laitimes

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

author:Sad burn sale

The Outer Gods are arguably the most powerful beings in the entire Cthulhu mythological system, but Lovecraft himself did not specifically use the term Outer Gods, but a corresponding class of Other Gods can still be found in the original book. It should be noted that the foreign gods should not be confused with Lovecraft's gods. The latter only appears in the 1921 story of the same name, "The God of The Gods", and the 1927 "Dream Quest For The Secret Land of Cardas". And according to Lovecraft's account, the god apparently referred only to Atthatus and his attendants. According to the novel, the gods are powerful gods from outer space, blind and silent, dancing around Atsaros with the accompaniment of flutes and the beating of giant drums. And their soul and messenger is the Chaos of Fuxing, Naiaratotipu.

The term "Outer Gods" is actually a very new term. The term was probably first revealed in the Chaos Society's 1983 2nd Edition Rulebook, but the meaning at the time was different from what it is now. It defines "outer gods" as a collective term for "Other Gods" and "Elder Gods", a name that was later distinguished from the two as a separate concept in the later rulebook. Thus, it can be seen that the Chaos Society established the concept of a foreign god very early on, but did not immediately use the term. Before the Society of Chaos, while enthusiasts acknowledged the great differences between the Old Dominators—such as Cthulhu and Asathos—they were all classified in the category of The Old Dominators. But it is undeniable that the Concept of The Outer Gods proposed by the Chaos Society was a very successful initiative. Today, the vast majority of enthusiasts, while questioning the specific scope of the gods, see the term as part of the Cthulhu myth.

According to the Definition of the Chaos Society, in the Cthulhu myth, the outer gods are almost close to the existence of the true gods, completely different from the alien horror monsters such as the old rulers, and some of them may even be the personification of the laws of the universe. It seems that only a few foreign gods are interested in human affairs or aware of human existence. But when they become aware of the existence of or interest in humans, the gods often seem to try to pass through the barriers of the universe or the dimensions of space to cause new destruction. All the intelligent races and lower gods in mythology (mainly the old rulers) were aware of the existence of foreign gods, and many of them worshipped them.

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Atchathos

Azathoth was the leader of the old rulers and gods, nicknamed the "God of Blind Foolishness", "The Core of Primordial Chaos" or "The Head of the Demon God", sometimes referred to as the "Lord of All Things", created by Lovecraft.

Atchathos

Atthatus is described as a god who operates entirely by instinct. His image is a huge amorphous mass of darkness and chaos, placed in a palace in the middle of time and space. Atthathos was flanked by countless servants frantically beating invisible giant drums, blowing flutes that only emitted disgusting, monotonous tones, accompanied by the frantic howls of the foreign gods. As his messenger, Naiaratotipu carried out his commands in the universe and acted according to his will. Sada Hergra was his incarnation.

Jugg Sotos

Yog-Sothoth, born of the "Dark", "Nameless Fog" and "Nameless Fog" of Chaos, was the ruler of time and space, also known as "The Key to the Door" or "The One Who Lives Everything, all Things Are One", created by Lovecraft. He knows and sees all the way and is connected to all time and space. Jugg Sotos lives outside the space-time continuum and is generally believed to exist in this universe and this dimension, nor is he bound by time and space.

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Jugg Sotos

The image of Jugg Sotos is a gathering of billions of glorious spheres. Jugg Sotos has several incarnations in this universe, such as Aphgomon and Tavier Yate Umer.

Jugg Sotos knew everything, and his intellect was even greater than that of Ipo Zitter. If he could please him, he might reward him with knowledge. Those who cross the Ultimate Gate to meet Him sometimes receive this gift.

Jugg Sotos is the portal through which the Void passes again, and all time is only the only one for Jugg Sotos. Jugg Sotos knew the labyrinth of time. The place where the old rulers of the ancients appeared, and the places where the old rulers of the cycle parade reappeared, these are all known to Jugg Sotos.

Shabu Nicholas

Shub-Niggurath was born of the "Darkness", "Nameless Mist" and "Darkness" of Chaos born of Asathos, alias the "Goddess of Dark Abundance", the "Supreme Mother", also known as the "Black Goat of the Forest that gives birth to thousands of children", a super-fertile god, created by Lovecraft. In the system constructed by Auguste William Dres for the Cthulhu myth, she is one of the beings that symbolize the "earth". It is depicted as a huge piece of flesh like a black cloud, with many tentacles, and a large mouth dripping with mucus. It has bred many old rulers and can also give birth to a monster called the "Black Goat Cub".

