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+ | ==Summary== |
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− | '''Immortality''' is the term given to people who cannot die from natural means, whether this be due to longevity, regeneration, or other means. |
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+ | '''Immortality''' is the ability to simply not die by natural means for any number of reasons, ranging from simply having no limit to your lifespan, being able to [[Regeneration|regenerate]] from wounds that would normally be lethal, or being protected by a higher being, among other possible reasons. It should be noted that no Immortality is truly perfect, and no matter how much a character's immortality is hyped up within their own setting, it is very, very unlikely that they are truly completely unkillable when matched up against characters from other fictions. |
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==Types== |
==Types== |
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− | '''1: |
+ | '''1: Eternal Life:''' ''Characters gifted with this type of immortality cannot die from natural causes, such as old age or conventional illness, but can be killed by unnatural causes. To clarify, this type of immortality can include both those who do not age at all, and those who still grow old, but will never die of old age. However, in the case of the latter it should be made clear that this is not just [[Longevity]], as characters with that ability will eventually die of old age, as opposed to Eternal Life, for which dying of old age is not possible.'' |
− | *'''Examples:''' [[Galactus]] ([[Marvel Comics]]), [[Ajimu Najimi]] ([[Medaka Box]]) |
+ | *'''Examples:''' The Valar ([[Lord of the Rings]]), [[Galactus]] and the [[Silver Surfer (Marvel Comics)|Silver Surfer]] ([[Marvel Comics]]), [[Ajimu Najimi]] ([[Medaka Box]]) |
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+ | '''2: Resilient Immortality:''' ''Characters with this degree of immortality can indefinitely survive injuries that would otherwise be lethal to a normal person, without needing to heal.'' |
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+ | *'''Examples:''' [[Voldemort]] ([[Harry Potter (verse)|Harry Potter]]), [[Ganondorf]] ([[The Legend of Zelda]]), [[Hidan]] ([[Naruto (The Universe)|Naruto]]) |
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+ | '''3: Immortality via [[regeneration]]:''' ''Characters with this type of immortality can simply regenerate from wounds that would normally be lethal, though its effectiveness depends on the degree of the regeneration.'' |
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+ | *'''Examples:''' [[Doomsday (Post-Crisis)|Doomsday]] ([[DC Comics]]), [[Majin Buu]] ([[Dragon Ball]]), [[Alucard (Hellsing)|Alucard]] ([[Hellsing]]), [[Kaguya Houraisan|Hourai]] [[Fujiwara no Mokou|Immortals]] ([[Touhou Project]]) |
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− | ''' |
+ | '''4: Immortality via [[Resurrection|reincarnation or resurrection]]:''' ''Characters that are immortal because, whenever they die, they will simply reincarnate within another body or resurrect themselves at a later point in time.'' |
− | *'''Examples:''' [[ |
+ | *'''Examples:''' The Avatar ([[Avatar: The Last Airbender]]), [[Dark Schneider]] ([[Bastard!!]]), [[Michael Roa Valdamjong]] ([[Tsukihime]]), [[The Emperor of Mankind]] ([[Warhammer 40,000]]) |
− | ''' |
+ | '''5: Deathless Immortality:''' ''Characters who exist unbound by conventional life or death, or do not exist at all, and thus cannot be traditionally killed. Typically, abilities such as [[Existence Erasure]] are needed to destroy them.'' |
− | *'''Examples:''' |
+ | *'''Examples:''' All Dark Area Digimon ([[Digimon]]), [[Sun Wukong]] (Journey to the West), Ultimate Ones ([[Nasuverse]]), Hourai Elixir Users ([[Touhou Project]]) |
+ | '''6: Parasitic:''' ''The character is able to attain a sort of immortality by abandoning bodies whenever necessary to transfer their consciousness to another body, whether they are [[Possession|possessing]] someone else or switching to a backup body.'' |
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− | '''4: Immortality via godhood, or protection from a deity:''' ''A character that was either granted immortality by a god, or is immortal because of its hierarchical position due to godhood, so that its divine immortality is less a power, and more treated as a consequence of its state of being as a deity. In either case, only a being of greater power than the god in question can override it.'' |
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− | *'''Examples:''' [[ |
+ | *'''Examples:''' [[The Lich]] ([[Adventure Time]]), [[Teridax]] ([[Bionicle]]), [[Jason Voorhees]] ([[Friday the 13th]]), [[Orochimaru]] ([[Naruto (The Universe)|Naruto]]), [[Darth Sidious]] ([[Star Wars|Star Wars Legends]]) |
+ | '''7: Undead:''' ''Characters who cannot die due to technically being already dead, often overlapping with other forms of immortality.'' |
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− | '''5: Perfect Immortality:''' ''Complete and utter inability to ever die. This is typically reserved for questionable omnipotents and cosmic characters who are strong enough that dying isn't exactly high on their list of worries, even if they were capable of it.'' |
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− | *'''Examples:''' [[ |
+ | *'''Examples:''' [[Jason Voorhees]] ([[Friday the 13th]]), [[Kirby (Character)|Ghost Kirby]] ([[Kirby (Universe)|Kirby]]), Edo Tensei zombies ([[Naruto (The Universe)|Naruto]]) |
− | ''' |
+ | '''8: Reliant Immortality:''' ''The character cannot die as long as a certain being, object, or even concept exists.'' |
⚫ | *'''Examples:''' [[Lucemon]] - reliant on malice in the hearts of men ([[Digimon]]), [[Voldemort]] - reliant on Horcruxes ([[Harry Potter (verse)|Harry Potter]]), [[AIM Burst]] - reliant on the Level Upper Network ([[To Aru Majutsu No Index]]), Fairies - reliant on aspects of nature ([[Touhou Project]]), [[Chara]] - reliant on the desire to kill ([[Undertale]]) |
