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Disabled Deity
- 218 statements
- 38 feature instances
- 13 referencing feature instances
Disabled Deity | type |
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Disabled Deity | label |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity | page |
DisabledDeity | |
Disabled Deity | comment |
A Disabled Deity is a god or similar being who, despite the power and physical resilience that comes with divine status, is disabled in some way. Because of the obvious complications in even figuring out what would count as a disability to an entity like a Sentient Cosmic Force, this trope is generally applied to Physical Gods. This trope is Older Than Feudalism, dating back at least as far as Hephaestus in Classical Mythology. It's not uncommon for contemporary uses of this trope to be inspired by mythological figures. Somehow, using their godly powers to cure themselves never comes up as a viable option. Depending on how divine powers work in this setting, there may be a certain amount of Fridge Logic involved regarding why a being who can change shape or alter reality can't grow back a lost body part. This may be justified out-of-universe if the disability has symbolic significance or is part of the deity's "theme" (such as visual impairment for a god of knowledge, or a Red Right Hand for a God of Evil). This is for gods with physical disabilities, injuries, and such; for deities who are mentally ill or just not all there, see Mad God and Almighty Idiot. For gods that are not just disabled but completely broken up, see Pieces of God. |
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Disabled Deity | isPartOf |
DBTropes | |
Disabled Deity / int_11d152d0 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_11d152d0 | comment |
Belgariad: Torak's disability doubles as a Red Right Hand. The Orb of Aldur burned the left side of his body leaving especially his face and hand horribly scarred. Gods are also incapable of healing because they are (the Orb notwithstanding) incapable of being harmed; by dint of this, Torak feels the fresh pain of his injury, the severity of which has rendered him catatonic for millennia at a time. | |
Disabled Deity / int_11d152d0 | featureApplicability |
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Disabled Deity / int_11d152d0 | featureConfidence |
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Belgariad | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_11d152d0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_1f140feb | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_1f140feb | comment |
Morgoth from The Silmarillion was burned by the Silmarils and lost the power to shapeshift as a result. The burns will also hurt him for eternity. Sauron is missing a finger by The Lord of the Rings, it having been cut off (along with the titular Ring) at the end of the Second Age; Gollum specifically mentions his torturer having four fingers. His inability to heal may be related to the fact that he can't take any beautiful form anymore. |
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Disabled Deity / int_1f140feb | featureApplicability |
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Disabled Deity / int_1f140feb | featureConfidence |
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The Silmarillion | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_1f140feb | |
Disabled Deity / int_3583b777 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_3583b777 | comment |
In Eternal Darkness, Mantarok—the Eldritch Abomination that kept the three others in balance—eventually sustains a major disability: Death. However, even as a "dead god", it wields considerable power. The True Ending, in fact, reveals that everything that transpires was all part of its plan to eliminate the other three, leaving Mantarok uncontested. | |
Disabled Deity / int_3583b777 | featureApplicability |
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Disabled Deity / int_3583b777 | featureConfidence |
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Eternal Darkness (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_3583b777 | |
Disabled Deity / int_37fc51ce | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_37fc51ce | comment |
How you define "deity" in the Trek Verse is tricky, but there is an entity in the Q Continuum trilogy named 0 (as in the number) who is a Q-level Reality Warper. He is also very much a bad guy. The Q Continuum punished him by restricting his travel speed to light speed and putting up a barrier around the entire galaxy just to keep him out (yes, this is the one Kirk kept running into in The Original Series. Oh, and the barrier being in the center instead of the edge of the galaxy in Star Trek V isn't an error; that's a second barrier to hold one of 0's underlings.) His restricted movement is represented by his having a bum leg in his human form/disguise. | |
Disabled Deity / int_37fc51ce | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_37fc51ce | featureConfidence |
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Trek Verse (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_37fc51ce | |
Disabled Deity / int_42d070ed | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_42d070ed | comment |
In The World God Only Knows, Vulcan can't walk and has difficulty with her vision and hearing. However, she can imbue herself into an inanimate object, moving it around and using it to see and hear. | |