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Shabu Nicholas

Of all the gods of Cthulhu mythology, Sabhu Nicholas is one of the most widely worshipped. Among humans, she was worshipped by the Far North, the Mu continenters, the Kunyans, and all the Druids and barbarian religions; among the inhuman races, she was also worshipped by mi go and Nug Soth, among others.

In Lovecraft's work, The name of Sabus Nicholas appears only in one incantation, and her image was later perfected by other authors.

Shabb Nicholas is often confused with "darkness". "Darkness" was born from Asatos, and Sabus Nicholas was born from "Darkness." Unlike the "nameless fog," the true meaning of "darkness" is unclear.

Naiaratotipu

Nyarlathotep, created by Lovecraft, for the birth of The Lord of All Things, Asathos, of "Darkness", "Nameless Fog" and "Chaos" of "Chaos", known as "Ambush Chaos". Naiaratotipu was the messenger and spokesman of the gods, and he was particularly obedient to Atthos. Unlike most foreign gods, Naiaratotipu is one of the very few foreign gods who exhibits a humanly understandable rationality. He has always been keen to deceive and seduce mankind and to plunge mankind into terror and despair as his highest joy. In Cthulhu mythology, his image is closest to the traditional concept of "demons".

Neyarattop's incarnation of the Night Roarer

Naiaratotipu has many incarnations and titles, and dozens have appeared. Naiaratotip's best-known incarnation is "Howler in the Dark", an ugly giant whose face should have grown a huge tentacle in the position of its face. The human avatar of Naiaratotipu is usually a dark-skinned, tall, thin man with a cheerful smile. Other avatars include the Black Pharaoh, the Faceless God, and the Night Hunter.

The Nameless Mist

The Nameless Mist is one of the outer gods, produced by Atthatos, the source of all things. The Nameless Mist, like darkness, has never been truly described by Lovecraft himself. He first appeared in a "genealogy of Asartos" drawn by Lovecraft in his letter No. 617. As can be seen in the genealogy, Lovecraft set the Nameless Mist as the originator of Jugg Sotos. But even later writers did not describe the Nameless Mist in more detail or create any works from it.

The Nameless Mist

Although the Nameless Mist itself is not described in detail, a corresponding N'yog-Sothep can still be found in The Fantasy Flight Games card game Call of Cthulhu. In the seventh edition of the Rule Book, the Nameless Mist is given the title of "Magnum Innominandum".

Abhos

Abhoth is one of the foreign gods, known as the "source of impurities" and "the ancestor of demons", created by Clark Ashton Smith. Abujos, the creator of all the anomalous and abominable creatures on Earth, inhabited the Ikwa Cave at the bottom of the Mount Voormithadreth of the Prehistoric Anthonyneal Hyperborea, in the form of a terrifying, pale gray, liquid-like giant pool. The gray objects in them constantly trembled and expanded, producing ugly deformed objects known as the "sons of Abuhos", including the upper and lower limbs without a body, a rolling head, and a stomach with fish fins struggling. These objects attempt to climb out of the cave, but are often pulled back into the pool by Abhos, where they are swallowed up by their creators. Abhos also possessed telepathic abilities and was able to communicate with those who approached him, but his spirit was filled with hatred for the outside world.

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Abhos

Gehros

Ghroth was one of the foreign gods, known as the "Star of Judgment" and "Pioneer of Destruction", created by Ramsay Campbell. Gehros has the appearance and size of a planet, made of gas, ash and hot liquid iron. It usually appears as a huge rust-red sphere, covered with faults and rifts, and often forms a giant eye in the vast ocean of liquid iron beneath it.

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Gehros

Gehros was a pioneer of destruction, drifting through the universe and constantly chanting a hymn similar to the sound of anti-aircraft sirens, the "Celestial Sounds", to which the merciless stars and sleeping rulers of the old days would listen. Any galaxy it passes through will be affected by this song, the stars will gradually reach the correct position, and the old rulers will immediately awaken from their slumber and enter a state of activity, which will cause the destruction of all other life in the star, and more seriously, the star itself will cease to exist. Because of this horrible nature, it is also known as the "Precursor", "Retribution" or "Death Star". Some people believe that the mass extinction of species in the age of the dinosaurs on Earth was caused by Gehros, and others say that the destruction of the mother star of the Shagai insect family, the Star of the Shagai, was also caused by the arrival of Gehros and the awakening of some unknown life form.

