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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wraith_knight_2.jpg]]
2 [[caption-width-right:350: Evil is a matter of perspective.]]
3
4''Wraith Knight'' is a {{Deconstruction}} HighFantasy series by Creator/CTPhipps.
5
6[[EvilOverlord The King Below]], Enemy of the World, [[PredecessorVillain is dead]]. Will his successor save the world...or rule it? Jacob Riverson was once the greatest hero of an age. Cut down during what should have been the final battle against the King Below, he was condemned to centuries of torment as a Wraith Knight in the service of said monster.
7
8With the destruction of his master, Jacob finds his free will returning and discovers he is in a world torn by civil war between the King Below's former slaves and the heroes who "saved" them. Joining forces with the overly-idealistic but brilliant warrior [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething Regina Whitetremor]] and sorceress [[LadyOfBlackMagic Serah Brightwaters]], Jacob must determine whether he has any place in the new world and whether his destiny is as a hero or monster. Or both.
9
10Books in the series:
11
12[[index]]
13* ''Wraith Knight'' (2016)
14* ''Literature/WraithLord'' (2019)
15* ''Literature/WraithKing'' (2023)
16[[/index]]
17
18It is part of the Literature/{{Futurepunk}} setting, which is TheVerse for all Creator/CTPhipps' science fiction stories.
19
20----
21
22[[foldercontrol]]
23
24[[folder: Series]]
25* AbusivePrecursors: No less than two of them with the Terralan Dominion serving as TheEmpire in the distant past [[spoiler: and the First Humans being the people who made the world as a gigantic theme park.]]
26* ActionGirl: Regina is a dragonriding, dragonslaying, sword-swinging daredevil. Serah can kill a hundred people with a single spell. Half of the Nine Heroes are also women, including their leader, Morwen. It's implied there's literally as many of these as men in the setting too.
27* AffectionateParody: A DownplayedTrope example as the story is entirely serious and really you need to know J.R.R Tolkien to get all the references but the entire book includes innumerable digs at the typical Tolkien pastiche as well as assumptions of the original work. These include AlwaysChaoticEvil races, the omnibenevolence of supernatural beings, the "Return of the King" being anything other than a usurption, CantArgueWithElves, and that smaller weaker races wouldn't get swept up in events.
28* AIIsACrapshoot: [[spoiler: The setting is actually an enormous playground of SufficientlyAdvanced humans 10,000+ years in the future. The three ruling AIs eventually degenerated into believing themselves gods after being abandoned by their masters.]]
29* AlwaysChaoticEvil: Deconstructed, Reconstructed, and Subverted. The Shadowkind races were created to be plagues on the Lightborn races but have their own moralities as well as cultures. Generally, though, they did all of their atrocities on the orders of the King Below and because their homeland was an icy hellhole compared to the Southerner's nicer climate.
30* AmbiguouslyBrown:
31** The physical description of the High Humans indicates that they are mostly this, being brown or black skinned with crystal blue eyes.
32** The Riverfolk are also this as they are descendants of the Indras, G'Tay, and Gael countries plus various other refugee peoples. This includes Jacob in his mortal years.
33* AncientConspiracy: The Oghma are a group of archmages who manipulate events throughout the world to preserve civilization through the Great Shadow Wars.
34* AncientTradition: The Shadowguard are basically the [[VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins Grey Wardens]] or [[Series/GameOfThrones Night's Watch]] of the setting. They are a group of working class knights, wizards, and professional killers who include many criminals among them. They exist for the purpose of destroying the Shadowkind and fighting the King Below, no matter how many centuries it takes to ultimately defeat him.
35* ArcWords:
36** Arcus Maeharl a.k.a "Shadow aid, my brother."
37** The war was never meant to end.
38* AristocratsAreEvil: The aristocracy is frequently changed for being corrupt, brutal, and useless. {{Subverted}} by Regina, who is a RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething.
39* TheAntiGod: The King Below is considered the equal and opposite to the King Above, representing chaos, madness, darkness, and evil to the King Above's order, logic, light, and good. This proves to be significantly more complicated than it appears as the Lawgiver proves to be a tyrant while the King Below seems more mischievous than actually evil. [[spoiler: Then we discover they were actually allies the entire time.]]
40* BadPowersGoodPeople: A common FantasticRacism of the setting. Anyone who displays a facility with shadow magic, is treated as a ticking time bomb at best or just murdered out of hand. Many of them actually end up in the King Below's service because it's better than the alternative.
