Difference between revisions of "Ancient prophecies"

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Shard-mutated shapeshifters seen in the fog banks of Oceana, now called "Mistwives" by sailors.
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Shard-mutated shapeshifters seen in the fog banks of Europa, now called "Mistwives" by sailors.
  
 
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Latest revision as of 13:42, 2 May 2025

Ancient Prophecies

“The old stories didn’t die. They changed.”

Overview

This page compiles legends, prophecies, and mythic phenomena encountered or speculated upon in the world of *Apocalyptica Arcanum*. All entries have roots in real-world folklore and mythology prior to January 18th, 1886. Some have been confirmed through direct encounters; others remain the subject of fear, rumor, and forbidden research.

Confirmed Phenomena

Wendigo

Source Legend: Algonquian mythology (North America)

Modern Interpretation: A shard-twisted spirit of endless hunger, now called the "Frozen Hunger" in West America.

Status:

    • Confirmed Encounter**

The Black Dog and the Two-Faced Woman

Source Legend: Lakota mythology

Modern Interpretation: A spiritual warning of unraveling — the Black Dog devours hope; the Two-Faced Woman lures souls into ruin.

Status:

    • Confirmed Encounter**

Abhartach

Source Legend: Irish folklore

Modern Interpretation: An immortal vampiric tyrant, now whispered of as "The Thirsting King" among the drowned cities of Europa.

Status:

    • Confirmed Encounter**

The Evangelical Rapture

Source Legend: Christian apocalyptic tradition

Modern Interpretation: A mass vanishing and mutation event after the fall, interpreted as divine judgment by some and magical collapse by others.

Status:

    • Confirmed Historical Event**

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Rumored and Speculative Phenomena

Draugr

Source Legend: Norse mythology

Modern Interpretation: Shard-infested corpse-walkers guarding ruined strongholds across the Sea of Ghosts; also called "The Hollowed Kings."

Status:

    • Rumored**

Selkies

Source Legend: Scottish folklore

Modern Interpretation: Shard-mutated shapeshifters seen in the fog banks of Europa, now called "Mistwives" by sailors.

Status:

    • Rumored**

Will-o'-the-Wisp

Source Legend: European folklore

Modern Interpretation: Floating shard lights that lure travelers into bogs, known now as "Green Lanterns" among swamp tribes.

Status:

    • Rumored**

The Headless Horseman

Source Legend: German and American folklore

Modern Interpretation: A revenant knight fueled by shard-rage, known in Cascadia as "The Rider Without Mercy."

Status:

    • Speculated**

La Llorona

Source Legend: Mexican folklore

Modern Interpretation: A spirit of endless mourning who drowns shard-tainted children; still called "The Weeping Woman."

Status:

    • Rumored**

The Green Man

Source Legend: British Isles folklore

Modern Interpretation: A living shard-born entity of tangled forests, revered as "The Verdant King" in Europa.

Status:

    • Speculated**

The Wild Hunt

Source Legend: Germanic and Norse folklore

Modern Interpretation: An arcane storm of ghostly riders still seen racing across the wastelands under the green auroras.

Status:

    • Rumored**

Baba Yaga

Source Legend: Slavic folklore

Modern Interpretation: A twisted, shard-warped witch dwelling in the wandering ruins of Southern Asia, now known simply as "The Hag."

Status:

    • Speculated**

Cockatrice

Source Legend: European folklore

Modern Interpretation: Shard-tainted reptilian beasts that petrify with a hiss; feared as "Stonelash Serpents" in Lemuria.

Status:

    • Rumored**

Alp

Source Legend: Germanic folklore

Modern Interpretation: Nightmare creatures feeding on the minds of shard-weary travelers, now called "Dreamleeches."

Status:

    • Speculated**

The Kappa

Source Legend: Japanese folklore

Modern Interpretation: Amphibious shard-mutants haunting river deltas and flooded ruins in Oceana; often called "Shellbacks."

Status:

    • Rumored**

The Cintamani Stone

Source Legend: Buddhist and Hindu mythology

Modern Interpretation: A shard relic said to grant visions of the Beforetimes, sealed somewhere within the jungles of Atlantis.

Status:

    • Speculated**

The Banshee

Source Legend: Irish folklore

Modern Interpretation: Spirit-women wailing across shattered battlefields; modern scavengers call them "Gravewives."

Status:

    • Rumored**

The Pukwudgie

Source Legend: Wampanoag Native American folklore

Modern Interpretation: Shard-twisted gremlins, tricksters of the ruined forests of West America.

Status:

    • Rumored**

The Kitsune

Source Legend: Japanese folklore

Modern Interpretation: Shape-shifting shard spirits that weave illusions to steal vital essence; now called "The Ninefold."

Status:

    • Speculated**

The Black Shuck

Source Legend: English folklore

Modern Interpretation: Shard-mutated black hounds hunting the lost and the damned across Atlantic coastal ruins.

Status:

    • Rumored**

The Yuki-onna

Source Legend: Japanese folklore

Modern Interpretation: A shard ghost of the snows, seen luring travelers to their deaths along the glaciers of Arctica.

Status:

    • Rumored**

The Nuckelavee

Source Legend: Orcadian (Scottish) folklore

Modern Interpretation: A skinless shard monstrosity that poisons the waters of the Bengal Isles.

Status:

    • Speculated**

The Dullahan

Source Legend: Irish folklore

Modern Interpretation: A shard-blighted herald of death, carrying a burning emerald shard as its lantern.

Status:

    • Rumored**

The Valkyries

Source Legend: Norse mythology

Modern Interpretation: Rogue shard-spirits that harvest souls from dying battlefields; now called "The Shardmaidens."

Status:

    • Speculated**

The Loup-Garou

Source Legend: French-Canadian werewolf myths

Modern Interpretation: Shard-mutated berserkers found among the war-clans of Dixie.

Status:

    • Rumored**

The Morrígan

Source Legend: Irish mythology

Modern Interpretation: A shard-bound war spirit, whispering destruction to kings and generals before their downfall.

Status:

    • Speculated**

The Kelpie

Source Legend: Scottish folklore

Modern Interpretation: Water shard-creatures that drag travelers under when crossing marshes and lakes.

Status:

    • Rumored**

The Chupacabra

Source Legend: Latin American folklore

Modern Interpretation: Shard-mutated livestock hunters; blamed for the devastation of rural farming villages in Cascadia.

Status:

    • Rumored**

The Leshy

Source Legend: Slavic folklore

Modern Interpretation: Shard-touched forest guardians that can twist paths and illusions to trap wanderers.

Status:

    • Speculated**

The Jorōgumo

Source Legend: Japanese folklore

Modern Interpretation: Shard-mutated spider spirits that lure prey by singing from ruined cities.

Status:

    • Rumored**

The Tarasque

Source Legend: French folklore

Modern Interpretation: A colossal shard-beast, blamed for the destruction of early settlements in Southern Asia.

Status:

    • Speculated**

The Afanc

Source Legend: Welsh folklore

Modern Interpretation: Shard-born lake monsters of Atlantis’s inland seas, hunting travelers beneath the green-glow waters.

Status:

    • Rumored**