Turzcha

Tulzscha is one of the invisible dancers that surround the Hall of Atthatos. As an alien god, it also represents a primordial cosmic source energy. In some narratives, this energy is mistakenly reduced to things like death and life, order and chaos. In fact, the nature of these energies and the external gods who manipulate them are far beyond our comprehension.

Turzcha is more directly related to the motion of stars and planets. Thus, the rituals and rituals that summon him are prefabricated at the autumn equinox, summer solstice, winter solstice, or other astrologically important times.

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Turzcha

Turzcha always appears in the form of a green pillar of flame. After being successfully summoned, it appears in the form of gas, penetrates into the earth into the core of the planet, and finally erupts from the ground in the form of a pillar of fire and is fixed. The earth will decay, and nearby rocks will quickly erode and bring death to plants and animals.

Turzcha's beliefs are found in the West Indies, France, Italy, and in the town of Kingsport, Turzcha is worshipped by all maggots in the area.

Idheela

Yidhra, one of the foreign gods of Cthulhu mythology known as The Dream Witch, usually appears as a young and charming human woman, but her appearance can change. Idhera has been on Earth since the first microbes appeared. In order to survive in a changing environment, she gained the ability to present any biological trait she devoured. Over time, Idheela split herself into different faces, each sharing her consciousness.

Idhela sects are widely distributed in Burma, Chad, Laos, Sumer, New Mexico and Texas. By merging with Idhera, believers gain eternal life, even though this will make them somewhat similar to their masters. Those who served her were also promised rich rewards and robust livestock. She usually hides her true colors in powerful apparitions, appearing as a beautiful young woman; only those who are favored by her can see her true face.

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Idheela

Dauros

Daoloth is an alien god of peculiar nature created by novelist Ramsay Campbell, nicknamed the Veil Crusher. It lives in a high-dimensional world far beyond the concept of human three-dimensional space, and human spatial thinking cannot imagine its specific shape. It is not without fixed forms, but the structure of this form is so complex that the naked eye cannot confirm any descriptive shape, and it seems to be just a hybrid of "hemispheres, shiny metal sheets, and small cylinders of plastic texture", all of which are pale gray. People who see it will unnaturally feel that there seem to be many shining eyes between the cylinders, but no matter which direction you look at it, you can only see the space in the many cylinders. The number of direct adherents of Dauros on Earth is very small, and its interstellar priests claim to be able to see the past, the future, and everything that travels through different spaces by worshipping Doroth; but summoning Doroth is very dangerous—because of its strange shape, people who see it basically go crazy, so they must summon it in a completely lightless environment, and if it is not controlled by a specific spell when summoning it, it will continue to expand until infinity. People who are wrapped up in Dauros tend to be punished by moving to some strange and incomprehensible extreme space or remote corner of the universe.

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Dauros

Upo Sasra

Ubbo-Sathla, known as the source of the source and ultimate ancestor, is one of the outer gods created by the novelist Clark Ashton Smith. It is described as a massive protoplast, located in a grotto deep in the permafrost. Its presence is a symbol of great fecundity, on which its body spontaneously produces primordial, single-celled organisms known as the offspring of Upo Sassara. It guards a group of stone tablets that record the wisdom and secrets of the gods. Upo Sassara is said to have spawned the prototype of all life forms on Earth, which was destined to one day reabsorb all life on Earth. Upo Sassara has no human adherents, and Migo and other alien races may worship it. Both the Book of Ebony and the Book of the Dead mention this deity.

Upo Sasra

Upo Sasra is very similar in shape and nature to another foreign god, Abhos, and this similarity has led some scholars to speculate that Upo Sasra and Abhos were the same entity that existed under different names at different times. The slates guarded by Upo Sassara have always been sought by wizards, although no wizard has been able to successfully obtain them.

Epo Zitter

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Yibb-Tstll is a foreign god created by Brian Ramley. His black blood was a weapon that attached to his victim like a snowflake and suffocated him. Contact with him can be an immediate change — often catastrophic, but occasionally beneficial. Ippo Zitter is sometimes described as a stationary, black tentacled individual with a soft and eerie head, eyes separated from the body, and huge black bat wings. Countless nightmares under the wings sucked black milk from its countless nipples.

