Enemy Group Origins
@Golden Girl
City of Heroes comics and artwork
Here's pdfs of the stuff you just posted:
Hosted on my webspace
In the room the women come and go
Talking of Michelangelo.
God, I wish half the things in the Crey article were actually well represented in game. So much good stuff there that could've been going on. Instead we just got a couple mid level arcs dealing with the Revenant Heroes and the Doctor :\
7.16 Rularuu the Ravager
7.16.1 Background: On Cosmology
Before one can understand the threat that Rularuu the Ravager poses to all existence, one must first
understand a bit about cosmology. As the Rikti Invasion so dramatically showed us, ours is not the only
dimension out there. In fact, it is just one of many untold millions of such places. Each of these
dimensions is like a reflection cast off from the original universe – a sort of Platonic Ideal where all
existence began billions of years ago when time began. Ever since that time, the Origin Point has been
casting reflections, each of which have in turn been casting their own reflections, until there is a
seemingly infinite supply of dimensions.
But in truth, the dimensions only seem infinite. In fact, many of the reflections have such slight
differences from one another that they collapse in upon each other and rejoin, or just fade away. While
every moment births or destroys a new dimension, most of existence never notices these subtle shifts.
What defines a dimension, and allows it to maintain its own stability in the multi-verse, is its uniqueness.
The more radically the universe differs from the Origin Point and from the other universes around it, the
more permanency it achieves. While there are potentially an infinite number of such places, in fact only a
few million such places are known to exist. While this is still a staggering number of universes when you
consider that each one is as seemingly limitless as out own, it is not in fact an infinite number.
This multitude of dimensions are all connected to one another through a plane of non-being called the
Aether. One way to picture the geography of the multi-verse is to imagine a lake with thousands of tiny
islands in it. Each island is in turn vibrating just enough to send out a constant flow of ripples from its
shores. The islands are of course the various permanent dimensions, while the ripples are their reflections
– existing for a short while before collapsing back into the Aether or merging with some other reality. In
the common parlance of inter-dimensional cosmologists, these are called Shards. By traveling underneath
the surface of the lake, one can reach any island without having to pass through any other dimensions.
The same is true with inter-dimensional travel – a quick jaunt through the Aether brings you to some
other reality.
Earth is relatively new to inter-dimensional travel, and so is just learning the lay of the land. The Portal
Corp has mapped close to a hundred other dimensions, only about a quarter of which are Permanent
Dimensions, while the others are mostly Shards. Travelers from other realities have been searching the
multi-verse for much longer, and amongst them one dimension has become particularly legendary – the
Origin Point. This is the world that started it all – the universe which has cast all of the other reflections in
existence. No one knows exactly where it is (or even if it really still exists), but many have hunted for it.
The theory goes that events that transpire at the Origin Point have consequences that ripple through the
entire multi-verse. If one were to seize control of the Origin Point, one could theoretically hold all of
existence hostage to his or her whims.
7.16.2 Birth of The Ravager
Ultimately, it was this legend – that whoever controlled the Origin could dominate all the realities – that
inspired Rularuu to begin his campaign of terror and reality destruction, but that is a development that
came later in his mortal life. Before he earned his title Ravager, Rularuu was just another priest in a
temple to The God of Gateways. He came from an alternate reality very different from our own Earth. On
his world, religion and magic had been systematized and spread to all humans very early in the history of
civilization (as opposed to on our world, where the secrets of magic were jealously guarded by a few
priests and sages). The whole world practiced magic in some small way or another.
It is not surprising then that the people of Rularuu’s world had discovered the existence of alternate
realities and had been opening up passages to them for centuries before he was born. With the help of
their gods, they had managed to explore and even colonize several dozen other Earths. Some they
conquered, others they peacefully assimilated into their own inter-dimensional community. The key to
this expansion was the God of Gateways, a deity who held sway over all manner of magical portals. It
was he who allowed Rularuu’s people to use inter-dimensional travel as a means to actually teleport
around on their own world as well as traveling to other realities.
Intra-dimensional teleportation is simple in theory, but very hard to master in practice. Instead of using
the Aether to travel to another dimension, you use it to skitter around the exterior of your own and then
come back in at a different point. Because travel through the Aether is nearly instantaneous, it’s very easy
to miss your mark and end up reappearing in space or on another planet rather than somewhere else
convenient on the surface of your own world. On Rularuu’s world, only the God of Gateways had the
computational power and inclination in his divine being to make the appropriate calculations. Thus he
was a very powerful and important deity, especially once teleportation became the main method of travel
between places and dimensions.
As one of the god’s priests, Rularuu acted as a combination gatekeeper and travel agent. Using the
appropriate prayers and incantations, he would arrange for supplicants (i.e. customers) to reach their final
destinations. Although this duty required significant training and expertise, it was far from the exciting
life that Rularuu wanted for himself. He wanted to explore the multi-verse and unlock its secrets. But
exploring new realities was a dangerous and honorable duty, reserved for only the most experienced and
proven of the God of Gateways’ priests.
On his thirtieth birthday, Rularuu came to the realization that he still had another fifteen years of service
as a “travel agent” to do before he would even get a chance to join the exploration cadre within the church
– and even then his admittance into their elite ranks was by no means assured. The thought of waiting that
long was simply beyond toleration for the ambitious young man. And so he did the unthinkable – he
began to search for a way to travel to new dimensions on his own without the god’s help. He transferred
from his home universe to a frontier church on one of the colony worlds where his experiments would
attract less attention. There he began to develop a series of mystical rituals that would hopefully allow
him complete freedom to travel as he pleased across the multi-verse.
It took close to a decade, but Rularuu finally made the breakthrough he’d been striving so hard for,
although it wasn’t exactly what he had expected. Normally, when a gateway between two realities comes
into being, it connects the origin universe to a similar, or linked, point in the other universe. For example,
traveling to another Earth much like our own, you would arrive in a very similar location on that other
world. Arriving somewhere else requires the kind of calculations only a god or super computer are
capable of (which is what the Portal Corp and Rikti do). Rularuu didn’t have that kind of power at his
disposal. But he found another shortcut – he could link himself to himself – or at least to the soul in
another dimension who most closely approximated his own being. He could then use that link to transfer
himself into another universe, appearing at the exact location of his other “self.”
