Creative
 

Lorica/Lore/Chaos/1

Fiction Wikia, the place where you can write fiction.

Arcanery | Disciplines | Packages || Bestiary || Philosophy || History || Lore || Society | Titles
This article is about lore, myth, and literature in Lorica.

[edit] Chaos of the Gods Cycle

  • But Vayria and Lamoth were both missing the other half, and as thus were driven to interact, both constructively and destructively, in a process known as the propagation of the deities, whereby each side created several other deities, all of which held tremendous amounts of this factonal energy. Henceforth begins the Chaos of the Gods. So much of the factonal energy eventually came to a standstill at the Ravelling that it was able to absorb most of the rest to form the tapestry of factons which we know of now. The first three deities were known as gods, and the rest as (merely) deities.
  • Hence begins the Chaos of the Gods. But now, instead of brute power, these gods resorted to intelligence, and more importantly, aspects of factonal power that would have meaningful ramifications for both universes. Hence, we start chronicling the events, personifying the gods and deities as if they were people, for better understanding:
  • Despite the initial destructive and deteriorating blasts from both sides, both Vayria and Lamoth had a tremendous amount of power left within them. Now, however, they were more careful with their use of that power. Instead of going all out with their war, they decided instead to fight a war of attrition, one that would involve not them, but their offspring, or minions, and thus not drain themselves of resources. Only in this fashion, they thought, coud either side survive long in their cosmic engagement. Now, in this factor the two sides were not equal, as Vayria was the Goddess of fertility and thus could create minions at will both easily and effectively, while Lamoth, being the God of destruction, could only destroy and corrupt, not produce minions for himself. This was a principal reason why Vayria adopted the new war policy: she was assured of winning.
  • However, Lamoth was not completely at a loss; since he was the god of destruction, he still had a great deal of power with which to fight this war. He therefore did not give up: He visited Vayria’s children, the deities, and corrupted them. At a time when Vayria had only created four children, Bane, Scipios, Tyrael and Viva, Lamoth managed to steal two of them from Vayrian’s side: the twins Bane and Scipios.