Trunimbra

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Tru'Nembra was a foreign god and one of the invisible dancers who surrounded Theatos Palace. It is the piper of Atsatos, where it plays all sorts of extremely memorable music for Athatos, and the gods dance around Atsartos to his accompaniment. The live sound Portruningbra has no actual body and exists in the form of sound waves. The sound waves it produces can penetrate all barriers, and when faced with it, even plugging the ears is ineffective, even the deaf are not spared. There was no order to worship Truningbra, and most of the followers of this foreign god were mad musical geniuses, and those chosen by it were sent to the palace of Atsatos, where they played music for Asathos for eternity.

Trunimbra

North Eddick

Noth-Yidik is one of the gods, depicting a giant worm with a head at each end. He had combined with Kussouen to create the Tyndaurus Hound race, and there is not much more information about him.

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

North Eddick

Kussoun

K'thun, the mother of the race, is a little-known foreign god. Ancient Asian tribes described it as a terrifying pale gray giant tree with tentacles rather than branches and roots on it, with a giant eye in the canopy. Kussoun has created many species in the evolutionary history of life on Earth, and she was able to absorb biological matter to create new life.

Kussoun

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Kussoun had combined with a part of North's Body to create the Hounds of Tindalos, a race that is said to have created dinosaur-like creatures in the early days of Earth. Kussoun falls into a deep sleep after absorbing biological matter, and in the process of sleeping she mentally shapes creatures that are made up of absorbed biological matter and are released from the mother when they mature. Unlike Upo Sassara, the creatures created by this god rarely survive, yet those that survive tend to transform into truly terrifying monsters with nature and abilities that humans cannot comprehend.

Kussoun's worshippers were mostly human, and her followers would perform a terrible ritual under the leadership of her priest: using a human as a sacrifice, stripping her of the flesh and blood of the sacrifice to provide her with meat; she might eat the believer when she was not satisfied with the sacrifice.

Msisha

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Mh'ithrha is one of the foreign gods, nicknamed the "Overlord of Tyndalus", who resembles a giant wolf, similar to Fenrir in Norse mythology. He is the most powerful being of all the Tindarus Hounds.

Msisha

Msisha resides in Tindalos, a city of spiral towers that stands in the deepest part of the horned time dimension, where he rules the city of Tindalos. Msisha has been working to break the barrier between the horned space-time and the curved space-time, so that the city of Tynda ross descends into the curved space-time, establishing a passage between the two worlds. The twilight of the gods mentioned in Norse mythology suggests that the day the city of Tindarus descends is the end of the world.

Ksykeschukrus

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Cxaxukluth was a descendant, or "son," of the spontaneous fission of Atsatos. This exothetic and hermaphrodite has the form of a constantly rotating amorphous substance that constantly decomposes and changes form. Its descendants were Hziulquoigmnzah and Ghisguth, both of whom were old rulers.

Ksykeschukrus

Yumaento

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Yomagn'tho is one of the gods, created by Crispin Burnham, nicknamed the "Glutton of the Stars". Yumaento is a malevolent being who somehow expects the destruction of mankind. He lurks in outer space called Pherkard, waiting to be summoned to Earth. When summoned to Earth, Yumaento appears as a small fireball, which gradually grows into a giant fireball with a pattern of burning petals. Yumaento had no human worshippers, and his followers and vassal races were reptile cavemen named "Rhygntu".

Yumaento

Abu Gesar

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Aiueb Gnshal is one of the foreign gods, known as the "Eye of the World." The foreign god lived in a temple in Bhutan, and he looked like an invisible black void with seven orb-like eyes floating in it. Abu Gesar had an excellent insight, his eyes could see all time and space. Because of this characteristic, Abu Gesar's followers often looked through his eyes at other time and space. It is said that by looking into his eyes and performing a terrible ritual, you can see the palace of Atsartos.

Abu Gesar

Most of Abu Gesar's admirers were ghouls, but some humans worshipped him. The existence of this foreign god is recorded in the Cambuluc Scrolls, written by lang-fu, a sorcerer in Bhutan. It is said that the Great Mongol Khan Temujin received help from Abu Gesar.

Engel Kolas

Ngyr-Korath is one of the foreign gods of Cthulhu mythology, founded by Walter Korath Jr. Created by C. De Beer, also known as the "God of the Void". It is a dark blue mist with a flame-like eye. Engel Kolas existed here before the birth of the solar system, and he angrily witnessed the birth of the solar system. At this time, another old god, Paighon, made up of nuclear power, came from androy to the solar system and settled in the core of the earth. The two gods began an endless battle, and eventually Pagun stopped Engel Kolas and banished him into the Void.

