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15[[quoteright:350:[[VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lumas.png]]]]
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18Ah, the stars. They've fascinated skywatchers throughout all of human history.
19Now, it's been well established that a good way of highlighting how ''other'' your fantasy world is is to [[AlienSky put a different sky above it]]. And as it happens, one of the recurring methods of doing this in fiction is to make the stars literally living entities, optionally ones who can take human form and come down to Earth. The details of how these beings act vary wildly through fiction; sometimes they're fairly human, sometimes they're horrific otherworldly {{Eldritch Abomination}}s. Either way, one major underlying implication of this trope is that our understanding of the universe is nowhere near as sophisticated as we'd like to believe.
20
21Sub-Trope of AnimateInanimateObject.
22
23See also CelestialBody, where a character has star fields and celestial objects marked on their skin, as well as LivingConstellation, StarsAreSouls, TheFaceOfTheSun, and possibly GeniusLoci. SinisterSentientSun is a sub-trope.
24----
25!!Examples
26
27[[foldercontrol]]
28
29[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
30* ''Anime/{{Ojarumaru}}'': In series 19 episode 30, "''Kazuma ni amaetai Tamae''", a pair of shooting stars, brothers Nagareboshi and Tamae, visit Earth and see Kazuma and Ojarumaru. Nagareboshi wants to be piggybacked like how Ojarumaru is, but Tamae struggles to give his younger brother a satisfying piggyback ride.
31[[/folder]]
32
33[[folder:Asian Animation]]
34* ''Animation/HappyHeroes'': A star creature with human-like legs appears in Season 6 episode 44 and is shown to have the ability to fire energy beams, as well as to fly and teleport.
35* ''Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolf'': ''Dear Little Wish'' features anthropomorphic stars as characters, among them the elderly Grandpa Meteor whom the goats help to write down everyone's wishes.
36[[/folder]]
37
38[[folder:Comic Books]]
39* ''Franchise/TheDCU'':
40** Solaris is an evil sentient artificial sun from the ''ComicBook/DCOneMillion'' event and ''ComicBook/AllStarSuperman''.
41** ''ComicBook/{{JSA}}'': Aquarius is a rogue living star responsible for the death of [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks Golden Age]] ComicBook/BlackCanary's husband.
42** ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'': Rao, the sun of planet Krypton, contains a giant cosmic entity of the same name who used to be worshiped as a god.
43*** Rao is briefly seen in an issue of ''ComicBook/TheSandman1989'', along with other personifications of stars, at a party where the guests are other gods and members of the [[AnthropomorphicPersonification Endless]].
44* ''ComicBook/DoctorWhoTitan'': In the Twelfth Doctor comics, the Hyperions are an evil race of sentient stars.
45* ''ComicBook/IHateFairyland'': In the first issue, Gert slaughters a group of stars, who are shown to be able to speak.
46* ''Franchise/MarvelUniverse'': Several characters are stars, and one theory is that literally all stars in the MU are sentient:
47** ''ComicBook/TheDefenders'': Cloud was a living nebula, a celestial body that becomes a star, that came down to Earth and took on the form of a recent car crash victim.
48** ''ComicBook/DoctorStrange'': Apalla, a creature who aided Doctor Strange for a story arc in ''ComicBook/DoctorStrange1974''. She used to swear "by the Grand Nebular", whatever that is.
49** ''ComicBook/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy'': ComicBook/StarLord's origin story involves "the Master of the Sun", the ruler of our own system's star. Eventually, though, that was revealed to be a ploy; he was just some kind of evil lizard alien thing.
50[[/folder]]
51
52[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
53* ''WesternAnimation/Wish2023'': Star is a sentient star. [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Shocker.]] They're a personification of the wishing star from other Creator/{{Disney}} films like ''WesternAnimation/{{Pinocchio}}'', specifically.
54* Evangeline, Ray the firefly's love interest from ''WesternAnimation/ThePrincessAndTheFrog'', is heavily implied to be this. [[spoiler: After Ray dies during the final battle against [[BigBad Dr. Facilier, the Shadow Man]], he ultimately becomes another star as well.]]
55[[/folder]]
56
57[[folder:Fan Works]]
58* ''Fanfic/TriptychContinuum'': The Sun is alive, and can [[spoiler:communicate and give advice to Celestia, if she wants to connect to it. But doing so is dangerous]].
