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The Stone of Madness is a real-time strategy stealth game developed by The Game Kitchen and published by Tripwire Presents. It was released for Windows , Nintendo Switch , PlayStation 5 , and Xbox Series X and Series S in January 2025.
The mind flayer received its own chapter in the book Lords of Madness: The Book of Aberrations (2005). [24] The Expanded Psionics Handbook (2004) re-introduced the psionic mind flayer, detailing the differences between psionic and normal mind flayers, although creating a Psionic Mind Flayer still requires the information from the Monster Manual ...
At the Mountains of Madness includes a detailed account of the circumstances of the shoggoths' creation by the extraterrestrial Elder Things. Shoggoths were initially used to build the cities of their masters. Though able to "understand" the Elder Things' language, shoggoths had no real consciousness and were controlled through hypnotic suggestion.
A sadistic, mind-controlling, faun-like humanoid, likely related to Shub-Niggurath. Xinlurgash The Ever-Consuming: A bristly-mass with large gaping maws, made up with tentacles and spider-like limbs. Xirdneth Maker of Illusions, Lord of Unreality: An illusion-making entity with no true form. Xitalu Being of Higher Dimension
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
The Elder Scrolls IV: Shivering Isles is the second expansion pack for the role-playing video game The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion.Announced on January 18, 2007, the expansion was developed, published, and released over the Xbox Live Marketplace by Bethesda Softworks; its retail release was co-published with 2K Games. [1]
R'lyeh is characterized by bizarre architecture likened to non-Euclidean geometry that hampers exploration and escape. At one point, a crew member "climbed interminably along the grotesque stone moulding – that is, one would call it climbing if the thing was not after all horizontal – and the men wondered how any door in the universe could be so vast" [2] and at another, a sailor "was ...
A recurring theme in Lovecraft's work is the complete irrelevance of humanity in the face of the cosmic horrors that exist in the universe, with Lovecraft constantly referring to the "Great Old Ones": a loose pantheon of ancient, powerful deities from space who once ruled the Earth and who have since fallen into a death-like sleep.