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Engel Kolas

Azhora Ta

Azhorra-Tha is one of the foreign gods. This foreign god has no fixed form and is in a state of flux. Like most foreign gods, Azhora Ta's true form is an incomprehensible being. Some accounts describe it as a bizarre hybrid with the characteristics of toads, squid, insects, and constantly emitting terrifying beeps. Azhora Tower was sealed on Mars by the Old God a thousand years ago, and a thousand years later Mi-Go discovered the prison where the Alien God was being held and took every measure to prevent its location from leaking out. The order of Azhora Ta on Earth has long since ceased to exist in name only, and few records of him remain, except for sporadic fragments.

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Azhora Ta

Hydra

The Hydra, one of henry kutner's creations, is a vast ocean of gray silt in which countless weeping heads emerge—some human, some not, with distorted expressions as if in excruciating pain.

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Hydra

There are countless legends about multi-headed monsters, and their prototypes are from the god Hydra. This deity inhabits an interlaced dimension that connects many other dimensions. Hydra feeds on the brains of various creatures, and it travels to different spaces to hunt the heads of its victims through soul sending - Hydra will only hunt the creatures that are associated with it, and those that are hunted will become part of it, and the victims will not die completely, their souls will wander the outside world forever. In certain situations, they can maintain a psychological connection with the spirit of this world.

Hydra's admirers were mostly human, and they tricked others into making offerings to the gods by sending a pamphlet called The Sending of souls. The book records a ritual of soul teleportation, and when someone performs the ritual in the book, Hydra will appear as a soul host and take off the head of the caster, and the victim's head will live in its body forever, becoming part of the deity.

Ketapa

C'thalpa is one of many foreign gods, also known as the "God of the Star Core", in the form of a huge mass of living, sentient magma that inhabits the mantle.

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Ketapa

Ketapa has existed since the early days of the Earth. The Earth was still in a state of scorching lava spheres in the prime time, which was a suitable place for it. It occupies a lava lake on the surface of the earth and flows slowly in the lake. Later, due to surface cooling and other reasons, Ketapa transferred below the surface, where he continues to live to this day. It is deeply rooted in primordial matter deep underground, while also causing confusion at the quasi-elemental level of magma. It leaves a permanent mark on that level. It gave birth to the old ruler, Shterot, and five other terrible heirs through asexual reproduction, of which little is known.

Ktapa has no human adherents, and its minions are mole-shaped underground people named "Talpeurs", who carry out its commands in the world above the surface.

El Dágos

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Ialdagorth is one of the gods, also known as the "Devourer of Darkness", created by Kevin Eric Sheridan and debuted in Servants of the Coils. Eldagos was one of the invisible dancers who circled the court of Athatos. It is somewhat related to Asartos and is believed to be his cousin. It looks like an amorphous black mist, and people who see it will have an inexplicable sense of fear. Eldagos can be summoned to Earth by a specific spell, and everywhere it goes it will be shrouded in a black mist, and everything in it will be swallowed up by it. Like most foreign gods, Eldagos existed in the early universe, and since it was a cousin of Atthatus, there are some theories that it was born in endless chaos at the same time as Atsaros.

El Dágos

Kayah Kaalh

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Kaajh'Kaalbh is one of the invisible dancers who surrounds Asathos. It inhabits a disordered parallel dimension where everything is unstable, and in addition the forms of the gods are constantly constituting and decomposing, so there is no such thing as a true form. In this dimension, anyone who wants to summon it needs the help of an alien race called the Dimensional Shamblers, and this alien god may appear in various forms, usually a huge lake of mercury or a pool of magma.

Kayah Kaalh

Shabis Ka

Shabbith-Ka is one of the invisible dancers who surrounds the court of Atthos. It looked like a shapeless, human-sized, slightly purple ball of light, with a powerful arc erupting and crackling sound, and one or more mutilated faces could be seen in it if you stared at it for a long time. Shabis Ka can break down any substance with a single touch, and the place visited by this foreign god is forever tainted by a purple color that is not earthly, which never completely disappears, and the flora and fauna that inhabit or grow in this area will be stunted and mutated.

Shabis Ka

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Seven hundred years ago, primitive tribes near the equator worshipped Shabis Ka. Today, Shabis Ka has a small organized cult that calls itself primal Song cult. Believers are usually trained singers who must sing hymns before God or they will be broken up by Shabis Ka.