The only down side to this was if you happened to be on the other end of Rularuu’s linkage, you got
destroyed in the process. In short, to travel to another dimension, Rularuu had to destroy one of his other
selves. He had no idea that this is what would happen when he first tried the spell, but once he did, he
never looked back. In the process of destroying his first alternate self he actually consumed the other
being, and in the process took in all of his knowledge, memories, and life force. He’d never felt better in
his entire life – plus he instantly had all the knowledge he needed to survive in the strange new dimension
he’d teleported himself in to.
Of course, the big problem was, Rularuu had no way of returning to his home dimension. In fact, he had
very little control over where he was going on any given linkage. Unlike the God of Gateways or Portal
Corp, Rularuu had no sensors or divine insight that would allow him to ascertain his destination before he
traveled there. Thus is was impossible for him to effectively direct his travels. And even if he could find
his home dimension, he couldn’t go there because there was not “him” there to link with – he was
traveling the multi-verse. Ultimately though, the inability to return home didn’t bother Rularuu very
much. He’d spent his whole life trying to escape from home, and now he had the freedom he’d so
fervently hoped and worked for.
Rularuu tore across the multi-verse for several centuries. He found that each self that he consumed
revivified him – in effect giving him eternal youth as long as he still had worlds to visit. Most of his other
selves were very much like him – incredibly intelligent, curious about how the universe worked, and
ambitious. Thus Rularuu managed to absorb the combined knowledge of hundreds of geniuses, scientists,
wizards, writers, artists, and politicians in his travels. With their accumulated knowledge, combined with
the data he acquired during his own explorations of the realities he visited, Rularuu came to have a fuller
understanding of the multi-verse and its underlying principals than anyone else in all of existence –
including beings like the God of Gateways in his home dimension.
Eventually Rularuu’s ever expanding knowledge base overcame those original deficiencies in his mode of
travel. His multi-faceted mind became capable of the awareness and computational power necessary to
discern pathways through the Aether to specific dimensions. Likewise, he mastered the magic forces
necessary to directly open a link to other realities, obviating the need for him to link with other selves and
destroy them in order to travel. He could now slip from one reality to another with ease. But of course,
that didn’t stop him from continuing to fold his other selves into the greater-than-human beings known as
Rularuu. He’d become addicted to the power, the knowledge, and of course the fountain of youth aspect.
He kept right on devouring his reflections, becoming more powerful with each new acquisition.
And then, after close to five hundred years of such traveling, Rularuu decided to return to his home
dimension for a little visit. His own Earth had not changed very much during his absence. The empire had
expanded to include a few more dimensions, and the trade federation now spanned close to a hundred
realities. In all his travels, this was one of the few multi-dimensional political entities that Rularuu had
ever seen, so he decided to sit and wait a while. Rather than taking the time to learn all the ins and outs of
this society, he chose to visit a few of the member dimensions and find his selves there. Their knowledge
and life force would see him through for quite a while.
But Rularuu found something unexpected. He had become quite an anomaly in the multi-verse. He was a
being composed of many parts, all joined into one cross-dimensional entity. Such a thing was, if not
unique, then extremely rare. As a result, Rularuu himself had begun to cast reflections through the reality
web. His alternate selves were becoming more powerful and more like him. Some had even discovered
his secret and were busy devouring other selves on their own. Thus, when Rularuu sought out to link with
one of his counterpoints to begin the devouring process, he found that his other self had set up magical
wards that blocked the linkage (which Rularuu immediately recognized since he himself had such wards
protecting him). Finding a self with such power made Rularuu all the hungrier to devour him.
Using less invasive means of interdimensional travel, Rularuu shifted to the other’s world, and confronted
the mage. The fight lasted but a few seconds, since for all his power, the other self was no match for
Rularuu. What took longer was figuring out a way to consume the other’s soul and memories without
using a dimension spanning link. Rularuu held the self imprisoned for several years while he worked on a
solution to the puzzle, and eventually he devised a magic ritual that should have accomplished the same
result. It worked, but it worked far, far better than Rularuu had originally planned. He had spent a lot of
timing formulating the scope of the spell in an effort to ensure that he would get everything from his
prisoner that he would have gotten if he’d devoured him through his normal process. His ritual defined
one of the parameters as “the full contents of his life and experience.” When he cast the spell, Rularuu
consumed not only the other self, but everything and everyone that the other self had ever come into
contact with. Hundreds of thousands of men, women, children, animals, and even buildings and streets
and forests were torn from reality and condensed down into some form of pure energy and knowledge
that Rularuu could absorb.
This cataclysmic event was disastrous to the reality that he’d torn asunder. The planet began to tear itself
apart now that tremendous sections of it had just vanished. Dazed by the sudden influx of extraordinary
power and new sensations, Rularuu only just had the wherewithal to shift realities before the
disintegrating world caught him up in its death throes. Safely ensconced in a remote location in his home
universe, Rularuu spent some time just absorbing all the new knowledge. He had never really dreamed
that he could actually consume a world, or even just a piece of one. The experience was the most
intoxicating thing he’d ever felt. He knew that his days of taking in just one person at a time were now
behind him. Whole realities would be his fodder.
But his other self had also given him an idea, once his memories had been integrated into Rularuu’s own.