Disabled Deity / int_42d070ed | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_42d070ed | featureConfidence |
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The World God Only Knows (Manga) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_42d070ed | |
Disabled Deity / int_42ffb88e | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_42ffb88e | comment |
The SCP Foundation's Church of the Broken God believes in two deities; Yaldabaoth, a god of organic life, and Mekhane, a god of civilization, technology, and the mind. Yaldabaoth got pissed when Mekhane gave some of his creations minds and free will, and tried to kill them all. Mekhane then made a Heroic Sacrifice and broke themself to pieces to imprison Yaldabaoth. The Church of the Broken God wishes to piece Mekhane back together, but unfortunately for them, their last attempt didn't go too well. They're most well known for their belief that various mechanical SCP items are pieces of Mekhane. The Church of the Broken God sees most of the strange technology the Foundation locks up as fragments of Him, from a retrovirus that turns people into Clock Punk cyborgs to a machine that converts any metal thrown into it into more of itself, to the Ridiculously Human Robots they have. |
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Disabled Deity / int_42ffb88e | featureApplicability |
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Disabled Deity / int_42ffb88e | featureConfidence |
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SCP Foundation (Website) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_42ffb88e | |
Disabled Deity / int_468bebb0 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_468bebb0 | comment |
Blind Io, chief of the Discworld's gods, is an aversion. While he has no eyes in his head and wears a blindfold, he has a bunch of eyes floating around him that let him see (which causes problems when a raven comes around). | |
Disabled Deity / int_468bebb0 | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_468bebb0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Discworld | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_468bebb0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_46a4b34d | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_46a4b34d | comment |
In The Elenium, Azash was castrated by the Younger Gods, which weakened him enough that he could be trapped inside an idol. | |
Disabled Deity / int_46a4b34d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_46a4b34d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Elenium | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_46a4b34d | |
Disabled Deity / int_46aac2a3 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_46aac2a3 | comment |
Elden Ring: The Empyrean Malenia is an extreme example- she has lost three of her limbs and her eyes to the Scarlet Rot, forcing her to wear magical prosthetics to hold the Rot back. This doesn't stop her from being a fierce warrior and the game's resident Superboss. | |
Disabled Deity / int_46aac2a3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_46aac2a3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Elden Ring (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_46aac2a3 | |
Disabled Deity / int_49a88442 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_49a88442 | comment |
In Final Fantasy XIV, Zodiark is shown to have many missing or truncated body parts when the player encounters him in the flesh during the Endwalker expansion. These include three of his six arms, two of his four wings, many of his tentacle legs, and a good chunk of his abdomen and waist. These deformities are the result of him being sundered into fourteen pieces by Hydaelyn and then put back together in an incomplete state by his Ascian followers. | |
Disabled Deity / int_49a88442 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_49a88442 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Final Fantasy XIV (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_49a88442 | |
Disabled Deity / int_547e25a7 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_547e25a7 | comment |
In Ever World, Hephaestus is described as having an upper body the size of a gorilla with legs that look like they belong to a child. David helps him design a wheelchair to get him on their side in the fight against the Hetwan. | |
Disabled Deity / int_547e25a7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_547e25a7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Everworld | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_547e25a7 | |
Disabled Deity / int_5666eb1f | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_5666eb1f | comment |
The Neptunia series subjects its protagonists to this often. Causes range from simple amnesia, having their worshipers turned to the villains' side, being Trapped in Another World where they don't qualify as deities, being Trapped in Another World with no one left to worship them, or just having their powers stolen by the villain. | |
Disabled Deity / int_5666eb1f | featureApplicability |
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Disabled Deity / int_5666eb1f | featureConfidence |
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Neptunia (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_5666eb1f | |
Disabled Deity / int_5755b96a | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_5755b96a | comment |
