Rubbery Men: Difference between revisions
KestrelGirl (talk | contribs) Thank you for the addition! May as well add the rest of the puzzle (Lovecraft) while we're at it. Tag: visualeditor |
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[[Ealing Gardens]] | [[Ealing Gardens]] | ||
|allegiance = [[Flukes|The Flukes]]|notable_members = [[The Tentacled Entrepreneur]]<br> | |allegiance = [[Flukes|The Flukes]]|notable_members = [[The Tentacled Entrepreneur]]<br> | ||
[[The Nacreous Outcast]]}}''"The Rubbery Men are the ones who resemble squids, a little. They trade deep amber for the tiny blind fish that they eat, and for human music. They seem sad, anxious and very polite. But they are terribly menacing. Faces like squid! Occasionally one is stoned to death in an episode of civic high spirits. (They're actually very nice. Almost certainly.)"''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets|Who are the Rubbery Men?|Fallen London}}</ref> | [[The Nacreous Outcast]]|alias=''Homo cephalopoda'' (scientific name)}}''"The Rubbery Men are the ones who resemble squids, a little. They trade deep amber for the tiny blind fish that they eat, and for human music. They seem sad, anxious and very polite. But they are terribly menacing. Faces like squid! Occasionally one is stoned to death in an episode of civic high spirits. (They're actually very nice. Almost certainly.)"''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets|Who are the Rubbery Men?|Fallen London}}</ref> | ||
''"[[Do you recall?|Do you recall]] how they came to that place? And we sang of our lightnings and shapeful disgrace? They tilted their vanes and ennobled their spires. We welcomed them then and commingled all choirs. If we could remember those days. If only we could remember."<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Nodule_of_Violet_Amber|Nodule of Violet Amber|Fallen London}}</ref>''</blockquote>'''Rubbery Men''' are mysterious squid-faced humanoids, who for the most part cannot speak English. | ''"[[Do you recall?|Do you recall]] how they came to that place? And we sang of our lightnings and shapeful disgrace? They tilted their vanes and ennobled their spires. We welcomed them then and commingled all choirs. If we could remember those days. If only we could remember."<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Nodule_of_Violet_Amber|Nodule of Violet Amber|Fallen London}}</ref>''</blockquote>'''Rubbery Men''', scientific name ''Homo cephalopoda,''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/They_all_look_the_same_to_me|They all look the same to me|Fallen London|}} ''"[...] Witnesses say that the culprit is a Rubbery Man [...] as an authority on'' homo cephalopoda ''you have been called."''</ref> are mysterious squid-faced humanoids, who for the most part cannot speak English. | ||
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==Lovably Slimy== | ==Lovably Slimy== | ||
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The Rubbery Men consider themselves to be cousins of the [[Thief-of-Faces]], making them by extension slightly more distant cousins of the [[Snuffers]].<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Flint|Flint|Fallen London}} ''""Thief-of-Fashes," it confides. "Their enemy. Our coushin.""''</ref> | The Rubbery Men consider themselves to be cousins of the [[Thief-of-Faces]], making them by extension slightly more distant cousins of the [[Snuffers]].<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Flint|Flint|Fallen London}} ''""Thief-of-Fashes," it confides. "Their enemy. Our coushin.""''</ref> | ||
== | == Cultural Inspirations == | ||
Given illustrations of Rubbery Men, they may have been inspired by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illithid mind flayers (or illithids)], an evil race of monsters from the well-known tabletop RPG ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dungeons_%26_Dragons Dungeons & Dragons]''. In turn, Illithids and Rubbery Men both superficially resemble H. P. Lovecraft's [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cthulhu Cthulhu]; D&D's creator Gary Gygax confirmed he was tangentially inspired by Lovecraftian mythos. | Given illustrations of Rubbery Men, they may have been inspired by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illithid mind flayers (or illithids)], an evil race of monsters from the well-known tabletop RPG ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dungeons_%26_Dragons Dungeons & Dragons]''. In turn, Illithids and Rubbery Men both superficially resemble H. P. Lovecraft's [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cthulhu Cthulhu]; D&D's creator Gary Gygax confirmed he was tangentially inspired by Lovecraftian mythos. | ||
Latest revision as of 17:59, 7 June 2025
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Beyond this point lie spoilers for Fallen London, Sunless Sea, Sunless Skies, or Mask of the Rose. This may include midgame or minor Fate-locked content. Proceed with caution. You can find out more about our spoiler policy here. |
"The Rubbery Men are the ones who resemble squids, a little. They trade deep amber for the tiny blind fish that they eat, and for human music. They seem sad, anxious and very polite. But they are terribly menacing. Faces like squid! Occasionally one is stoned to death in an episode of civic high spirits. (They're actually very nice. Almost certainly.)"[1]
"Do you recall how they came to that place? And we sang of our lightnings and shapeful disgrace? They tilted their vanes and ennobled their spires. We welcomed them then and commingled all choirs. If we could remember those days. If only we could remember."[2]
Rubbery Men, scientific name Homo cephalopoda,[3] are mysterious squid-faced humanoids, who for the most part cannot speak English.
