Gods of the High Wilderness: Difference between revisions

From The Fifth City Wiki
Needs to be polished. Incomplete. Extraneous.
 
KestrelGirl (talk | contribs)
mNo edit summary
Tag: visualeditor
 
(23 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{major spoiler}}
{{major spoiler}}
Just like the the Unterzee, the High wilderness contain many incomprehensible things. Leaving the Neath doesn't remove ex-zailor's superstitions, rather it has replaced their paganism with another one. Tall tales of these entities spread and terrifyingly, these story is no different than their Zee's counterpart: their superstitions may actually hold some truth.
[[File:SPOILER_Stargate.png|thumb|250px|What secrets dwell in the Sunless Skies?]]
Leaving the Neath doesn't relieve an ex-zailor's [[Gods of the Unterzee|superstitions]]; it merely changes their subjects. Tall tales of mysterious sky-gods spread far and wide, and as with their Unterzee counterparts, these stories may hold some truth. Of these stories, three gods stand out: '''the Burrower Below''', '''the Storm that Speaks''', and '''the Waste-Waif'''.__forcetoc__


== The Beast, the Thunder, and the Outcast ==
== The Burrower Below ==
Just like their Unterzee counterpart, these gods made an immense impact to those who traverse the heavens.
<blockquote>''"You dream of falling. It's a common dream, here. The fogs that bedevil the High Wilderness are thick about you, and through them, below, you see something stir. A beast. A behemoth. Almost a dragon; almost a whale; almost a continent. It gnaws on the roots of heaven, and all the fogs of the Wilderness are its steaming breath. Its maw opens, wide as the gulf between stars."''</blockquote>''"You discover a stoker angrily defacing the engine's bible. He claims that here in the heavens, there are more pertinent gods than that of King James. Immediately, he launches into a sermon about the Burrower Below: the wyrm-mother, general-progenitrix of the Devourers of Days, who are called the Aeginae. "She tunnelled the paths across the sky! Every transit is a trespass! We must give praise!"''<ref name = "dream">{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Airs_of_Terror#Dream|Airs of Terror: Dream|Sunless Skies|}}</ref>
[[File:Burrowerbelow.png|thumb|200x200px]]
'''The Burrower Below''' is apparently the mother of all [[Aeginae|dragons]], including [[Storm]] and [[the Silent Saint]].<ref name = "touch">{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Airs_of_Terror#Touch|Airs of Terror: Touch|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> She governs the lower regions of the High Wilderness and the "forgotten paths of the sky", such as the [[Avid Horizon]]<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Watchers|Prepare an invocation to the Burrower Below|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> and the regions of space that are occupied by the transit relays.<ref name = "touch">{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Airs_of_Terror#Touch|Airs of Terror: Touch|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> (In other words, the relays are literally wyrmholes.) Frequent usage of said relays might displease the Burrower.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Transit_Relay|Transit Relay|Sunless Skies|}}''Rare event (20%): +10 x Attention: the Burrower Below''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Attention:_the_Burrower_Below#TransitA|Attention: the Burrower Below|Sunless Skies|}}''"The passage is less pleasant than you had hoped. A crewman swears he saw something vast stirring in the sky's deeps, and raves about a "many-eyed burrower" to any who will listen.""''</ref>


=== The Burrower Below ===
The Burrower is strongly associated with promises.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Oathbreaker|The Oathbreaker|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> She despises skyfarers who broke their oaths, especially those made in her name. Those who anger her will have their souls marked for taking, and will be troubled by unusually thick fogs called '''the Burrower's Breath''' (which may or may not be her actual breath).<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/An_Abandoned_Signal_Box|Deposit the Signalman at the Spidered Signal Box|Sunless Skies|}}</ref><ref name = "breath">{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Burrower%27s_Breath|The Burrower's Breath|Sunless Skies|}}</ref>
''"You dream of falling. It's a common dream, here. The fogs that bedevil the High Wilderness are thick about you, and through them, below, you see something stir. A beast. A behemoth. Almost a dragon; almost a whale; almost a continent. It gnaws on the roots of heaven, and all the fogs of the Wilderness are its steaming breath. Its maw opens, wide as the gulf between stars."''


