The official discord link if you wish to join the discord: https://discord.gg/j5RKwCvAFu

The background art comes from Cherylann1960.

User:Truth Bullets/SandboxFear

From The Codex

Verse Page

  • Insert a picture of the Verse at the very top, just above the Summary section.
  • For pictures that are wider horizontally, the standard size is 700px, and the alignment is to the center.
  • For pictures that are longer vertically, or are of similar size in both directions, the standard size is 400px, and the alignment is to the right.
At the end of days, as we lay ourselves down to the impossible world of dreams, our minds conjure up creations of a blackened reality where meaning and fear are synonymous. Beings rise out of the fiery fields of gray and evoke newfound emotions our consciousness practically invents on the spot. There is much power in the mind, and the creative mind crafts haunting ruses without boundary.

Summary

The Fear Mythos is an immense, detailed writing community spanning thousands of works and featuring a good number of antagonists to each. Its original purpose was a spin-off to the Slender Man Mythos, and was created by Owen Norris, Adam Levine, and Seann Barbour.

The premise is there are monsters called "Fears," creatures that are, for lack of a better term, manifestations of humanity's most primal fears and phobias, hence the name.

The Fear Mythos deals with blogs, vlogs, creepypasta, video games, and whatever else there exists that regard to these disturbing beings (there is now even a book). No canon or continuity required; writers get complete freedom, and each canon while specific to its author is technically canonical.

Power of the Verse

  • This section should explain how strong the characters/weapons in the series are in general, and what sort of abilities that they hold.

Explanations

For an explanation of the cosmology, click the collapsed section below.

For an explanation of all Fears themselves, click the collapsed section here.

Conceptual Nature: Fears are repeatedly said to be metaphors and concepts.

That's when alliterator proposed that the monsters be embodiments, personifications, of fears. His exact words were "Monsters as metaphors, woo!"
The monsters are metaphors. Even beyond a tendency for horror, the one consistent link for the things this mythos's blogs would then be about is that they'd have a metaphorical centre.
Just because a concept is rooted in a fear doesn't mean that concept has to be written for fear.
But as we expanded, adopted "Monsters as metaphors," grew outward, and allowed every artist her or his canon, that simple list evolved into a periodic table of Fear.
But this is not the only way to write; the monsters have always been metaphorical, and over time they've tried to emphasize that.
As mentioned before, they are metaphors. Our stories take one crucial idea (fear) and explore it, document it, play with it, turn it into conventions and then break those, and altogether do so in the interest of art and supporting the community. I want to be thorough here: Fears do not have to be horror monsters. They can be humans in a drama, a couple of objects in a poem, a simple phrase in a video, or the story could even be paradoxically defined by their nonexistence in a philosophical twist.
We had floods of comedy blogs, waves of philosophical pieces, blogs rooted in anthropological study, blogs based in absurdism, and ample stories that were far more fantasy than could be called horror. And every one of them was its writer's own portrayal, their personal metaphor for something that meant a lot to them, and every one of them was accepted as a part of our mythos.

Specific Fears will have their necessary explanations on their profiles.

Calculations

Supporters/Opponents/Neutral

Supporters

Opponents

Neutral

Characters

Weapons

Vehicles

Fear 1

Summary

Here you can add a summary/short info about the character.

Powers and Stats

Tier: Current Tier of the character (in bold).

Name: The character's true name, and/or common name/epithets

Origin: The name of the fiction which the character is from, with a link to the Verse page

Gender: Male, female or genderless

Age: Character's age

Classification: Character's class/race etc.

Attack Potency: The character's attack power or destructive capacity (in bold; add any explanations using brackets, not in bold).

Dimensionality: The spatial dimension the character resides on.

Travel Speed: How fast the character can move.

Combat Speed: How fast the character goes in combat.

Reaction Speed: How fast the character can react.

Lifting Strength: The weight the character can lift/move, usually expressed in tons. However it is optional since lifting strength generally doesn't matter in most fights (in bold).

Striking Strength: The attack power of the character's physical attacks/blows (in bold).

Durability: The amount of attack power the character can withstand before being overwhelmed (in bold).

Stamina: Self-explanatory

Range: The distance the character's attacks/abilities can cover.

Powers and Abilities: A list of the character's general abilities (Please add links to the "Powers and Abilities" pages, if it is possible).

Standard Equipment: Things the character usually uses, or carries with him.

Intelligence: Self-explanatory

Standard Tactics: The usual behavior exhibited by a character during battles. For example, which actions a character will first perform when fighting an unknown opponent or which abilities they will use frequently, rarely, or never. If the character's behavior is too inconsistent to identify, they fall under "wildcard".

Weaknesses: Self-explanatory

Feats: List all of the character's amazing feats. Strength feats, speed feats, durability feats, etc. You can judge a person's power by their feats.

Notable Attacks/Techniques: A list of some abilities the character generally uses.

Key: For characters who have transformation stages/power-ups or who become stronger through certain points of the story, insert those transformations/power-ups/timelines here in bold.

Note: Self-explanatory

Explanations (Optional)

This section can be used to explain the reasons for the assigned power level of a certain character more in-depth, as well as how the powers and nature of the character fundamentally work. This is particularly useful for more high-tiered characters.

However, it is very important that you make sure that the text has good grammar/sentence structure, and is easy to understand.

Gallery

Put other pictures of the character here.

Others

Put some minor information about the character here.

Notable Victories:

Put some notable/good matches that result in the character's victory.

Notable Losses:

Put some notable/good matches that result in the character's loss.

Inconclusive Matches:

Put some notable/good matches with the results still unclear.