The other had learned what Rularuu had been doing and thus protected himself. But the other new that he
would never be able to match Rularuu’s power unless he found some new way to augment his own. That
was when he conceived of his own brilliant plan. He would find the semi-mythical Origin Point – the
reality from which all other universes were first reflected. If he could find and control that realm, he
would have the power to influence the entire multi-verse and could, in effect, edit Rularuu out of it. Of
course finding a single needle in an infinite haystack was a tall order, but the other saw it as his only
hope. Now the idea belonged to Rularuu and he had a new twist to add to the plan. Sure controlling the
Origin Point would give one tremendous power. But what if one consumed the Origin? Rularuu planned
to do just that – find the Origin reality and devour it. Then he would embody the Origin and would thus
every reality in existence would become a reflection of him.
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7.16.3 The Ravager Comes
Rularuu perfected his ritual, expanding its scope to include an entire world, and then an entire reality.
Once he completed it, he felt the perfect place to test his new scheme was on his own home world. As he
expected, the gods and priests divined his intent and sallied forth to try and halt their reality’s destruction.
Their combined power should have proven more than sufficient, but Rularuu was prepared for them. He
distracted the divine army with a host of false reflection – each made from a tiny fraction of his own
being. In effect, he was spinning off pieces of himself that he had devoured over the past five centuries.
As these lesser reflections delayed the gods (each was still a powerful magician in its own right), Rularuu
completed his ritual and consumed the entire reality in one fell swoop.
The infinite meal that a universe makes left Rularuu in a kind of intoxicated daze as he struggled to
absorb the knowledge, experience, and power of an entire reality. As it turned out, a lot of knowledge got
lost in the translation – individual thoughts and memories from the untold trillions he’d slain all got lost
in the shuffle, and distinct personalities merged into aggregate wholes. Nevertheless, the amount of data
and power was staggering. Short of God himself, Rularuu had become the most powerful being ever to
exist. And he was just getting started.
Even with all that knowledge and power, Rularuu still could not pinpoint the Origin Point. However, he
did have the ability to distinguish lesser realities from greater, more permanent ones. The varied
dimensions of the multi-verse shown like stars in the sky – and he chose to start devouring the brightest
ones first. Rularuu had truly come into the title Ravager as he cut a swath of destruction through the
Aether. And then, one day in 1968, our reality, and our world, caught his attention.
Earth’s dimension shone particularly bright in the multi-verse at that time. 1968 was a year that saw
sweeping change and discord across the globe. A new breed of hero was developing, society was falling
down and rebuilding itself every month, and the times, they were a changing. Normally even such
sweeping events on a single planet in a whole universe would not have attracted much attention, but there
were two factors in play. One, Rularuu had come to believe that the Origin Point was indeed on a planet
that was analogous to Earth in the multi-verse. Two, Rularuu’s other self on Earth was heavily involved
in the events taking place there.
Here, the other Rularuu was more popularly known as Gerard McNaughton, AKA Gerard the Green ,
famous comedian and stage magician by day, crime-fighting sorcerer by night. Gerard was also secretly a
member of the Midnight Squad, a group of mystic minded heroes in Paragon City who fought to keep the
world safe from supernatural threats. Gerard the Green had been using his notoriety and public fan base to
help promote some of the more controversial causes of the day, including protests against the Vietnam
War and fighting for African-American Civil Rights. He used his nature-based magical powers to great
effect in some of the best known pranks and protests of the era and was even featured on the cover of
Time magazine on one occasion.
For all his affable personality and pointed political humor, Gerard was actually a very powerful magician.
He had become aware of what Rularuu was doing by using his own existential link to the Ravager to
secretly monitor his crimes. Unfortunately, as Rularuu searched the Aether for bright worlds that might be
the Origin Point, he espied the trans-dimensional tether and followed it back to Earth. Thinking it as
likely a place as any for the Origin Point, he decided to devour it and his other self.
Gerard the Green immediately saw what was happening and prepared the Midnight Squad for the
Ravager’s arrival. Although he knew what Rularuu was capable of, he still felt that there must be some
way to stop him before he destroyed the Earth. Rularuu arrived in Paragon City in the form of a hurricane
force storm that covered the entire Eastern seaboard, driving people away from the coasts and into
shelters or their homes. He then materialized a physical avatar and proceeded to begin the three-day ritual
of consumption from the top of a tower located precisely at the storm’s eye. The Midnight Squad and the
city’s other heroes threw everything they had at Rularuu, but he either swatted them aside like flies or
shut them out with impenetrable force fields.
After two days of futile fighting, the Midnight Squad met to discuss one final plan. Gerard the Green had
developed a strategy, all be it a very dangerous one. He suggested using the power locked within an
ancient artifact known as the Dagger of Jocas to trick Rularuu into consuming the wrong world. The
dagger had the ability to actually sever reality, and the Midnight Squad kept it locked in an extradimensional
vault for safe keeping. None of the members felt comfortable using the artifact, but they
realized that they had no choice. With the dagger’s power and their own magic, they would
simultaneously cut away a tiny sliver from the reality of every person, animal, and thing in Paragon City
and then use their magic to weave them together into a shadow version of the great metropolis. If they did
this at the exact moment of Rularuu’s ritual, they could trick him into consuming the shadow shard
instead of the real thing. They theorized that this would cause the ritual to actually backfire, forcing
Rularuu to consume himself instead of Earth’s reality and hopefully destroying him forever.
The Midnight Squad made its preparations while Rularuu finished the last stages of his ritual. All across
the city residents felt a simultaneous tingling in the back of their necks as the Dagger of Jocas cut away a
part of their existence. The shadow city came together just as Rularuu’s incantations ceased and then –
POOF! – it was over. The storm immediately cleared up and Rularuu was gone from his tower. It wasn’t
quite what the Midnight Squad had expected, but they were definitely pleased with the results. Only
Gerard The Green had any reservations. He still had his connection to Rularuu and he knew that
somewhere, out there, the Ravager still existed.