''"You discover a stoker angrily defacing the engine's bible. He claims that here in the heavens, there are more pertinent gods than that of King James. Immediately, he launches into a sermon about the Burrower Below: the wyrm-mother, general-progenitrix of the Devourers of Days, who are called the Aeginae. "She tunnelled the paths across the sky! Every transit is a trespass! We must give praise!""''[[File:Burrowerbelow.png|thumb|286x286px]]
Like her progeny, the Burrower eats time: not just the mined geodes of Hours, but also a person's remaining Hours of life. To bargain with the Burrower, a Sky-Captain must sacrifice either a geode of Hours, or several of their oldest crew.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/On_the_Quiet_Sea|Sacrifice hours to appease the Burrower Below|Sunless Skies|}}</ref><ref name = "breath">{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Burrower%27s_Breath|The Burrower's Breath|Sunless Skies|}}</ref><ref name = "adrift">{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Adrift!|Adrift!|Sunless Skies|}}</ref>


'''The Burrower Below''' is the mother of all dragon, such as [[Gods of the Unterzee#Storm|Storm]] or [[The Silent Saint|the Silent Saint]]. She governs the lower region of the High Wilderness and the "forgotten path of the sky", which include the [[Avid Horizon]] and those that are used by the [[transit relays|Transit Relay]]. Frequent user of the relay might risk displeasing the Burrower.
== The Storm that Speaks ==
<blockquote>''"You dream of a storm whose lightning scratches words across the sky, and whose thunder is a cacophony of voices belonging to people you have known. Its winds pluck, pitifully, at your clothes. You are wearing black: sombre, funereal black."''<ref name="dream">{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Airs_of_Terror#Dream|Airs of Terror: Dream|Sunless Skies|}}</ref>


The Burrower is associated with promise. Skyfarers who broke promise or oath, especially those that are made under the Burrower's name, are despised by the Burrower. Skyfarers who angered the Burrower will have their souls marked for taking. They will be troubled by unusually thick fogs called "The Burrower's Breath" (which may or may not be her actual breath).
''"The body of the sun is still cooling. A few embers continue to glow at its core, a low and sullen red. When Her Majesty entered Albion, she slew the sun with an experimental weapon: an Unclear Bomb. Then she claimed the sun's throne and dominion. You can't help feel that, as you gaze on the sun, the sun gazes back."''<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Most_Serene_Mausoleum#The_Nave_2|Contemplate the dead sun|Sunless Skies|}}</ref></blockquote>[[File:Stormthatspeaks.png|thumb|200x200px]]
'''The Storm that Speaks''' (not to be confused with [[Storm]]) is the lingering, tormented ghost of [[the King of Hours]].<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Blindness_Throne|Ward them away with prayer|Sunless Skies|}}</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Martyr-King%27s_Cup|The Martyr-King's Cup|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> The Storm can be encountered in [[Albion]], speaking with voices of the past to those who may listen; for example, an ex-zailor may hear the voice of their former crew, a poet may hear the voice of their former rivals, and a scholar may hear the voice of their teachers.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Storm_that_Speaks|The Storm that Speaks|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> Worshipers of the Storm that Speaks typically have tattoos of a storm with multiple mouths, and tend to sanctify the past.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/A_Memorial|A Memorial|Sunless Skies|}}</ref>


Similar to her progeny, the Burrower eats time. Not just the mined geode of Hours, but also an age of a person. To bargain with the Burrower, a Sky-Captain may sacrifice either a geode of Hours, or several of their oldest crew.
Those who gain its attention report a sudden wave of nostalgia, which may either be disturbing or inspiring.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/An_Outbreak_of_the_Heart-Sickness|An Outbreak of the Heart-Sickness|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> It can also banish pesky phantoms of past deeds or events.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Old_Ghosts|Invoke the Storm that Speaks|Sunless Skies|}}</ref>


=== Storm that Speaks ===
Two of the Storm's lackeys hunt its foes: wandering sigils of lightning, not unlike the [[Logoi]], that strike locomotives and show visions of the past;<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/A_Word_Written_in_Lightning|A Word Written in Lightning|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> and '''the Whisperwinds''', who entrance skyfarers with the voices of their loved ones, luring them to leave their locomotives.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Whisperwinds|The Whisperwinds|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> The Whisperwinds' lure might be avoided by swearing an oath to sabotage the [[Clockwork Sun|"usurper-sun"]], who is extremely despised by the Storm for taking its throne.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Sabotaging_the_Sun|Sabotaging the Sun|Sunless Skies|}}</ref>
''"You dream of a storm whose lightning scratches words across the sky, and whose thunder is a cacophony of voices belonging to people you have known. Its winds pluck, pitifully, at your clothes. You are wearing black: sombre, funereal black."''