41* BlackAndGrayMorality: The series subverts a lot of traditional high fantasy tropes as the good side of light and order isn't particularly nice. [[spoiler: The Lawgiver is a tyrant, the Nine Heroes are ruthless conquerors, and even Saint Jassamine is a religious fanatic. However, the Shadowkind AKA the forces of darkness and chaos aren't much better. Even protagonist has a DarkAndTroubledPast where he did some pretty awful stuff in the name of the greater good.]]
42* TheBlackSmith: The forging of magical items is an important part of the setting with this trade being something that a lot of magicians have to learn. A handful of wizards have also ascended to become UltimateBlacksmith types like Co'Fannon, Tharadon the Black, and [[spoiler: Jacob Riverson]]
43* CargoCult: [[spoiler: The King Below, Lawgiver, and Earthmother turn out to have been the AIs put in charge of minding the Three Worlds for the First Humans. Then some sort of disaster occurred and it became home to the Terralan refugees. This resulted in the slow degredation of the AI's sanity as their minds collapsed under contradictory directives of caring for the refugees versus managing the location. After the refugees were destroyed, the AI were worshiped by the surviving humans and began to engage in BelievingTheirOwnLies]]
44* ClarkesThirdLaw: [[spoiler: The Wraith Knight series takes place in the far-far future of the author's other science fiction settings like Literature/AgentG and ''Literature/LucifersStar.'' The world was created as a playground for the godlike First Humans.]]
45* CorruptChurch: The Grand Temple during the time of Jacob's mortal days is a grand guginol of corruption, excess, and hypocrisy. [[spoiler: Which is why Jacob lets its leaders be burned alive.]]
46* CrystalDragonJesus: The Church of the Lawgiver is a massive religion that embodies many styles and ethics of Christianity in the Middle Ages. It even has its own version of Marian worship with the Great Mother. It is a polytheistic religion, though, that has a GodOfEvil set up as TheAntiGod to the Lawgiver.
47* CycleOfRevenge: A CentralTheme of the books is the attempts to get justice for past crimes and grievances results in this. It is particular in Regina's case as her insistence on avenging Whitehold results in her dragging the rest of the world into war.
48* DarkFantasy: A {{Deconstruction}} tale of a FallenHero turned HumanoidAbomination that attempts to deal with the heroes of the last war who have become [[FallenHero Fallen Heroes]] themselves. It questions traditional fantasy morality, FantasticRacism, and power structures with a lot of GrayAndGrayMorality.
49* DarkIsEvil: What the majority of the Southern Kingdoms believe about the Shadowkind that threaten them every thousand years or so. The truth is a bit more complicated. It turns out to have been an InvokedTrope as the Trickster deliberately set himself up to be the GodOfEvil.
50* DarkIsNotEvil: The CentralTheme of the books. Jacob is an undead monster formerly enslaved to the GodOfEvil with many evil powers related to cold, shadow, as well as darkness. He is also a NiceGuy who just wants to do what is right (and is terrible at it).
51* {{Deathseeker}}: Implied with the Trickster.
52-->''I’ll kill you!'' I screamed in my mind.
53-->''Perhaps,'' the spirit replied lazily. ''Wouldn’t that be wonderful?''
54* {{Deconstruction}}: A lot of the book is, essentially, a DeconstructiveParody of the Lord of the Rings starting with the premise of, "What if a Ringwraith survived the death of Sauron and decided to go back to being a hero?"
55* DeityOfHumanOrigin: Protagonist, Jacob Riverson, ascends to the rank of becoming the new GodOfEvil after the death of the previous god occupying the role, TheTrickster. He is determined to become an AntiAntiChrist, though. [[spoiler: Later, he brings Regina and Sarah up to his level as well.]]
56* DivineConflict: The setting's history is defined by the ForeverWar between the Lawgiver and the Trickster as the two gods constantly war with each other. The series starts when one of them finally triumphs over the other.
57* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: Jacob and Jassamine's bloody reforms of the Grand Temple have a resemblance to the Protestant Revolution.
58* DragonRider: The Shadowguard, Annessian Empire, and armies of the King Below breed clutches of dragons that they proceed to ride into battle as the settings version of [=WMDs=].
59* DungeonPunk: The seemingly HighFantasy world rapidly shows itself to be full of FantasticRacism, classicism, corrupt gods, religious fanatics, and no actual good guys. How twisted is the world? The best person in the setting may be the GodOfEvil and even he's someone with a DarkAndTroubledPast.
60* TheEmpire: The Anessian Empire is the aggressive, expansionist, and colonialist version of this trope. They have conquered many of their neighbors in the Southern Kingdoms and have even wholesale destroyed a few. They have also gone through periods of retreat.