7.16.4 The Shadow Shard
Gerard was right of course. Rularuu did live on, although he was none too happy about his current
situation. The nanosecond before his ritual fired off he realized what the Midnight Squad had done. He
sensed that the shadow Paragon City had been substituted for the real universe, but it was too late to stop
the ritual. Yet if the ritual went off as planned, he would devour nothingness and, as predicted, destroy
himself. In the short sliver of time, the several universes that comprised Rularuu’s mind made a quick
calculation and acted. Rularuu sacrificed a great portion of his own power to immediately infuse the
illusory city with true energy and form. Where the Midnight Squad had originally anticipated that the
false reality would exist for only a moment, Rularuu’s infusion gave the new universe true form. It
swirled up out of the Aether and formed a pocket universe, known as a shard, that was an exact replica of
the Paragon City that Gerald and company had copied using the Dagger of Jocas.
Rularuu realized almost immediately that he was trapped – and the fact that it had taken him more than
just a moment to fully comprehend his situation worried him more than anything. At his full power, such
realizations should have come instantaneously. He had truly become but a shadow of his former self. He
looked around this false city and found it full of very real people, including copies of the very Midnight
Squad that had tricked him. He unleashed his full fury on the assembled – and startled – heroes. They
fought back as best they could, but even in his weakened state Rularuu had more than enough power to
tear them each limb from limb, along with most of the other copied heroes in the false city.
Not satisfied with slaying just the shadows of those who had defeated him, Rularuu’s madness drove him
even further. He had brought his hurricane with him into the Shadow Shard and now he increased its
intensity to the point where it actually started to tear the reality of the place apart. Huge chunks of the city
went flying off into space or shattered into millions of pieces. Hundreds of thousands of shadow people
died – although to call them shadow people is to unfairly diminish them. Rularuu had given them all full
life – they had all the feelings, memories, and emotions of the originals from which the Midnight Squad
had copied them.
Rularuu’s rage lasted for almost a year as he systematically searched ever atom of the Shadow Shard in
his quest to find a way out. But he was literally trapped within himself. He’d given up so much power to
give the realm permanency that he no longer even had the ability to peer out into the Aether or into other
realms. He couldn’t even use his most basic ritual and link with another one of his selves (something he
dearly wanted to do to Gerald the Green). Finally, he resolved himself to his fate, or at least to the fact
that he was going to have to find a long term solution to his problem.
As the Ravager, Rularuu had not spent a whole lot of time building anything. He hadn’t even really had a
home or base of operations for centuries. Although he had the knowledge of several dozen universes
stored away in his brain, the Shadow Shard’s creation had scattered and jumbled his thoughts. It took him
a while to start to piece together a plan for how he would shape his own little personal kingdom. He made
an early, vain attempt to simply rebuild the city as it once was, but soon grew bored with the results. He
let his imagination run wild a little bit, and constructed his new home to more closely suit his own special
needs.
While Rularuu retains just a small fraction of his former power, by Earth standards he’s still amazingly
powerful. His preferred modes of transportation are flight and teleportation (his feet haven’t touched the
ground in years), so he saw no reason to retain the basically two-dimensional arrangement that had once
governed the city’s design. He also found that he could easily bend and reshape such basic elements as
the laws of physics. Thus he could create low or high gravity areas to suit his needs, pipes and rivers that
flowed up instead of down, and his own multi-hued, ever shifting sky in place of a sun and stars (which
didn’t exist in the Shadow Shard as real celestial bodies anyway).
Of course this radical new construction left the hundreds of thousands of surviving humans in a state of
shock and confusion – but nothing worse than what they’d already experienced when Rularuu fist tore the
shard apart. Ninety percent of Paragon City’s shadow residents had died during that time, and many of
those who did survive only did so because they either had super powers or were rescued by someone who
did. All the major heroes had died fighting Rularuu in those first few hours, but hundreds of lesser powers
had survived. They were smart enough to know that they couldn’t do anything against Rularuu’s god-like
puissance and so had hidden themselves from his wrath as best they could.
Rularuu had paid little attention to the survivors. He simply didn’t care what happened to them. Having
devoured whole realities, the fate of a few shadow humans who wouldn’t even exist were it not for his
sacrifice of power didn’t even register on his radar screen. But soon Rularuu began to experience two
emotions he had not felt for quite some time – loneliness and boredom. He’d had no need for
companionship or entertainment when he was busy sucking in other people’s knowledge and experience.
But now he needed some sort of distraction, some kind of companionship. Furthermore, he could use any
help he could get when it came to finding a way to escape his current predicament.
And so Rularuu sought out the survivors and brought them all together in a great, many-tiered public
plaza that he’d constructed out of different pieces of roadway and parking lots. Although he has keen,
supernatural senses and some clairvoyance, Rularuu is not omniscient within the shadow shard. A few
hundred managed to stay hidden away, but the vast majority – about a hundred thousand – gathered
together out of fear or curiosity to see what Rularuu had to say. The Ravager appeared before the
assembled masses as a hundred foot tall floating figure in purple and yellow robes. His head had long ago
left any pretensions to being human and instead appeared utterly demonic. His hands burned with green
fire and he stood atop a column of smoke and multi-hued lightning.
Rularuu spoke for many, many hours. Once he started talking it was like he couldn’t stop or, at the very
least, he didn’t want to stop. He quite frankly and openly told them about his past and how he came to be
a ravager of realities. Naturally he left out the embarrassing bits and focused on his great
accomplishments, his limitless knowledge, and his world shattering power. He didn’t mention how he’d
gotten himself into his current situation at all, but rather implied that he’d chosen to create the Shadow
Shard for his own mysterious purposes. Then he gave them all a choice – serve him or be broken down
into their constituent atoms and rebuilt into something useful. Everyone assembled agreed to do as he
commanded, although really, what else could they say? Of course, in their hearts, most of them pledged
allegiance out of fear, not devotion, and secretly hoped to one day find away back to their home (since of
course, none of them realized that they were copies of the originals and therefore already were home).