59[[/folder]]
60
61[[folder:Folklore]]
62* The famous NurseryRhyme ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twinkle,_Twinkle,_Little_Star Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star]]'' made in [[OlderThanRadio the 1800s]] that refers to a beautiful little star as a sentient being, an usual representation in books and videos for children and toddlers.
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Literature]]
66* ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia'': As seen in ''Literature/TheVoyageOfTheDawnTreader'', the stars in the sky of Narnia are alive. Every so often they get tired of shining and take a break by coming down to Narnia in human form. Which can actually interbreed with normal humans. In ''Literature/TheLastBattle'' Father Time calls them all down when it's time to bring an end to Narnia.
67* Frank Herbert's ''Literature/{{ConSentiency}}'' series novel ''Whipping Star''. During the course of the story, Saboteur Extraordinary Jorj X. [=McKie=] discovers that the alien creatures known as Caleban are the physical projection of intelligent stars.
68* ''Literature/TheDarkSideOfTheSun'' by Creator/TerryPratchett has a living sun which, along with a [[GeniusLoci sentient ocean]], is seeking an intelligent gas.
69* In ''Literature/{{Dogsbody}}'', all stars have living spirits. The spirit of the star Sirius is framed for murdering a dwarf star, and banished to Earth to search for a vital piece of evidence -- and, in the process, forced to be reborn as a mortal... a mortal dog, to be precise.
70* In ''Literature/HowlsMovingCastle'', Calcifer the fire demon is actually a fallen star who made a contract with Howl.
71* Almalik, the central node of the massive HiveMind in ''Literature/TheStarchildTrilogy''.
72* The main character in ''Literature/{{Stardust}}'' promises to find a fallen star and bring it back to a girl he's courting. When he actually tracks the star's point of impact into Fairyland, it's a rather sharp-tongued young girl named Yvaine.
73* In ''Literature/StarMaker'' by Olaf Stapledon, stars turn out to be living, intelligent organisms of a sort, as do the nebulae which preceded them.
74* In ''Literature/AWrinkleInTime'', some stars are sentient enough to join in the fight against the Black Thing. The protagonists witness one star go supernova in a Heroic Sacrifice to fend it off, and [[spoiler: Mrs. Whatsit]] mourns the loss of her previous life as a star.
75* In ''Literature/TheZodiacSeries'', the Original Guardians were all fallen stars, given mortal form to guide the humans settling their star system. By the modern day, all are long dead and have returned to the stars...[[spoiler:[[BigBad with one exception]].]]
76[[/folder]]
77
78[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
79* ''Series/DoctorWho'': In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E742 "42"]], a living star tries to take revenge on the crew of a mining ship after they use an illegal solar mining device to extract fuel from its core.
80* In ''Series/{{Andromeda}}'', crew member Trance Gemini is eventually revealed to be the living avatar of a sun. Specifically, the sun in the Vedran System. All her kind are avatars to different suns.
81[[/folder]]
82
83[[folder:Magazines]]
84* During TheSixties, a periodical children's digest titled ''Humpty Dumpty Magazine'' ran a series of panel comics called "Twinkle, The Star That Came Down From Heaven." Twinkle is described as an actual star, though he's less than six feet tall. His head has the classic five-point shape atop a body with a harlequin pattern. Twinkle likes to comes to Earth and assist forest animals and stray pets. One story arc introduced Compy (a shortened form of companion star), who looked very much like Twinkle, just smaller and prone to mischief.
85[[/folder]]
86
87[[folder:Religion]]
88* The sun often depicted as a god in different religions around the world (Ra, Helios, Sol etc.) Of course, these cultures generally didn't realize that the sun is a star.
89* In the Bible, angels are called stars. The implication is that the stars in the sky are literal angels or manifestations of angels in space. They are implied why humans worship the stars through astrology.
90** The Bethlehem Star is called an angel
91** Christ Himself is called the Sun of Righteousness, and He is also called the Angel of the LORD before He became man, so the Sun may be a literal manifestation of Christ.
92[[/folder]]
93
94[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
95* Star Pact Warlocks in ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' 4e make Faustian bargains with the stars themselves, which are horrific Lovecraftian nightmares living in "the Far Realm" (where D&D's more bizarre and otherworldly monsters come from).