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− | *'''Examples:''' [[Teridax]] ([[Bionicle]]), [[Jason Voorhees]] ([[Friday the 13th]]), [[Orochimaru]] ([[Naruto (The Universe)|Naruto]]), [[Darth Sidious]] ([[Star Wars|Star Wars Legends]]) |
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+ | '''9: Transcendental Immortality:''' ''Characters whose true selves exist independently from the plane where they can be killed.'' |
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− | '''7: Undead:''' ''Self explanatory. The undead generally double up with other types of immortality, often being impossible to kill through conventional means.'' |
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− | *'''Examples:''' [[ |
+ | *'''Examples:''' [[Dark Schneider]] ([[Bastard!!]]), [[Pennywise]] ([[The Dark Tower]]), [[Bard]] ([[League of Legends]]), [[Tokiha Misa]] ([[Notch]]) |
+ | '''10: Meta-Immortality:''' ''Entities that are not alive or dead in a conventional sense, standing outside the ordinary laws of reality, temporality, and dimensionality (of any number). If it is possible to destroy such a character, it can only be accomplished by a being of a similar or higher existence.'' |
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− | '''8: Reliant Immortality:''' ''The power to be immortal so long as a certain object, person, concept etc. exists.'' |
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+ | *'''Examples:''' All 1-A characters |
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⚫ | *'''Examples:''' [[ |
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[[Category:Powers and Abilities]] |
[[Category:Powers and Abilities]] |
Revision as of 17:48, 19 February 2020
Summary
Immortality is the ability to simply not die by natural means for any number of reasons, ranging from simply having no limit to your lifespan, being able to regenerate from wounds that would normally be lethal, or being protected by a higher being, among other possible reasons. It should be noted that no Immortality is truly perfect, and no matter how much a character's immortality is hyped up within their own setting, it is very, very unlikely that they are truly completely unkillable when matched up against characters from other fictions.
Types
1: Eternal Life: Characters gifted with this type of immortality cannot die from natural causes, such as old age or conventional illness, but can be killed by unnatural causes. To clarify, this type of immortality can include both those who do not age at all, and those who still grow old, but will never die of old age. However, in the case of the latter it should be made clear that this is not just Longevity, as characters with that ability will eventually die of old age, as opposed to Eternal Life, for which dying of old age is not possible.
- Examples: The Valar (Lord of the Rings), Galactus and the Silver Surfer (Marvel Comics), Ajimu Najimi (Medaka Box)
2: Resilient Immortality: Characters with this degree of immortality can indefinitely survive injuries that would otherwise be lethal to a normal person, without needing to heal.
- Examples: Voldemort (Harry Potter), Ganondorf (The Legend of Zelda), Hidan (Naruto)
3: Immortality via regeneration: Characters with this type of immortality can simply regenerate from wounds that would normally be lethal, though its effectiveness depends on the degree of the regeneration.
- Examples: Doomsday (DC Comics), Majin Buu (Dragon Ball), Alucard (Hellsing), Hourai Immortals (Touhou Project)
4: Immortality via reincarnation or resurrection: Characters that are immortal because, whenever they die, they will simply reincarnate within another body or resurrect themselves at a later point in time.
- Examples: The Avatar (Avatar: The Last Airbender), Dark Schneider (Bastard!!), Michael Roa Valdamjong (Tsukihime), The Emperor of Mankind (Warhammer 40,000)
5: Deathless Immortality: Characters who exist unbound by conventional life or death, or do not exist at all, and thus cannot be traditionally killed. Typically, abilities such as Existence Erasure are needed to destroy them.
- Examples: All Dark Area Digimon (Digimon), Sun Wukong (Journey to the West), Ultimate Ones (Nasuverse), Hourai Elixir Users (Touhou Project)
6: Parasitic: The character is able to attain a sort of immortality by abandoning bodies whenever necessary to transfer their consciousness to another body, whether they are possessing someone else or switching to a backup body.
- Examples: The Lich (Adventure Time), Teridax (Bionicle), Jason Voorhees (Friday the 13th), Orochimaru (Naruto), Darth Sidious (Star Wars Legends)
7: Undead: Characters who cannot die due to technically being already dead, often overlapping with other forms of immortality.
- Examples: Jason Voorhees (Friday the 13th), Ghost Kirby (Kirby), Edo Tensei zombies (Naruto)
8: Reliant Immortality: The character cannot die as long as a certain being, object, or even concept exists.
- Examples: Lucemon - reliant on malice in the hearts of men (Digimon), Voldemort - reliant on Horcruxes (Harry Potter), AIM Burst - reliant on the Level Upper Network (To Aru Majutsu No Index), Fairies - reliant on aspects of nature (Touhou Project), Chara - reliant on the desire to kill (Undertale)
9: Transcendental Immortality: Characters whose true selves exist independently from the plane where they can be killed.
- Examples: Dark Schneider (Bastard!!), Pennywise (The Dark Tower), Bard (League of Legends), Tokiha Misa (Notch)
10: Meta-Immortality: Entities that are not alive or dead in a conventional sense, standing outside the ordinary laws of reality, temporality, and dimensionality (of any number). If it is possible to destroy such a character, it can only be accomplished by a being of a similar or higher existence.
- Examples: All 1-A characters