Lovably Slimy[edit]
Rubberies deal a brisk trade in amber; they are also eager to take their amber back.[4] Despite their apparent harmlessness, they still face xenophobia in London - devils refuse to take Rubbery souls[5] and display active hostility to any manifestation of their powers,[6][7] and they are frequently assaulted[8][9] and even lynched.[10] Despite everything, at least one of them, the Tentacled Entrepreneur, has become a somewhat successful businessman and risen high enough in society to run for Mayor of London.
The lemon-scented slime that the Rubbery Men exude appears to have healing properties, but it's best for the desperate;[11] use of the substance as a restorative may result in mild side effects, like spasms, hair growth, a slight change in the shape of the affected body part, and nightmares.[12]
The Rubbery Men, though outcasts in society themselves, have also turned away one of their number: the Nacreous Outcast.
Helicon House[edit]
"Interlocked tentacles: a gathering place. Soothing bubbling noise: an invitation, hesitantly extended. An explanatory writhing: humans are only sometimes permitted."[13]
Faced with hostility in London, any Rubbery Men have settled in Ealing Gardens,[14] outside the city. They have built an artistic community at Helicon House,[15] where they are free to express themselves[16] and present their ideas to a wider audience,[17] in the company of accepting humans.[18] The basement of Helicon is a lab for the Shapeling Arts.[19]
Flute Street[edit]
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Beyond this point lie major spoilers for Fallen London, Sunless Sea, Sunless Skies, or Mask of the Rose. This may include endgame or major Fate-locked spoilers. Proceed at your own risk. You can find out more about our spoiler policy here. |
"Flute Street, the home of the Rubbery Men. It's a cavern. Nothing like the size of the Neath, but still huge."[20]
The Rubbery Men who do not live in London or Ealing Gardens largely reside in Flute Street, a cavern that lies beneath London and is big enough to hold thousands.[21] This is the only other place besides Helicon where the Rubberies can practice the Shapeling Arts in peace; however, the Rubberies who live and work in Flute Street are in service to the Flukes.[22]
The individuals who travel between Flute Street and London were made into their current form by the Flukes to interact with human beings,[23] though there are less humanoid Rubberies who remain in Flute Street.[24] Part of their interaction with humans involves the circulation of amber, which absorbs Vital Essences that may be used to alter a being's place on the Great Chain.[25] This amber is brought back to Flute Street, and used to experiment with the Shapeling Arts[26] and commune with the Flukes that live there.[27]
The Rubberies both envy and pity their Fluke overlords: they long for their ancient forms and are jealous of the fact that they don't have to face the ire of xenophobic humans, but feel badly for how much it takes to allow them to survive in the Neath.[28] The Flukes, for their part, simply cannot comprehend the struggles that their creations face in London, making them rather annoyed.[29][30]
Interestingly, the culture that thrives at Helicon House does not appear to be as present in Flute Street,[31] but there is music every once in a while.[32]
Do You Recall?[edit]
The Rubberies hail from the planet Axile, and were brought to the Neath by the Bazaar. This was a part of a failed deal between the inhabitants of Axile and the Bazaar[33] - upended because someone or something shouted Correspondence from the heavens, scorching Axile and dooming all its creatures.[34] Despite their failings, they uphold and enforce their end of the bargain, which was to never love.[35][36]
During their time on Axile, the ancestors of the Rubbery Men may have possessed malleable and boneless bodies.[37] They used moon-misers as mounts to traverse the terrain of Axile, and relied on creatures called eye-scuttlers to do menial tasks for them.[38] The ancient Rubbery Men sculpted many-roomed structures within their pools made out of black coral that contained contraptions, such as musical instruments.[39]
When Rubbery Men dream, they dream of Axile, in a place called the Sea of Spines.[40][41] Rubberies also have a distinct experience of death, as they can perceive a color woven into the veil between life and death[42] that humans cannot.[43] They call it slobgollion - or at least, that is the closest human approximation of the word.[44]
The Rubbery Men consider themselves to be cousins of the Thief-of-Faces, making them by extension slightly more distant cousins of the Snuffers.[45]
Cultural Inspirations[edit]
Given illustrations of Rubbery Men, they may have been inspired by mind flayers (or illithids), an evil race of monsters from the well-known tabletop RPG Dungeons & Dragons. In turn, Illithids and Rubbery Men both superficially resemble H. P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu; D&D's creator Gary Gygax confirmed he was tangentially inspired by Lovecraftian mythos.
References[edit]
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