96[[/folder]]
97
98[[folder:Video Games]]
99* ''VideoGame/Dota2'': Phoenix only looks like the fiery bird that is its namesake; it's actually a living star taking AFormYouAreComfortableWith. This is made more apparent by its ultimate, which has Phoenix going supernova and, true to [[ThePhoenix the creature it embodies]], being reborn in the explosion.
100* ''VideoGame/FallenLondon'': The stars (including our Sun) are the gods of the universe, where they are also known as Judgements. They use their light to impose their own laws, the very laws of physics, upon everything they shine upon. [[AlternateContinuity In the timeline where]] ''VideoGame/SunlessSkies'' takes place, they are slowly being killed off.
101* ''VideoGame/{{Ristar}}'': The protagonist is an anthropomorphic star creature.
102* ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'': Stars are used throughout the series as powerups, important objects and symbols of power, and it's fairly common for them to be portrayed as living beings in their own right.
103** ''VideoGame/MarioAndLuigiBowsersInsideStory'': The story's true villain, the Dark Star, is a living, malevolent celestial object that fell from the sky in the distant past.
104** ''VideoGame/MarioParty3'': In the story mode, the main organizer of the competition is the Millennium Star, a silvery sapient star who is "born once a millennium".
105** ''VideoGame/PaperMario64'': The star spirits are living beings in the form of cartoon stars with faces, who are held captive by Bowser. In-game lore even states that young stars are "born" and raised in Starborn Valley.
106** ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy'' and its [[VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy2 sequel]] feature the Lumas, tiny living stars that expand into entire worlds when fed enough star bits, then collapse into black holes, and then become Lumas again, in an endless cycle of reincarnation.
107** ''VideoGame/SuperMarioRPGLegendOfTheSevenStars'': Geno is a sapient star sent to collect the star pieces. He possesses a doll to fight alongside the rest of the party.
108[[/folder]]
109
110[[folder:Web Original]]
111* All stars in ''Webcomic/{{Nebula}}'' are sentient, and the Sun is one of the main cast members. He's depicted as an enormous humanoid being with skin made of fire and his head the physical Sun itself. He has a fiery temper and a domineering personality, though he sees it as his duty to look after the rest of the solar system and does his best to protect it from outside threats.
112* Nina from ''Roleplay/RainQuest'' is an anthropomorphic star. Considering that she spent her life drifting through space alone, it's unknown whether or not the other stars are alive too, but considering that the game takes place in a world where all the characters are anthropomorphized objects seen in the sky, it's possible.
113* Website/SCPFoundation:
114** The now-deleted original SCP-1548, also known as "The Hateful Star", was a sentient star that intended to destroy all of humanity, and it was heading our way. However, in the tale "[[http://www.scp-wiki.net/now-i-understand-the-problems-you-can-see Video Killed The Radio Star]]", it reverted directions, and its anomalous properties made it collapse and implode. There's now also a page for SCP-1548-EX which subverts this trope, saying that the Foundation misinterpreted random noise as threats. The star was perfectly normal and burnt out before reaching Earth.
115** The replacement SCP-1548 implies the sun is sapient as it begins generating thaumaturgic patterns and mass ejections which generate a shell around the solar system. The Foundation finds out too late the shell was meant to both hide and protect the solar system from extradimensional invaders which have devoured all other stars in the universe.
116** The SCP-001 Proposal has sunlight turn anyone exposed into horrific blob monsters that worship the sun and try to convert everyone else. It's heavily implied that the sun was sentient and actively chose to do this, but not outright confirmed in the original file. Some tales set in this canon have the sun be malevolent, but others make it a natural event. One even suggests the sun was trying to protect humans from the original SCP-1548, but didn't understand the consequences of its actions.
117* The eponymous ''Webcomic/{{Star Power}}''s, which are sentient, masquerade their energy patterns as regular stars.
118* ''Literature/{{Starwalker}}'': The fact that this is true is important, because StarKilling happens in the story, due to the protagonists, by way of [[spoiler:the star step drive]].
119[[/folder]]
120
121[[folder:Western Animation]]
122* On ''WesternAnimation/PennZeroPartTimeHero'', the stars in the Most Dangerous World Imaginable vomit acid.
123[[/folder]]
124

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