"When gods withdrew and demons fell,
The world was left an empty shell.
From love forbidden, fate was torn,
And in the dark, a child was born."
Lore
The war between heaven and abyss had ended in silence. No victor, no peace—only ruins. The gods abandoned their thrones, the demons retreated into shadow, and mortals were left to rebuild upon scorched earth.
Yet in the ashes of that forgotten war, a secret lingered. A god of radiant light and a demon of endless night had broken every law of their kind. Against the hatred of their worlds, they chose love. And from that love, a child was born.
He was hidden among mortals, his essence sealed by wards older than memory. To the villagers, he was nothing more than a boy—fragile, ordinary, unremarkable. But within him slept a power neither divine nor damned, a power that could shatter the balance of realms.
Centuries passed. The story of the war became legend, then myth, then silence. But silence does not last forever.
"When moon turns black and shadows creep,
The child shall wake from endless sleep.
The seal shall break, the night shall roar,
And realms shall bleed forevermore."
Lore
On the night of the Black Moon, the sky itself trembled. The stars dimmed, the air grew heavy, and the earth cracked as if recoiling from an ancient memory. From the forests came whispers, from the rivers came screams, and from the hearts of men came terror.
Shadows bled into the Mortal Realm, twisting men into monsters. Neighbors turned upon neighbors, their bodies warped by corruption. The village bells rang in panic, but no prayer could stop the tide.
And in the midst of this chaos, the boy's chest burned with a fire he could not name. His vision blurred, his breath faltered, and the seal upon his soul began to stir.
The villagers saw only fear. The heavens saw only danger. The abyss saw only opportunity.
But destiny saw something else.
"The world knows not the child's true name,
But soon shall rise eclipse-born flame.
From love forbidden, fate shall rise,
To save the world… or end the skies."