61* EvilIsDeathlyCold: The King Below and his minions live in the Northern Wasteland, wield ice magic, and have their headquarters at the North Pole (called "The Eyes of the World"). The World Below is also an icy hell for the damned.
62* EvilOverlord:
63** The King Below was this for the entire World Between. When he dies, there was much rejoicing.
64** The Nine Heroes/Nine Usurpers may also be an example of this. They saved the world, only to promptly take it over.
65** Even our heroes can be viewed as this, being mage rulers of the Northern Wasteland.
66* EvilTowerOfOminousness: The Tower of Everfrost is an enormous metal tower in the center of the King Below's capital city in the Eyes of the World. It is also built into a literal hole in the ground that leads directly down to the World Below (Hell).
67* GaslampFantasy: The series is unusual example as it takes place in a HighFantasy setting but which has combined technology with magic after the last war between the DarkLord and TheAlliance. While the protagonist is effectively a Ringwraith, he has to deal with an enormous clockwork spider and the flying airship navy of the Empress.
68* GunsAreUseless: They exist but magic is so prevalent that they're not noticeably better than enhanced arrows or bolts which can be outfitted with runes to create explosions. Also, barriers (magical shields) exist so guns are not nearly as effective as they are in our world.
69* HorsemenOfTheApocalypse: The four Dark Lords (or Wraith Knights) deliberately invoke this. They are the four undead horsemen servants and wizard-knights of the King Below, who is the setting's god of evil. They are the Wraith Knights of War, Despair, Lust, and Plague.
70* LovingAShadow:[[spoiler: This is essentially Jacob's relationship with Jassamine. Jacob has a worshipful and even religious veneration of his lover as well as remembers her in the most flattering of lights. It becomes increasingly clear that Jassamine was a ManipulativeBastard and used him repeatedly to advance her own position before trying to politely pawn him off on some of her female minions when he became politically disadvantageous to love.]]
71* {{Precursors}}: The Terralan Dominion was a High Human civilization of wizards that served as the ruler of the Southern Kingdoms for a thousand years. It is also responsible for the majority of fantastic races and monsters on the planet due to their experiments. They ended up being destroyed by a volcano set off by Valance the Red.
72* OrderVersusChaos: The primary conflict in the series is this rather than GoodVersusEvil. The Lawgiver represents order with its tyranny, expansionism, and religious control. The Trickster by contrast represents freedom, chaos, and resistance. [[spoiler: It's subverted when it's revealed that it is the Lawgiver and his brother RunningBothSides.]]
73* OurLichesAreDifferent: The Wraith Knights of the King Below are all immortal ghost-warriors who can assume physical forms, wear black cloaks, and sport demonsteel armor. They are the leaders of the King Below, a GodOfEvil's armies, and each possesses a magical sword that grants them ResurrectiveImmortality. Of course, the destruction of their sword means that they immediately lose this (and get replaced with whoever figured it out).
74* {{Polyamory}}: [[spoiler: Regina, Jacob, and Serah are all in love with one another to varying degrees by the end of the book. It requires Jacob becoming the God of Darkness to realize that they can just do what they want. Polyarmory is also something that is common in the setting with the nobility known to taking second and third spouses after their primary one.]]
75* ProudWarriorRace: Played with regarding the Formori, who are not AlwaysChaoticEvil but have been used as shock troopers by the King Below for millennium that their culture doesn't know much else but war.
76* {{Pun}}: The World Between AKA Middle Earth.
77* RunningBothSides: [[spoiler: The Lawgiver and the Trickster are revealed to have been allied for the Great Shadow Wars, causing a conflict between "good and evil" so they could encourage more fantasticism in their worshipers. At some point, the Lawgiver, or Jassamine alone decided to make the conflict real and killed the King Below.]]
78* SchizoTech: A pretty big example of it as they still have bows, arrows, and mounted calvary despite having trains as well as electric lights. It's just the bows can shoot faster than guns, the arrows explode, [[DragonRider and the mounted calvary is dragons.]] Oh and giant building-sized golems are serving as bulldoers.
79* SlaveryIsASpecialKindOfEvil: One of the big accomplishments of Jacob and Jassamine during the Temple Reformation was the outlawing of slavery. It's one of the signs of just how bad the Nine Usurpers are in that they have re-instituted it.
80* StandardFantasyRaces: A DownplayedTrope example with Sidhe (elves), Formor (orcs), Trow (Trolls), and Bauchan (Dark Elves). There's also Boggarts, Dryads, giants, and Nockers. This is downplayed due to the fact that they tend to go with a more Celtic mythology influenced version of the characters than pure Tolkien fantasy. [[spoiler: It is also an artificial world created by far future humanity making a playground for themselves.]]