The Order of the Stick: Like his Norse Mythology counterpart, Hoder, the Northern God of Winter, is blind. His priests wear blindfolds while on duty, which both cause them some trouble on uneven ground and leave them ignorant of the fact that one of their visitors is a vampire. | |
Disabled Deity / int_5755b96a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_5755b96a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Order of the Stick (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_5755b96a | |
Disabled Deity / int_5c7a979 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_5c7a979 | comment |
Little Big Adventure 2: According to a religious text Twinsen can read on Celebration Island, the god Dark Monk has a disfigured face after breathing in fumes from a sulphur mine. | |
Disabled Deity / int_5c7a979 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_5c7a979 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Little Big Adventure (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_5c7a979 | |
Disabled Deity / int_5e150650 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_5e150650 | comment |
Exalted: Autochthon has what, among primordial proto-gods with bodies the size of worlds, is roughly analogous to cancer; he was able to self-medicate fairly efficiently, but once he slipped into dormancy he began to slowly die from it. Appropriate, since he's the setting's equivalent of Hephaestus, if Hephaestus were a giant steampunk Eldritch Abomination with cyber-organic cancer. | |
Disabled Deity / int_5e150650 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_5e150650 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Exalted (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_5e150650 | |
Disabled Deity / int_6a7e6314 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_6a7e6314 | comment |
In Thor: Ragnarok, Thor, a Physical God of Thunder, loses an eye. He thus becomes similar to his father Odin the Allfather, who lost his eye before the events of Thor. Partway through Avengers: Infinity War, Rocket gives him a cybernetic eye to replace it (presumably so Chris Hemsworth didn't need to wear an eyepatch for the entirety of shooting). | |
Disabled Deity / int_6a7e6314 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_6a7e6314 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Thor: Ragnarok | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_6a7e6314 | |
Disabled Deity / int_6ac55ec7 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_6ac55ec7 | comment |
Dungeons & Dragons: The evil god Vecna of the Greyhawk setting is missing his left hand and eye, both of which have a tendency to resurface in the setting as Artifacts Of Doom. Depending on the edition, he lost the parts to a treacherous lieutenant before his apotheosis. The evil 4th Edition god Torog is covered in Wounds That Will Not Heal, has his legs visibly twisted and broken, and has his spine twisted backwards in an L-shape. He's called "The King That Crawls" and is the patron of jailers and torturers. Forgotten Realms: Tyr, the god of justice, was blinded by Ao the Overgod for questioning one of his decisions, and, much like his Norse Mythology counterpart, had his hand bitten off during an attempt to subdue Kezef the Chaos Hound. The Orc deity Gruumsh is said to have lost an eye while battling the Elven deity Corellon Larethian, although the church of Gruumsh insist this is a heresy spread by the elves and Gruumsh has always had one eye. Ilmater is a borderline example. His body is covered in Wounds That Will Not Heal, symbolic of his role as the god of martyrdom. |
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Disabled Deity / int_6ac55ec7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_6ac55ec7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeons & Dragons (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_6ac55ec7 | |
Disabled Deity / int_76e7de99 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_76e7de99 | comment |
Forgotten Realms: Tyr, the god of justice, was blinded by Ao the Overgod for questioning one of his decisions, and, much like his Norse Mythology counterpart, had his hand bitten off during an attempt to subdue Kezef the Chaos Hound. The Orc deity Gruumsh is said to have lost an eye while battling the Elven deity Corellon Larethian, although the church of Gruumsh insist this is a heresy spread by the elves and Gruumsh has always had one eye. Ilmater is a borderline example. His body is covered in Wounds That Will Not Heal, symbolic of his role as the god of martyrdom. |
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Disabled Deity / int_76e7de99 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_76e7de99 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Forgotten Realms (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_76e7de99 | |
Disabled Deity / int_7fc78282 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_7fc78282 | comment |
Sauron is missing a finger by The Lord of the Rings, it having been cut off (along with the titular Ring) at the end of the Second Age; Gollum specifically mentions his torturer having four fingers. His inability to heal may be related to the fact that he can't take any beautiful form anymore. | |
Disabled Deity / int_7fc78282 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_7fc78282 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Lord of the Rings | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_7fc78282 | |
Disabled Deity / int_80afc3d9 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_80afc3d9 | comment |