7.16.5 Reign of Rularuu
Rularuu the Ravager became Lord Rularuu in 1970. He set up his little kingdom with several important
goals in mind, some short term, and one long term. The overriding goal remained finding a way out of
this prison. He now knew for certain that he couldn’t do that on his own, so he had decided to try and find
some other way. He’d consumed realities where science had created portals for passing through from one
reality to another and he retained a basic knowledge of how such things functioned. He hoped to harness
the creative and intellectual abilities of his new subjects to the task of helping him rediscover the entire
technology – or a magical equivalent – to break through the dimension barrier.
In the meantime, the society as a whole needed to be organized and the use of resources tightly
controlled. Rularuu retained tremendous mystic power. He could transform matter at the atomic level
with a fair amount of effort or simply reshape and reform basic materials with ease. His control over
things like gravity and even time and space within his dimension gave him great flexibility in defining
reality. But one thing Rularuu could not escape was the fact that there was a very finite amount of matter
and energy within the Shadow Shard. With no access to even a sun for light and energy for plants to
photosynthesize, the realms resources needed to be very carefully conserved. Just making sure there’s
enough food and power for everyone (including his own needs) takes up much of his time. For more
information on the food chain in the Shadow Shard, see that document.
Rularuu has tinkered with nearly everything in the Shadow Shard to one degree or another, including the
denizens. He has tweaked the way their brains work, expanding their minds and mental capacity to help
him focus on finding a way out of this prison he accidentally created for himself. The vast majority of the
denizens were, for the past thirty years or so, entirely engaged in scientific or magical research of one sort
or another. Those who weren’t were busy working to support those who were. This vast commitment to
research is quite an accomplishment given that none of the individuals involved had any training in the
appropriate fields. Everything they’ve learned they either got from Rularuu’s own fragmentary memories
or from their own discoveries. It has been a slow going process and, even given the access to mutable
laws of physics and whatever equipment they need, not much progress has been made. Up until recently,
they’d managed only to create a device capable of sending out a signal into other, nearby dimensions and
scanning them for basic facts. This turned out to be an achievement whose consequences they couldn’t
have foreseen.
Of course not everyone went along with Rularuu’s game plan. Those initial few hundred survivors who
had hidden themselves from the Ravager remained hidden as best they could. They had the sympathetic
help of many of those who had pledged allegiance to the lord of the Shadow Shard. Many of the realms
remaining super powered beings were among the hidden, and they became the nucleus of a resistance
group. But their form of resistance was very passive. They feared any attempt to directly – or even
indirectly confront Rularuu. Instead they focused on stealing away resources from him and working on
their own efforts to escape the Shadow Shard and return home. Occasionally Rularuu would find one or
more of them and then his anger was terrible to behold. He’d publicly execute the rebels and lash out
against any loyalists who happened to be nearby. Resisting Rularuu proved a deadly vocation, but those
who did so felt they had no choice.
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7.16.6 The First Rikti Invasion
The first Rikti to invade Paragon City came not to Earth, but to the Shadow Shard, albeit, they came in
much smaller numbers. While preparing for their invasion, the Rikti spent a great deal of time surveying
our own dimension. During this time, they picked up the scanning signal sent out from the Shadow Shard.
Without that signal, the Rikti would never have noticed the tiny pocket universe since it was so small that
it was lost in the noise and chaos of the Aether. The Rikti’s own, much more advanced scans determined
that this shadow shard seemed to be attached to and created from the very dimension they planned to
invade.
Imagining that perhaps this was some kind of secret military installation or other target of military
interest, the Rikti sent several drones and scouting teams into Rularuu’s realm to ascertain if the place
was a threat. They quickly determined that, yes indeed, it could be a threat since the ruler possessed godlike
power levels. However, they also determined that the realm had no contact whatsoever with Earth.
They decided to withdraw from the realm without engaging the residents in battle and to keep a watchful
eye on it. If Rularuu’s realm became involved in the war at any stage then the Rikti would act against it,
but until then, they decided to leave it be.
Rularuu and his subjects lived through the Rikti War without ever realizing it was going on just nextdoor.
Indeed, it might have been centuries before the original Earth and the Shadow Shard came into
contact were it not for a captured Rikti database. During and after the war, any data recovered from the
Rikti about inter-dimensional travel immediately got transferred to the Portal Corp for analysis. The
analysts had tons of data to sift through after the war, and it was only recently that they finally decoded
and evaluated some information about the Rikti’s scouting of the Shadow Shard. All the Portal Corp
analysts could determine was that the Rikti had visited the realm shortly before the war and that it seemed
to be connected directly to Paragon City in some way. Obviously, this bore some investigation.
Unlike the Rikti, who were experts at covertly scouting other dimensions, the Portal Corp team that first
went through the barrier into the Shadow Shard did not take enough pains to secure their secrecy. They
had opened a portal into an area of the realm that still looked somewhat like the original Paragon City that
they had expected from a dimension so closely situated to our own. It didn’t take Rularuu long to discover
them, and when he did, he sprang into action. He immediately seized all but two of the ten-person
exploration team. Those last two had been left behind to guard the portal location where a group of
resistance fighters found and captured them. Thus, almost simultaneously, Rularuu and the resistance
both learned about the existence of Portal Corp, our world, and a possible means to escape.
Fortunately for Earth, the Portal Corp techs back home automatically shut down the portal when they
didn’t hear back from the exploration team. But something strange had happened. While the portal was
closed, the connection between the two realities was not entirely severed. Because the Shadow Shard was,
in reality, a part of our own dimension rather than a unique plane unto itself, it yearned to be reconnected
with its “parent.” The Portal Corp could thus not fully close the path between the two worlds. Not only
would it now be much easier for people to travel to and from the Portal Corp facility to the Shadow
Shard, but the possibility of random portals opening up between the two dimensions became very real.
Back in the Shadow Shard, Rularuu easily picked apart his captives through a combination of torture and
mental powers. Within a day he knew a great deal about the true Earth, the Rikti invasion, and Portal
Corp. He had of course immediately investigated the site where the explorers entered the Shadow Shard
and found traces of the connection to Earth. He immediately set his scientists to investigating the area
with all the equipment they had available. Meanwhile, the resistance fighters were also learning from
their “captives.” They told the explorers everything they knew about Rularuu and described what had
happened to them. The Portal Corp explorers agreed to help them escape back to Earth if they could get
back to the portal location and open a doorway home.