''"The body of the sun is still cooling. A few embers continue to glow at its core, a low and sullen red. When Her Majesty entered Albion, she slew the sun with an experimental weapon: an Unclear Bomb. Then she claimed the sun's throne and dominion. You can't help feel that, as you gaze on the sun, the sun gazes back."''[[File:Stormthatspeaks.png|thumb|286x286px]]
== The Waste-Waif ==
<blockquote>''"You search your stores, but there isn't a flammable thing left in them which hasn't been frozen to the brittle consistency of old, bleak bone. The cold deepens, taking its toll of the crew. Shivering, wild-eyed, several of them report seeing a child on board. Clad in rags. Gaunt as twigs. Mouthless. They pray for deliverance from the Waste-Waif."''<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Adrift!|Scavenge your supplies|Sunless Skies|}}</ref>


'''The Storm that Speaks''' is the lingering tormented ghost of the King of Hours. The Storm can be physically encounter in [[Albion]], speaking with voices from the past of those who listen. For example an ex-zailor might hear the voice of their former crew, a poet might hear the voice of their former rivals, or a scholar might hear the voice of their teachers. You can identified the worshipers of the Storm that Speaks by their tattoo of a storm with multiple mouth. They usually sanctify the past.
''"You have seen impossible things while you died. An April field sprouting across the bridge, bright with bluebells. People from your past, who kept you company as you froze. Now you see something else. A child. Frostbitten, hairless, wearing rags. It has no mouth. It reaches out, to close your eyes. How cold its fingers are! Colder than the frost that mantles you. Colder than your heart, now silent and still."''<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Adrift!|Give up|Sunless Skies|}}</ref></blockquote>[[File:Wastewaif.png|thumb|200x200px]]
Abandoned places are '''the Waste-Waif''''s domain, from the empty cabins of locomotives to the frozen domains of dead stars.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Graveyard_of_Stars|The Graveyard of Stars|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> It shepherds the cold wind of the heavens, and it favors the outcasts, the starving, and the dying.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Attention:_the_Waste-Waif|Attention: the Waste-Waif|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> It is said that the '''Guests''', the Wilderness's sentimental train-parasites, pray to the Waif.<ref name = "shrine">{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Guests_in_the_Galley|Construct a shrine to the Waste-Waif|Sunless Skies|}}</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Guests,_Evicted|Continue your bombardment|Sunless Skies|}}</ref>


Those who gain his attention might feel a sudden outbreak of nostalgia. This would either disturb skyfarers or gave them inspiration. The Storm can also banish phantom of the past for those who gain its attention.
The Waif often appears to those that have its attention or anger in the form of a pale child wearing ragged clothing.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Ruins|Enjoy the picturesque surroundings|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> Gaining its attention may lead you somewhere bountiful, or somewhere abandoned.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Shepherd_of_the_Winds|The Shepherd of the Winds|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> Provoking it might leave one troubled by unusual cold,<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Cold_that_Kills|The Cold that Kills|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> freeze one's crew,<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/Frosty_Fingerprints|Frosty Fingerprints|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> or worse - the least fortunate are lured to '''the Empty House''', to be turned into the Waif's possessions.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Empty_House|The Empty House|Sunless Skies|}}</ref>


Those who gain his anger will be hunted by two of his lackeys: The wandering sigils of lighning, not unlike the [[Logoi]], who strike locomotives and show visions of the past, and the Whisperwinds who entranced skyfarers with the voice of their loved one, luring them to leave their locomotives.
==References==
 
{{Scroll box|text = <references/>}}
It is said that those who meet the Whisperwinds may avoid its lure by sworing an oath to sabotage [[Clockwork Sun|the "usurper-sun"]], who are extremely despised by the Storm for taking his empty throne.
 
