“ | Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn. In his house at R'lyeh dead Cthulhu waits dreaming. |
„ |
~ H.P. Lovecraft, The Call of Cthulhu |
Summary
Cthulhu is a godlike alien entity of epic proportions. He is considered a Great Old One within the pantheon of Lovecraftian cosmic entities. While the Great Old Ones are not truly all-powerful gods as the Outer Gods are, they are nonetheless terrifying and godlike in mortal eyes. Originally from another universe altogether, Cthulhu and his kin arrived on Earth billions of years ago filtering down from the stars. However, the planet had already been claimed by a species known as the Elder Things, leading to a war between Cthulhu's Star Spawn and the Elder Things' Shoggoth monstrosities. Eventually, an uneasy peace was reached and the two factions each claimed their own half of the world.
During this time, Cthulhu constructed the city of R'lyeh, a place composed of structures so complex, the human mind would be unable to fathom them. However, a change in the stars caused Cthulhu to fall into a deep slumber, his city, and the majority of his race sinking to the bottom of the ocean with environmental changes. Though the Elder Things' only adversaries had vanished, their victory was cut short when the Shoggoth slaves gained sentience, rebelling, and destroying them. With the masters of the old world gone, life evolved from the Elder Things' leftover experiments, and the war was forgotten with time. However, Cthulhu still lies dormant at the bottom of the sea, immune to the changing of the universe. Cults devoted to him can still be found at the darkest corners of the earth, whispering dark blasphemies that one day, when the stars are right, the sunken city will rise and its lord shall return to claim what is his.
Powers and Stats
Tier: At least High 6-B, likely far higher
Name: Cthulhu, High Priest of the Great Old Ones, The Great Dreamer, The Sleeper of R'lyeh
Origin: Cthulhu Mythos
Gender: Genderless, referred to as Male
Age: Vigintillions of years old[1]
Classification: Great Old One, Alien Deity
Powers and Abilities: Superhuman Physical Characteristics, Great Old One Physiology, Large Size (Likely Type 3. Described like a 'Mountain' walking or stumbling[1] and 'Mountainous'[1]), Dimensional Manipulation, Spatial Manipulation, and Reality Warping (The City of R'yeh, of which Cthulhu presumably helped in the creation of it,[2] Has unnatural[3] and Non-Euclidean Geometry[2]), Fragrance Manipulation, Body Control and Adhesive Manipulation (Described as amorphous, slimy, and smelling intolerable[1])
Attack Potency: At least Large Country level, likely far higher (Cthulhu caused an earthquake as he slumbers in the city of R'lyeh[4])
Speed: Unknown (Great Old Ones have been stated to be capable of travelling from planet to planet,[5] although in what time frame is unknown)
Lifting Strength: Unknown, possibly Class G (Sheer Size should probably grant this, likely comparable to Dagon)
Striking Strength: At least Large Country level, likely far higher
Durability: At least Large Country level, likely far higher (Should be able to endure its own blows), its physiology makes it incredibly hard to kill
Stamina: Infinite (Their bodies are not made of biological matter, meaning they do not have the same stamina or nutritional limitations as most beings do, capable of flying from planet to planet without any need of air[5])
Range: Likely Hundreds of Meters Physically; at least Planetary with Psychic Abilities (Cthulhu can mentally interact with anyone on the planet[4]); High Hyperversal with psychic abilities when unhindered (The Great Old Ones were said to know and influence all that happened in the universe, which is infinite-dimensional,[6][7] before they were sealed away/began to slumber)
Standard Equipment: His Star Spawn[8]
Intelligence: Nigh-Omniscient (The Great old ones know all that is happening in the universe[9])
Weaknesses: None notable
Note: As explained and accepted with this blog, The Whisperer in Darkness mentioning the origins of Cthulhu and why stars were flaring forth in the same sentence doesn't imply Cthulhu affected stars. The paragraph containing this sentence employs literary parallelism by Henry Wentworth Akeley repeatedly mentioning two unrelated things he's learned to Albert N. Wilmarth; there's no reason to assume this sentence about Cthulhu and stars is different.
Gallery
Notable Matchups
Notable Victories:
Notable Losses:
Inconclusive Matches:
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Weird Tales p. 177-178: The Call of Cthulhu
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Weird Tales p. 173: The Call of Cthulhu
- ↑ Weird Tales p. 172: The Call of Cthulhu
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Weird Tales p. 175-176
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Weird Tales p. 168-169: Call of Cthulhu
- ↑ The Dreams in the Witch House
- ↑ Through the Gates of the Silver Key: V.
- ↑ At the Mountains of Madness p. 42
- ↑ Weird Tales p. 170: Call of Cthulhu
Discussions
Discussion threads involving Cthulhu (Cthulhu Mythos) |