In the Spirit Animals series, four of the godlike Great Beasts were slain while protecting humanity from the Devourer. As immortals, they cannot truly die, and the series kicks off with the four reincarnating as the spirit animals of four children. However, death and rebirth has stripped them of much of their power, and there's no telling how long it will take to return. | |
Disabled Deity / int_80afc3d9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_80afc3d9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Spirit Animals | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_80afc3d9 | |
Disabled Deity / int_83d41855 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_83d41855 | comment |
Gargoyles has Odin appear in one episode. Subverted, however, in that he gets his eye back at the end. The Eye of Odin was a recurring Artifact of Doom in the series; it turns from a dangerous medallion into an actual eye once Odin puts it back where it belongs. | |
Disabled Deity / int_83d41855 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Disabled Deity / int_83d41855 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Gargoyles | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_83d41855 | |
Disabled Deity / int_8a1a57c8 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_8a1a57c8 | comment |
Hackmaster supplement Gawds & Demi-Gawds: In the world of Aldrazar (the Hackmaster campaign setting) the greater gawd Luvia is blind. This gives him a -4 to hit in combat. | |
Disabled Deity / int_8a1a57c8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_8a1a57c8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Hackmaster (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_8a1a57c8 | |
Disabled Deity / int_8c87469c | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_8c87469c | comment |
The Thunder Dragon Lanayru in The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword is long dead in the present and suffering from a terrible disease in the past. The player must do some time warping to make his medicine and cure him so he'll be at full health in the present. | |
Disabled Deity / int_8c87469c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_8c87469c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_8c87469c | |
Disabled Deity / int_8f6cd2ef | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_8f6cd2ef | comment |
In We Make Our Own Light, Dark Sun Gwyndolin was reliant on a nest of snakes carrying him since he was barely able to walk under his own power. After losing them, he has to undergo physical therapy and now can move independently, but his stamina is still shot to Hell and his lungs are quite vulnerable to cold. | |
Disabled Deity / int_8f6cd2ef | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_8f6cd2ef | featureConfidence |
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We Make Our Own Light (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_8f6cd2ef | |
Disabled Deity / int_9591f30c | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_9591f30c | comment |
The title characters in Time Bandits are renegade angels and not full-fledged gods, but they count because Terry Gilliam cast actors with dwarfism to play them all. | |
Disabled Deity / int_9591f30c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_9591f30c | featureConfidence |
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Time Bandits | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_9591f30c | |
Disabled Deity / int_98c55b59 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_98c55b59 | comment |
The halfing thief god Bolo in Arcanum: Of Steamworks & Magick Obscura is said to only have one arm; the other was cut off as punishment for him stealing the shadow of Progo the god of storms. | |
Disabled Deity / int_98c55b59 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_98c55b59 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Arcanum: Of Steamworks & Magick Obscura (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_98c55b59 | |
Disabled Deity / int_9f380d17 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_9f380d17 | comment |
In Record of Ragnarok the gods that win their fights in the tournament often do so with some sort of lost limb or organ. While Zeus, Thor and Beelzebub got off mostly scot-free, Shiva lost three of his four arms against Raiden and Buddha lost an eye in his fight with Hajun. While the divine medics seem to be able to perform miracles when it comes to healing fighters, both gods seem to still be missing their limbs. | |
Disabled Deity / int_9f380d17 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_9f380d17 | featureConfidence |
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Record of Ragnarok (Manga) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_9f380d17 | |
Disabled Deity / int_a6543322 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_a6543322 | comment |
ZUN initially conceived of Okina Matara from the Touhou Project game Hidden Star in Four Seasons as being in a wheelchair, representing her being a god of the disabled, but changed his mind because he didn't want to come off as preachy when he didn't know what it was like to be disabled himself. He returned to his original idea in the Visionary Fairies in Shrine manga, which features Okina in a wheelchair, though he also clarified in one of the Universe Compendiums that it's less that she, herself, is disabled, but more-so that she, being a god, is the Anthropomorphic Personification of disability itself. | |