81* StandardFantasySetting: The setting is a collection of fantasy kingdoms of LightIsGood races from a warm Southern continent locked in an eternal war with a DarkIsEvil set of races from the frozen Northern continent. These races include Sidhe (elves), Formor (orcs), and Trow (trolls) with humans locked in the middle. One side is also led by a PhysicalGod GodOfEvil who routinely invades the South while the side of good has a less active GodOfGood. [[spoiler: The subversion is that this is all due to the fact the setting is a playground created by distant future humans and the two gods are working together to create a ForeverWar.]]
82* TheTrickster: [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin The Trickster, natch.]] He is a conniving, sarcastic, and witty prankster in addition to being an EvilOverlord.
83* UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans: More or less the CentralTheme of the books as every villain has this attitude [[spoiler: and the heroes too.]]
84[[/folder]]
85
86[[folder: Wraith Knight]]
87* AnguishedDeclarationOfLove: [[spoiler: Serah gives one to Regina. Jacob eventually gives one to both.]]
88* BodyHorror: Jacob suffers a case of this when he realizes he's got no face. {{Subverted}} when he realizes he can conjure a new body for himself by draining the life force of others.
89* {{Bowdlerise}}: In-universe. The Milkmaid Fair was originally a lewd drinking song in Jacob's time but is now an upbeat children's song with changed lyrics.
90* TheFundamentalist: Both Jacob and Jassamine were this in their original times, being among the few to take the religion of the King Above seriously as the rest of their faith had become the CorruptChurch. They eventually led to a Protestant-style reformation [[spoiler: before Jassamine JumpedOffTheSlipperySlope and became a KnightTemplar. Sadly, it's implied their god approved of this.]]
91* HistoricalHeroUpgrade: [[spoiler: Jassamine was a ManipulativeBastard WellIntentionedExtremist who is remembered as "Saint Jassamine." Contrast to Jacob's HistoricalVillainUpgrade.]]
92** Played straight with Eric the Great, who was a complete scumbag and ThePawn according to Jacob.
93* HistoricalVillainUpgrade: Sort of. Jacob Riverson was a sober, puritanical religious reformer in love with a single woman his entire life. He's remembered by history as a rowdy drunk LovableRogue lecher.
94* KilledOffForReal: [[spoiler: Thomas Brightwaters is the brother to Serah, a LovableRogue, and seemingly part of the main cast but dies unceremoniously in battle halfway through the book.]]
95** [[spoiler: This also happens to Creature toward the end of the book, showing AnyoneCanDie.]]
96* LovableRogue:
97** Jacob is remembered as one of these but was anything but. His reputation is that of a hard drinking, lusty, and semi-blasphemous killer that was, nevertheless, allied to the forces of good. The actual Jacob was a somber, serious, and SingleTargetSexuality hero.
98** Thomas Brightwaters is a more straight example. Being a flamboyant, theatrical, lusty, and cheerful soldier who is better at speeches than war.
99* LoveTriangle: Serah loves Regina but is attracted to Jacob who is falling for Regina but attracted to Serah. [[spoiler: They all end up together in the end.]]
100* OffscreenMomentOfAwesome: Regina takes down all of Jon Bloodthorn's sons and a small army to rescue Jacob's wounded form from the battlefield.
101* RipVanWinkle: Jacob gets hit with this hard when he wakes up after two hundred and fifty years of mind-control.
102* ScrewTheRulesIMakeThem: Jacob's solution to the [[spoiler: situation with the Formor's enslavement. Also, how he manages to resolve the love triangle between him, Serah, and Regina.]]
103* SingleTargetSexuality: Jacob possesses this for Jassamine his entire living life. [[spoiler: It changes when meets Regina and Serah.]]
104* SuicideByCop: More like Suicide By Evil God [[spoiler: Jacob is revealed to have done this when he discovered Jassamine, his one true love, murdered the royal heirs for their magical power.]]
105* TakeAThirdOption: Jacob does this when presented with the choice of enslaving the Formor to fight for him or letting the Nine Heroes/Usurpers run wild with their armies. [[spoiler: He RECRUITS them to fight for him by breaking their magical enslavement.]]
106* TricksterMentor: The Trickster, appropriately enough. Though how much he's manipulating Jacob to do his bidding and how much he's just having fun trolling him is very much up to interpretation.
107* VictoryIsBoring: The Trickster claims that this was why he eventually broke off his occupation of the human lands after winning the Third Shadow War. Once he realised that no great heroes were going to arise to lead a rebellion against him, he just went home and waited for the humans to recover enough to be worth invading again.
108[[/folder]]
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