The two Earthlings and a group of about forty resistance fighters mounted a lightning raid against
Rularuu’s scientists. Rularuu had never had much need for soldiers, guards, or police of any kind. His
own power had always been more the sufficient to ensure law and order. The attackers quickly
overwhelmed the scientists guarding the location and the explorers sent their emergency retrieval signal.
Rularuu rushed to the scene in time to see several dozen of his subjects rushing through an interdimensional
gateway. He of course followed them. But Portal Corp was ready to repel any such unwanted
guests. Applying a combination of force fields and energy weapons, the quickly drove Rularuu back
through the portal before he even realized what was happening. Even so, his own defenses managed to
kill fifteen people in the Portal Corp facility and cause substantial damage. But the portal was closed once
again, and Rularuu was trapped. Not only was he trapped, he was injured – something that hadn’t
happened to him since he was human.
Rularuu was actually a little bit frightened. He could taste his victory, but he could also taste his death.
On the other side of the barrier he had been much, much weaker than he expected. So much of his power
was wrapped up in creating and maintaining the Shadow Shard reality, that Rularuu at home and Rularuu
anywhere else were two vastly different beings. As long as the Portal Corp continued to effectively guard
their portal facility, he didn’t think he could get back through there without an army. Which obviously
meant it was time to start building just that.
Portal Corp was all for just sealing off the Shadow Shard and never looking back, but unfortunately they
couldn’t do that. After extensive debriefings with the explorers and the new refugees, they began to get
some idea of what the Shadow Shard really was. Although none of the Midnight Squad who’d fought
Rularuu was still alive, they were able to got through the hero group’s archives and pull out some salient
details about Rularuu. They surmised what had happened, and eventually came to the conclusion that the
realm could not be ignored. At the urging of the refugee resistance fighters they also had to admit that
they owed it to Rularuu’s subjects to try and rescue them from his tyrannical reign. After all, they were
actually citizens of Paragon City too, in a weird way.
And so the battle lines were drawn and the time for a war between the Shadow Shard and Earth had come.
Rularuu was intent on fighting his way through the portal (which his scientists would soon figure out how
to open) and the Portal Corp and its allies needed to overthrow Rularuu and rescue the Shadow Shard’s
human population from slavery. A month after their first incursion into the Shadow Shard, The Portal
Corp started sending in strike teams to secure a foothold in the realm. What they found surprised them
tremendously – Rularuu’s newly minted army had taken the field. The resulting battle was tremendously
bloody and costly, but the humans eventually prevailed. They left the portal permanently open and used
as a conduit to place a force field around the beachhead. Thus far, Rularuu has been unable to break
through, although his power grows daily.
The Portal Corp knows that humanity is on a ticking clock. They must defeat Rularuu before he finds his
own way out of the Shadow Shard. Otherwise he will be free to once again start devouring whole
realities, and there’s little question as to where he will start first. And the next time, it probably won’t be
so easy to trick him.
7.16.7 The Army of Rularuu
Rularuu had never made an army before. Indeed, he’d scarcely ever made anything at all in his long
existence. He’d been so busy destroying things, he’d never had the time or inclination to build anything.
His thirty-five years in Shadow Shard have taught him a lot about creation and modification. He’s
fashioned a funhouse reality from his own imagination and altered his human subjects to make them into
better scientists. When it came time to quickly create an army to fight for the portal, he first turned to the
humans once again. But he also drew upon the fragmented but still extensive database of knowledge in
his head about the scores of universes and billions of inhabited worlds that he’d devoured in his time. He
culled through these memories for the deadliest warriors he could recall and used them as models for his
new soldiers. The result is a mixed bag of styles and influences from across time and space, but which
together have formed a decidedly dangerous and effective fighting force.
Rularuu wants to keep as many humans as possible still working at trying to make their own portals.
Since the battle with Earth began, Rularuu has been using captive soldiers and heroes as raw materials for
his army-building program in addition to his own subjects. Still conscious of the finite resources available
to him in the Shadow Shard, he uses everything at his disposal, from dead enemy soldiers to spent shell
casings and discarded cigarette butts. Any bit of matter or energy that the Earthlings bring into the
Shadow Shard is more fodder for his mills. Even the energy put out by the Portal Corp force fields has
proven a valuable new resource.
7.16.7.1 Field Marshals
The only soldiers not created from humans or spare bits of matter and energy are the few dozen generals
who oversee Rularuu’s growing army – the Field Marshals. Rularuu doesn’t really trust any of his
subjects. He’s smart enough to know that they’d all run given half a chance. Even though he heavily
indoctrinates his soldiers with mind control and memory wiping magic, he still won’t risk putting
command in one of their hands. Therefore, he had no choice but toe lead the armies himself. Of course, he
can’t be everywhere at once, but part of him can. The Field Marshals are just that – parts of Rularuu
himself that he has broken off from his core being and given lives of their own. Each of them is a fully
formed personality from one of the many selves that Rularuu has devoured over the ages. These
personnae are all still loyal to the greater Rularuu whole. They’ve been around long enough to come to
appreciate and enjoy the power that being Rularuu gives. Thus they’re totally loyal to the Ravager. They
do not, however, continue to share thoughts or memories. Each Field Marshal is a complete individual
once again, with a small (but significant) fraction of Rularuu’s power. Under other circumstances the
Ravager would never have made such a sacrifice, but in this instance he felt that he had no choice.