=== Waste-Waif ===
''"You search your stores, but there isn't a flammable thing left in them which hasn't been frozen to the brittle consistency of old, bleak bone. The cold deepens, taking its toll of the crew. Shivering, wild-eyed, several of them report seeing a child on board. Clad in rags. Gaunt as twigs. Mouthless. They pray for deliverance from the Waste-Waif.""''
 
''"You have seen impossible things while you died. An April field sprouting across the bridge, bright with bluebells. People from your past, who kept you company as you froze. Now you see something else. A child. Frostbitten, hairless, wearing rags. It has no mouth. It reaches out, to close your eyes. How cold its fingers are! Colder than the frost that mantles you. Colder than your heart, now silent and still."''[[File:Wastewaif.png|thumb|286x286px]]
 
Abandoned place are '''the Waste-Waif''' domain. From empty cabin of a locomotives, to abandoned frozen domain of the stars. The Waif sheperds the cold wind of the heavens The Waste-Wind. The Waif favoured the outcasts, the starving, and the dying. It is said that the Guests, the Wilderness sentimetnal train-parasite, pray to the Waste-Waif.
 
The Waste-Waif often appears to those that have its attention (or its anger) in form of a pale child wearing ragged clothing. Gaining the attention of the Waste-Waif may let the wind lead you to somewhere bountiful or/and abandoned.
 
Those who anger the Waste-Waif might be troubled by unusual cold, have their crew frozen, or worse: lured to the Empty House.
[[Category:Characters]]
[[Category:Characters]]
[[Category:Nonhumans]]
[[Category:Nonhuman]]
[[Category:The High Wilderness]]

Latest revision as of 08:56, 7 June 2025

"Are you quite sure you want to know this?"

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.


What secrets dwell in the Sunless Skies?

Leaving the Neath doesn't relieve an ex-zailor's superstitions; it merely changes their subjects. Tall tales of mysterious sky-gods spread far and wide, and as with their Unterzee counterparts, these stories may hold some truth. Of these stories, three gods stand out: the Burrower Below, the Storm that Speaks, and the Waste-Waif.

The Burrower Below[edit]

"You dream of falling. It's a common dream, here. The fogs that bedevil the High Wilderness are thick about you, and through them, below, you see something stir. A beast. A behemoth. Almost a dragon; almost a whale; almost a continent. It gnaws on the roots of heaven, and all the fogs of the Wilderness are its steaming breath. Its maw opens, wide as the gulf between stars."

"You discover a stoker angrily defacing the engine's bible. He claims that here in the heavens, there are more pertinent gods than that of King James. Immediately, he launches into a sermon about the Burrower Below: the wyrm-mother, general-progenitrix of the Devourers of Days, who are called the Aeginae. "She tunnelled the paths across the sky! Every transit is a trespass! We must give praise!"[1]

The Burrower Below is apparently the mother of all dragons, including Storm and the Silent Saint.[2] She governs the lower regions of the High Wilderness and the "forgotten paths of the sky", such as the Avid Horizon[3] and the regions of space that are occupied by the transit relays.[2] (In other words, the relays are literally wyrmholes.) Frequent usage of said relays might displease the Burrower.[4][5]

The Burrower is strongly associated with promises.[6] She despises skyfarers who broke their oaths, especially those made in her name. Those who anger her will have their souls marked for taking, and will be troubled by unusually thick fogs called the Burrower's Breath (which may or may not be her actual breath).[7][8]

Like her progeny, the Burrower eats time: not just the mined geodes of Hours, but also a person's remaining Hours of life. To bargain with the Burrower, a Sky-Captain must sacrifice either a geode of Hours, or several of their oldest crew.[9][8][10]

The Storm that Speaks[edit]

"You dream of a storm whose lightning scratches words across the sky, and whose thunder is a cacophony of voices belonging to people you have known. Its winds pluck, pitifully, at your clothes. You are wearing black: sombre, funereal black."[1] "The body of the sun is still cooling. A few embers continue to glow at its core, a low and sullen red. When Her Majesty entered Albion, she slew the sun with an experimental weapon: an Unclear Bomb. Then she claimed the sun's throne and dominion. You can't help feel that, as you gaze on the sun, the sun gazes back."[11]

