![Lovecraftian god title generator](https://kumkoniak.com/31.jpg)
![lovecraftian god title generator lovecraftian god title generator](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/2b/ed/2a/2bed2ad7bbadf3eaed0aeb77fc225d4c.jpg)
Subtrope of Our Monsters Are Different, Our Monsters Are Weird & Cosmic Entity. As they are defined by existing outside reality as we conceive it, most also come from somewhere beyond the stars or before the dawn of time or outside our universe. If it's truely a faithful alien however, it shouldn't even be "evil" in the typical sense. They are often used as a Greater-Scope Villain, Outside-Context Problem, Mad God, God of Evil or Sealed Evil in a Can. Howard, the Eldritch Abomination has become a mainstay of horror and fantasy works, along with numerous others that popularly derive inspiration from Lovecraft. Native to the Cosmic Horror Story genre dabbled in by authors such as H. Any rules that they do follow are beyond our understanding, as are what motives they might have for any of their actions. Humans suffer Brown Note or Go Mad from the Revelation effects just from witnessing their Alien Geometries.
![lovecraftian god title generator lovecraftian god title generator](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/76/dd/9e/76dd9e13820f4fd0af634e4dd66b5efd.jpg)
They are grotesque mockeries of reality beyond comprehension whose disturbing otherness cannot be encompassed in any mortal tongue. The Eldritch Abomination is a type of creature defined by its disregard for the natural laws of the universe as we understand them. ‘Anat is a violent war-goddess, a maiden. Anat, a major northwest Semitic goddess.Resheph, Canaanite deity associated with plague (adopted by the ancient Egyptians as a god of horses and chariots).Nergal, Mesopotamian (solar) god of war and pestilence.Moloch, a Canaanite god associated with child sacrifice.Most likely in combination with something else, though no idea what yet. I nterpreted as a "fish-god", maybe a link with "The Black Fisher". Dagon (speculative), Mesopotamian/Canaanite deity with links to fertility.Chemosh, the god of the Moabites (and possibly the Ammonites).It means "lord", or "owner", and according to Wikipedia was a title particularly associated with the Canaanite storm and fertility god Hadad, which could reasonably be morphed into the second element "Ado", given enough imagination.īy Word of Brandon, this name is Lovecraft-inspired (see quote below, thanks to "Doombrigade", via Chemoarish (Dustmother) Baal, or Ba'al (suggested by is a possible source for the first element "Ba" in this Unmade's name.In the Hebrew Bible, abaddon is used with reference to a bottomless pit. Abaddon (this is just barely a hunch, really, and it's probably combined with something else), both a place of destruction and an angel of the abyss.(suggested by The (male) devil Ashtaroth was based on the Phoenician goddess Astarte (she is mentioned in the bible as Ashtoreth), which fits with the near-east theme of the other unmade (aka Ishtar and Inanna) Ashtaroth (spelling varies), the Great Duke of Hell in the first hierarchy with Beelzebub and Lucifer he is part of the evil trinity.Asherah (speculative), a Semitic/Akkadian/Ugaritic g oddess of motherhood and fertility.Here is a list of where I believe the Unmade names came from (I noted which ones I'm not sure about), with links to Wikipedia: I thought I'd do some web-searching to see if this held up for the other Unmade as well. Looking at the list of the Unmade's names ( thank you, Coppermind), it struck me (not for the first time) that both Moelach and Nergaoul are similar to other names I knew: Moloch and Nergal, both deities from the Ancient Near East (it appears they're mentioned in the Bible, but I only recognized Nergal because he's also a god in DnD's Forgotten Realms).
![Lovecraftian god title generator](https://kumkoniak.com/31.jpg)