Each Field Marshal resembles Rularuu himself, although their looks vary slightly, as they’re all
individuals and tend to choose colors and accoutrements that best suit their personalities. However, the
overall look is consistent, since it serves as their badge of office and authority. Dressed in deep purple
robes, the Field Marshal stands twelve feet in height. There are no feet visible since, like the Ravager
himself they travel by floating, flying, or teleportation. The robes have intricate designs and patterns in
colors that vary depending on the Marshal’s tastes. Their hands are more claw like than human and are
constantly surrounded by a halo of blue or green flames. Their heads are demonic, almost dragon like
snouts with different arrangements of horns and spikes depending on the individual Field Marshal’s
tastes.
Field Marshals are powerful foes in their own right, but their true terror comes from their ability to lead
Rularuu’s armies. They each have several thousand soldiers assigned to them, which they can instantly
teleport to their side in times of need (effectively summoning more minions). They can also reshape
energy and matter like their master, allowing them to heal themselves and their soldiers during the course
of battle.
www.SaveCOH.com: Calls to Action and Events Calendar
This is what 3700 heroes in a single zone looks like.
Thanks to @EnsonsDeath for the GVE code that made me VIP again!
The dagger of Jocas reference is pretty epic in the context of some of the recent Incarnate content.
@Golden Girl
City of Heroes comics and artwork
Musings are good enough for me, could you please post that one too?
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Rularuu
Many see the Rularuu as inscrutable, destructive enemies. However, there is a method to their madness. I will endevor to explain what I can of their existance.
The Shadow Shard was originally a world somewhat similar to our own. It even had humans, again, much like our own. And these humans worshiped the Ideals of a being they called The Rularuu. The Rularuu was, and is a being of immense power. So immense, in fact, that it split this power up over countless bodies. each with distict purposes, and even minds, though they all consider themselves one being.
The three primary peices of The Rularuu were Ruladak, Faathim, and Lanaru. Ruladak was in charge of, apparently, manual labor division. He seems to be a form of slave driver. Faathim was the healer, and possesses many defensive powers. Lanaru was the judicial system, judge, jury, and executioner.
All worked well on the shadow shard. Until one day Faathim noticed that people from our world had begun experimenting with portal technology. Faathim made plans to create a safe haven should travellers arive in the Shadow Shard. This Haven, the Chantry, was to be immune to all forms of assault. Even by The Rularuu itself. And he built it around himself in effort to free himself from the larger part of The Rularuu. His efforts were unfortunately successful.
In seperating himself from The Rularuu, it seems Faathim harmed it greatly. As Faathim seems to have been a calming influince on The Rularuu whole, his removal has spurned the remaining parts of The Rularuu to anger and violence. Lanaru, in particular, seems to have been driven mad, as it is unable to perform its function and breach the chantry to avenge the wound.
Unfortunately, the massive, insane, and unchecked power of The Rularuu tore the world of the Shadow Shard apart. The few survivors still have to battle the lesser parts of the Rularuu daily.
Ruladak and Faathim immediately went to war. Faathim, however, was able to bind Ruladak away by using trickery and deceit of some sort. Ruladak, however, was not without power.
In respose to imprisonment, an army of the lesser parts of the Rularuu constantly assault the Chantry, ironically preventing Faathim from leaving, imprisoning him in turn.
And that, as well as I can determine, is how The Rularuu came to be how it (or they) is.
Our discovery of the realm recently may prove to upset this tenuous balance of powers. Let us hope that whatever falls does not come crushing down on top of us.
Next is the part I must have pasted in, probably completely outdated.
So anyway, I went through my old SS TF screenshots and consulted with NoFuture and came up with these musing. There's also been a lot of theory getting thrown around in various parts of these forums.
Interesting what Sara Moore says about kora fruit - not in her TF but in your first Kora Fruit mission. She states that Kora Fruit has been around since before the breaking of the world, that it grows off Kora vines which feed off Cascade red rivers [never mind we get all our missions in Firebase Zulu - ahem ;], and that the fruits draw in Rularuu. The Rularuu don't eat the fruit, they just guard it, so who knows what they want with it. I have a hunch that's why the Rularuu are in this world, though. They are there to farm Kora Fruit - or at least to ensalve the natives and make them farm the fruit.
Sara Moore calls the refugees in the Shadow Shard the "Peoples of Paragon." I really think the Shadow Shard is an alternate Paragon City. An odd one with red rivers, kora fruit, and no superheroes but Paragon none the less. They also seem to have a long past with the "Prince of Brass" (Nemesis) though I'm not clear on whether that's our Nemesis or a home grown one. There's indications that Rikti and the CoT have been there, too.
Old Fred's Book is most interesting. The madness broke the world around 20 years ago. It destroyed the seasons. The sun and moon vanished. I want to think that 'vanished' here just means hidden by the clouds and storms, but Ruladak was trapped in this world by the breaking - so this has got to be some sort of dimensional thing. "Old" Fred is, by the way, only 35 years old.
The Peoples of Paragon seem to speak English - you have no problem reading what one of the natives wrote back at the breaking of the world. Rularuu can speak it (as you can see just going there) but monuments are written in another tongue. Perhaps the Aspect's native language? I can't believe we would even have a hope of translating whatever language Rularuu thinks in.
Strange - in the third TF we find out (in a single clue) that the people were told that they should worship and obey Rularuu, but should not worship Rularuu. Boyd thinks maybe it means they should worship Rularuu god or philosophy but not the creatures of Rularuu themselves.
So the history I'm seeing is this:
Rularuu invade and enslave the Peoples of Paragon. If Kora Fruit wasn't there already, the Rularuu introduce it to the land and start farming it. The Aspects of Rularuu rule the land. (The region? The world? The dimension?)
Faathim doesn't like the situation or being part of Rularuu. When he started to feel the first portals from our world, he builds the Chantry 'out of thin air' and hides in it, breaking off his contact from the Rularuu overmind.
Ruladak, who controlls the Soldiers of Rularuu, tries to break the Chantry. According to Sara Moore in the second TF, the war between them 'breaks several islands'. That's real interesting to me - it makes me think the world was already a series of floating islands at this point.