Sukenas

Suc'Naath is one of the invisible dancers that surround the Hall of Atthatos, nicknamed "The Mindless." Its shape was constantly twisting and rotating like a hurricane, purple and golden runes surrounding it, and constantly emitting disgusting screams and clapping sounds, while several faces with painful expressions appeared on the surface of Sukenas's body.

Sukenas

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Sukenas has three incarnations in this universe, and if these three parts can meet and unite at the same time, Sukenas can appear in its full state. Part of it is a comet called Aiin, which soars through a sea of stars, occasionally appears in different space-time, and briefly affects them, often leading to the creation of unstable time streams and countless parallel worlds in the past. The other part is a huge statue located somewhere on Earth. The third part is a wizard whose descendants have the blood of this foreign god. Legend has it that when Comet Ein crosses the sky, a human of Sukenas ancestry will appear with a statue, at which point it will be intact again.

A sect known as the Golden Hands of Suc'Naath worshipped the deity, who gathered all sorts of crazy intellectuals and trained assassins in the hope of one day releasing Sukhnas.

Cloud-like things

The Cloud-Thing is one of the invisible dancers who surrounds Atthatos. It looks like an ordinary cloud, but a closer look reveals an eerie purple glow in the clouds, with funnel-like swirling clouds beneath it. When a cloud-like object appears on Earth, it will suck and feed on its victims through its long tornado-like funnel cloud. As the number of victims increases, the color of the clouds will continue to turn purple, purple crystals will fall with the victim's body like rain, and cloud-like objects will flutter with the wind after a full meal.

Cloud-like things

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

The cloud-like thing does not have any believers or orders, and it usually accompanies Atthatos with other foreign gods. The god seemed unusually timid, and if it took any form of damage as it left, the clouds would roar and keep climbing high into the air until they dissipated.

Ikonagniz

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Ycnà gnnisssz was one of the foreign gods, founded by ClarkEvoor. Created by A. Smith. It is depicted as a black, purulent, amorphous object with many tentacles and eyes, constantly foaming and bursting on its surface and violently spewing out magma-like substances.

Ikonagniz

IkenaGniz is a being from the planet Soth, and is said to be a contemporary of Atthatos. He has properties similar to Upo Sassara, spewing magma-like material on his surface and producing a lava-like black creature that usually gathers around Ikarna Gniz and is occasionally absorbed by their creators.

Dindra

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

D'endrrah is one of many foreign gods, nicknamed the "Perfect One". She is an incredibly beautiful human woman who lives in a dark palace on Phobos. She was in a hall here, and there were countless mirrors that hid her true form—black holes with tentacles sticking out. She sometimes appears as a giant squid-like monster or a dark mist with millions of teeth. This form of Dyndara has a strong desire for planets, or "appetite" is more appropriate, and it wanders endlessly through the universe, devouring any planet it discovers. It is said that this being came here during ancient Egypt and tried to devour the earth, but Cthulhu destroyed it, and the ancient Egyptians described the battle between them as the sun god pulling on his flying car and fighting the dark god Apep.

Dindra

Mother of the Stars

The Star Mother is a juvenile of the Outer Gods. She looked like a baby-sized yellow-green stone, a faceless woman with huge breasts and a lot of pencil-thick tentacles that resembled plant roots. Originating in the nameless outer space, the Mother of stars came to Earth centuries ago and now inhabits an 18th-century shipwreck. Countless small vines spread out from her, as well as thin ropes and larger tentacles. These growths are like roots that penetrate the decaying wood of the hull.

Mother of the Stars

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

When the tentacles and twigs of the Mother of The Stars spread throughout the ship, slimy, sickly yellow-green growths grew on the ship, like some kind of malignant parasitic plant. She drives the crew's corpses through these growing creatures and manipulates the ship to move through the sea. The Mother of Stars can also create a mist that envelops ships in a thick fog. Some of the legends of ghost ships can be attributed to the Mother of Stars and her sunken lair.

Droam Avista

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Droom-Avista is one of the foreign gods, created by Henry Kutner, nicknamed "the inhabitants of the other world, the Shining Of Darkness". He slept in the abyss near Bel Yarnak and in his dreams compiled many worlds or universes, even complex cosmic sources. Droam Avista knows many secrets of the universe. He had a cruel sense of humor, and he often distorted the demands against the interrogators for those who came to him for help. Thorazor, The alchemist of Bell Janak, had acquired from Drom Avista the ability to turn everything into the rarest metal, which eventually led to the destruction of Bell Janak.