The Storm that Speaks (not to be confused with Storm) is the lingering, tormented ghost of the King of Hours.[12][13] The Storm can be encountered in Albion, speaking with voices of the past to those who may listen; for example, an ex-zailor may hear the voice of their former crew, a poet may hear the voice of their former rivals, and a scholar may hear the voice of their teachers.[14] Worshipers of the Storm that Speaks typically have tattoos of a storm with multiple mouths, and tend to sanctify the past.[15]

Those who gain its attention report a sudden wave of nostalgia, which may either be disturbing or inspiring.[16] It can also banish pesky phantoms of past deeds or events.[17]

Two of the Storm's lackeys hunt its foes: wandering sigils of lightning, not unlike the Logoi, that strike locomotives and show visions of the past;[18] and the Whisperwinds, who entrance skyfarers with the voices of their loved ones, luring them to leave their locomotives.[19] The Whisperwinds' lure might be avoided by swearing an oath to sabotage the "usurper-sun", who is extremely despised by the Storm for taking its throne.[20]

The Waste-Waif[edit]

"You search your stores, but there isn't a flammable thing left in them which hasn't been frozen to the brittle consistency of old, bleak bone. The cold deepens, taking its toll of the crew. Shivering, wild-eyed, several of them report seeing a child on board. Clad in rags. Gaunt as twigs. Mouthless. They pray for deliverance from the Waste-Waif."[21] "You have seen impossible things while you died. An April field sprouting across the bridge, bright with bluebells. People from your past, who kept you company as you froze. Now you see something else. A child. Frostbitten, hairless, wearing rags. It has no mouth. It reaches out, to close your eyes. How cold its fingers are! Colder than the frost that mantles you. Colder than your heart, now silent and still."[22]

Abandoned places are the Waste-Waif's domain, from the empty cabins of locomotives to the frozen domains of dead stars.[23] It shepherds the cold wind of the heavens, and it favors the outcasts, the starving, and the dying.[24] It is said that the Guests, the Wilderness's sentimental train-parasites, pray to the Waif.[25][26]

The Waif often appears to those that have its attention or anger in the form of a pale child wearing ragged clothing.[27] Gaining its attention may lead you somewhere bountiful, or somewhere abandoned.[28] Provoking it might leave one troubled by unusual cold,[29] freeze one's crew,[30] or worse - the least fortunate are lured to the Empty House, to be turned into the Waif's possessions.[31]

References[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Airs of Terror: Dream, Sunless Skies
  2. 2.0 2.1 Airs of Terror: Touch, Sunless Skies
  3. Prepare an invocation to the Burrower Below, Sunless Skies
  4. Transit Relay, Sunless Skies Rare event (20%): +10 x Attention: the Burrower Below
  5. Attention: the Burrower Below, Sunless Skies "The passage is less pleasant than you had hoped. A crewman swears he saw something vast stirring in the sky's deeps, and raves about a "many-eyed burrower" to any who will listen.""
  6. The Oathbreaker, Sunless Skies
  7. Deposit the Signalman at the Spidered Signal Box, Sunless Skies
  8. 8.0 8.1 The Burrower's Breath, Sunless Skies
  9. Sacrifice hours to appease the Burrower Below, Sunless Skies
  10. Adrift!, Sunless Skies
  11. Contemplate the dead sun, Sunless Skies
  12. Ward them away with prayer, Sunless Skies
  13. The Martyr-King's Cup, Sunless Skies
  14. The Storm that Speaks, Sunless Skies
  15. A Memorial, Sunless Skies
  16. An Outbreak of the Heart-Sickness, Sunless Skies
  17. Invoke the Storm that Speaks, Sunless Skies
  18. A Word Written in Lightning, Sunless Skies
  19. The Whisperwinds, Sunless Skies
  20. Sabotaging the Sun, Sunless Skies
  21. Scavenge your supplies, Sunless Skies
  22. Give up, Sunless Skies
  23. The Graveyard of Stars, Sunless Skies
  24. Attention: the Waste-Waif, Sunless Skies
  25. Construct a shrine to the Waste-Waif, Sunless Skies
  26. Continue your bombardment, Sunless Skies
  27. Enjoy the picturesque surroundings, Sunless Skies
  28. The Shepherd of the Winds, Sunless Skies
  29. The Cold that Kills, Sunless Skies
  30. Frosty Fingerprints, Sunless Skies
  31. The Empty House, Sunless Skies