Lanaruu, meanwhile, is going nuts. I can understand that - he's got a serious problem with authority and here he is part of a hive-being like the Rularuu. Lanaruu and his storm elementals are attacking everything. He also builds a fortress, the Storm Palace, but not to hide from the Rularuu overmind. Lanaruu's own growing insanity caused Rularuu to (at least mostly) disconnect.
Lanaruu "cast down" Ruladak in battle, whatever that means. Faathim (probably working with the native Peoples of Paragon) gets Ruladak entombed.
Lanaruu goes completely nuts and totally breaks the world, pulling it into another dimension. This also causes more disconnection from the Rularuu overmind.
I talk about the overmind a lot. I'm pretty sure the Rularuu are a being-of-many-beings kind of thing. Much like your body has living, individual cells. Rularuu isn't connected physically but through some psychic/mystic connection. I'm thinking the Rularuu "inducted" the Observers, Brutes, and Wisps while Natterlings are just made up of whatever is lying around. It could also be that Rularuu came from the Wisps as their psychic powers grew to the point of constant communication. Anyway, while the individual beings are normally dominated by the Rularuu overmind's will, they still do have their own free will. Not only are Faathim and Lanaruu acting individually, we also have a rogue wisp and brute buying enhancements from us out in the Shard itself.
The aspects of Rularuu were not always part of Rularuu. It seems they were killed (by Rularuu?) then the Rularuu resurrected them and made them part of the overmind. They look a lot like giant Wisps so maybe they are the ex-leaders of that race?
Loose Ends:
In the third TF when we find out the CoT is going to try and bind Faathim:
The idea of binding and capturing something like Faathim, it's mad. But they're talking like they've done it before.
Faathim the Not So Trustworthy? Azuria thinks Faathim isn't telling the whole truth. Justin, the TF3 contact, doesn't trust Faathim much, either.
What are the reflections!? They are all enemies that have come to the Shadow Shard before Portal Corps (Nemesis, CoT, Rikti, Crey) though the 5th Column/Council also shows up. There's really no mention of what they are, though. The newer Primus guide appearantly has an entry about another aspect of Rularuu that controls them but not what the purpose is. Perhaps to study them before invasion? Or is it just some alien thing we aren't going to understand? (Shades of Lem's _Solaris_)
Which breaking happened first? Lanaruu breaking the world or the Ruludak/Faathim fight? Lanaruu's breaking could have caused the whole region to be smashed into strange floating islands, then the R vs F fight could have broken them up a bit more. Or maybe this world was always floating islands. The R vs F fight broke the islands a bit more then Lanaruu's breaking ripped it out of its home dimension. It's difficult to tell, I think partly because it isn't easy for Faathim to distinguish himself from the other aspects.
The name - Shadow Shard. Shadow of what? Paragon City? The old world that the People of Paragon once lived in before the breaking?
Poison � Sabbath
Surprised they kept so much of the Mot story intact all the way up to i22. Unbelievably disappointed they cut the part about meeting the ghost of Lovecraft and Poe though.
Holy guacamole! There is a lot of stuff to digest in here. It'll take me more than a full day to read, and I can imagine how long this took to write. I spent most of the last hour reading through the 5th Column entry, and I'm reminded of why I fell in love with the game's original backstory. So much of the original content had so much backstory that it's truly amazing. As I read back on those origin stories, I get a sense of a real, living world where characters have lives of their own outside of what they do on-screen, and that's just amazing.
I LOVE seeing these stories, and I'd have loved to see the game go on to expand on them so much more. THIS is the stuff I've always wanted to see make the story headlines more than anything else.
Samuel_Tow is the only poster that makes me want to punch him in the head more often when I'm agreeing with him than when I'm disagreeing with him.
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Nemesis knows that he must start slowly since the city still loves its heroes. Thus far he is responsible for the new laws requiring all heroes to register themselves and their powers with a single city office. He has made this registration process relatively lengthy and onerous, and plans to add more red tape as time goes on.
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Always remember, we were Heroes.
The Dagger of Jocas! Finally, we see just what it does, and how truly epic it is. And it seems like the Dream Doctor had a few different names early on before he became what he is today (Mister E? Gerard the Green?).
Thank you, Poison, Leandro, and Golden Girl for posting all of this information.
I could wish it had been available more widely, years ago, but I'm not going to rant about it at this point. I'm just grateful that there's no reason to hold this stuff back any more.
Thank you, Poison, Leandro, and Golden Girl for posting all of this information.
I could wish it had been available more widely, years ago, but I'm not going to rant about it at this point. I'm just grateful that there's no reason to hold this stuff back any more. |
@Golden Girl
City of Heroes comics and artwork
@Golden Girl
City of Heroes comics and artwork
Just to be clear, this is a very recent release - this isn't stuff that a few players have been sitting on for years and not sharing with the community.
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I assume that the googledocs thing is actually documents related to Eden's aborted pen and paper RPG.
Talking of Crey, in the currently suspended I24, the Brickstown mob revamp set a lot of the Crey mobs to neutral, including one where a Paragon Protector was being shown off to a crown of citizens - and the old mugging spawns had been replaced with Crey agents standing beside a dead body with vague dialog about how the person died, or if they'd been involved or not - there really was a big push to turn Crey into not just another group menacing the streets.
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The outlines are instructive just for an illustration of the difficulty between imagining something and realizing your imaginings.
@Golden Girl
City of Heroes comics and artwork
I must apologise, but I've had these since 2004. But I gave my word not to share them.
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It's certainly a trip to read the Rikti outline in particular and see just how deeply Rick Dakan and Sean Fish had delved into their background. I wish we could have seen much more of that background reflected in the game setting.
I really like the idea that at some point The Clockwork King might eventually become a world-class threat. I still wonder if it was not our current dev team's intention to eventually kill off Penelope Yin and use her as the trigger that "activated" him, so to speak.
Maybe I'll ask Matt about that if he's able to organize that lore questions session he was proposing.
Thanks everyone for posting this , its great reading !
@Golden Girl
City of Heroes comics and artwork