Droam Avista

Similar to Sherkhum, the image of Drom Avista has never been accurately depicted. His arrival was often accompanied by shadows or darkness, and his form was hidden in the clouds of darkness. No one had ever peeked into his appearance, for no one could look directly at those who lived outside, lest their souls be destroyed forever.

Uvi hash

Uvhash is one of the outer gods, also known as the "Blood Mad God of the Void", and is a giant aggregate of tentacles and eyes that feed on blood; inhabits the planet Rhylkos, which resembles Mars. Anyone who summons him will suffer very cruel consequences. He appears to be related to the Star Spirit and is said to be one of the terrible patrons of the tyrant Caligola. He is at odds with the old god Nodens and the foreign god Gi-Hoveg.

Uvi hash

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Uviha can be summoned by blood-orb and spells from The Blood-Rituals of Rhylkos, but that is an extremely dangerous act. After the summon is successful, Uviha will send his minions to reveal the oracle, and then he will descend with a storm or night, at which time the summoner will be sucked dry of blood.

Mother of pus

The Mother of Pus is one of the gods, an amorphous body made up of eyes, mouth, tentacles, and soft mud-like things. The Mother of Pus was born in a lascivious mating of a human being with Shabu Nicholas. When summoned to Earth, she searches for food in the foul-smelling stagnant water.

Mother of pus

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Although the Mother of Pus is considered by most scholars to be the weaker of the outer gods, its manifestation is still quite frightening. The terrifying power of the Mother of Pus has a special set of manifestations. People within 20 miles of it can go crazy for some unknown reason. Those who are mad for a short time will eventually be able to recover their minds, while other unfortunate people will never be able to recover. Those in the nearest area of the Mother of Pus will get sick due to the power of the Weeping Curse, and foul-smelling ulcerative sores will appear all over the victim's body.

Saligya

Xa'ligha is one of the foreign gods, also known as the "Lord of The Berserk", the "Demon of Discord", and has some kinship with the old ruler Hasta. He is an entity made of pure noise that seems to be associated with Truningbra. Saligya lives in noise, and "The Xa'lugha Tree" is mentioned as connected to Harry Hu. In a battle between the gods and the gods, Saligaya was somehow destroyed, but a small part of his body still existed in the form of sound waves. Some wizards sometimes combine with the remains of gods to create crazy distorted sound waves.

Saligya

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

The followers of Saligaya, usually made up of bands, would force some musicians to become his own disciples, although the significance of this act was unclear. Believers would play rousing music for God during the sacrificial ceremony to attract Him, and everyone present would become a victim of God.

Nimblos

Nhimbaloth is one of the foreign gods, nicknamed "The Empty Death", the god of evil, despair, ghosts and swamps. Legend has it that after mortals died, their souls slid out of their bodies and poured into the river of souls, eventually flowing to the bone garden of Pharasma to be judged. However, this river is not absolutely safe as other rivers. Predators hunt on the conceptual banks and depths of the soul river, eager to be able to devour the drifting soul before it receives the final retribution. The mysterious Nimbulus feeds on these predators, reveling in the digested souls of the throats of these self-proclaimed death hunters.

Nimblos

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Nimblos often appears in cluttered swamps, desolate coasts, or remote branches of rivers. Although invisible in herself, evidence of her existence may be found in places where the undead who have been tortured beyond recognition by passing by her may be found. The more hostile the wildlife in these places became, the more strange the plants became, eager to tear apart flesh and blood. Bizarre markers along the riverbank or island coast — a heap of seven piles of broken dry soil at perfect intervals — are thought to be her finger marks. Where Nimbulus hunts, the world itself retreats.

Darkness from the stars

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

The Blackness from the Stars is one of the gods. It is an approximately ellipsoidal condensed, sentient condensation of living, sentient dark matter that splits from the primordial chaos at the center of the universe. In the dark, it can be discerned by the shimmer it emits. Although it is wise, it speaks a language that no one knows and ignores the will to communicate with it.

Darkness from the stars

Ruk Kesu

Cthulhu's outer gods take stock

Lu-Kthu, the source of the old rulers and a planetary-sized aggregate of biological internal organs, if viewed up close, is a damp wart-ball with many eggs on its surface and a web of long thin tubes. Each egg has an old dominant juvenile.