/{{Martyrs}}''.
* SinisterSurveillance: In most of Meridian, much to Diana's displeasure. Also present in act 1, though how much of it is actually real is up for debate.
* TheSociopath: Ragnar, Paige, and probably Gaius. Diana has little regard for anyone but herself, and goes along with Singer’s plan almost entirely out of self-interest. It’s arguable whether she cares about Elliot or not, especially after what happens in the Glade.
* SpiderLimbs: A feature associated with the Lord in White, and presumably with much of the Outer Dark in general. Or at least, that’s how we see it. It could just be an echo of John’s fear of spiders.
* SurrealHorror: This story lives and breathes this trope, particularly when the Lord in White or the Astral Lords are involved.
* ThroughTheEyesOfMadness: John, Jacob, and Diana. Hallucinations are very common, especially around the Lord in White.
* TimeAbyss: The Lord in White and the Astral Lords. Everyone that's been to the Glade is usually extremely old, thanks to its time-warping effects, but Diana and Elliot got out relatively intact.
* TomeOfEldritchLore: The Sister Verse.
* TrainingFromHell: Implied to have been what happened to Paige.
* TraumaCongaLine: [[spoiler: John’s “lives” are designed to be this, and that probably goes for any other ascendants trapped in the Glade. Exoniga and Kal's storyline in act 2 is literally just an endless sequence of tragedies.]]
* UncertainDoom: Implied to be the eventual fate of everything.
* WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity: What usually happens to people that use the Lord in White’s powers. Darklings don’t seem like the most stable bunch.
* YouCannotGraspTheTrueForm: All the extradimensional characters. When the Lord in White’s form starts to destabilize, all anyone usually sees is bloody teeth. The closest approximation is implied to be the liquid tree void in the Glade. Najaka manifests as ultraviolet light, [[spoiler: though Diana can supposedly see her in the end when the Lord in White renders her catatonic.]]
----

Top