Disabled Deity / int_a6543322 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_a6543322 | featureConfidence |
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Touhou Project (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_a6543322 | |
Disabled Deity / int_b2700e28 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_b2700e28 | comment |
If the Emperor Had a Text-to-Speech Device - "Khorne: A paraplegic sociopath." From the perspective of the present-day Imperium, the Emperor himself would qualify, being a God-Emperor dependent on life support and needing a speech synthesizer not unlike Stephen Hawking's to communicate his will to his followers. |
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Disabled Deity / int_b2700e28 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_b2700e28 | featureConfidence |
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If the Emperor Had a Text-to-Speech Device (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_b2700e28 | |
Disabled Deity / int_b88b182f | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_b88b182f | comment |
The Dark Eye: The Nameless God is a villainous and self-inflicted example. Chained into a breach in the firmament by the other gods as punishment for attempting to conquer all creation, he rages and tears off bits of his own body to free himself. His mortal followers seek to emulate him and sacrifice body parts one by one as they ascend through the ranks of his cult. This doesn't make them any less dangerous, which can make veteran players very nervous when they encounter a one-eyed NPC. | |
Disabled Deity / int_b88b182f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_b88b182f | featureConfidence |
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The Dark Eye (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_b88b182f | |
Disabled Deity / int_b9cc7496 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_b9cc7496 | comment |
In Dogma, God apparently took physical form to play skeeball, was seriously injured, and spends most of the movie as an old man on life support. | |
Disabled Deity / int_b9cc7496 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_b9cc7496 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dogma | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_b9cc7496 | |
Disabled Deity / int_bbe98876 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_bbe98876 | comment |
In The Crocodile God, Haik, the title's Tagalog crocodile-god, marries the mortal tribeswoman Mirasol in the newly-colonized Philippines. When she's pregnant and he declares that their daughter will be a god to the Spaniard she works for, the Spaniard shoots her. Haik tries to help, but can only heal Mirasol, and their tiny whale-calf daughter ends up stillborn. In modern-day California, Mirasol dreams of going to the Otherworld and finds out the other Tagalog gods managed to bring the whale-goddess back to life as an adult — but her legs are heavily scarred and she needs a walking stick in the mortal world. She's not too bothered, since she can still SWIM. | |
Disabled Deity / int_bbe98876 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_bbe98876 | featureConfidence |
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The Crocodile God | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_bbe98876 | |
Disabled Deity / int_bcadd7cb | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_bcadd7cb | comment |
Warhammer 40,000: The God-Emperor of Mankind was in excellent physical condition in his prime, but in the universe's "present" he's been dependent on life support for millennia. One of his numerous sons, Roboute Guilliman shares practically the same fate. Ironically enough, despite being seen as inferior physically in-universe, he actually returned to lead his troops, as described in the recent lore. This is partly justified, as Roboute's body is still mostly preserved, while his father's... not so much. |
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Disabled Deity / int_bcadd7cb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_bcadd7cb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Warhammer 40,000 (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_bcadd7cb | |
Disabled Deity / int_bd8b694d | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_bd8b694d | comment |
In Codex Equus, there are a few deities (and demi-deities) who have some kind of disability. Prince Healing Song is a blind Alicorn who lost his sight as a baby; he got infected with retinoblastoma, a rare ocular cancer, and doctors had to surgically remove his eyes to prevent spreading. When he Ascended to godhood on his deathbed, he was still blind, but he managed to get around this thanks to his mentor, Blue Suede Heartstrings. Despite being blind all his life, he refused to let it define or embitter him, and he's quite willing to joke about himself. He does get annoyed and snarky when people insult/patronize him, however. A large reason why he ended up befriending Gagal of the Kaluan Pantheon is due to Gagal admiring him for accepting his blindness, just like how he accepted his albinism. Muet, the Great Skunk goddess of Pantomime, Performance Art, and Silence, was born with mutism, which physically renders her unable to speak. Even after Ascending to true godhood, her disability remained. She's somewhat sensitive over how people react to her mutism, especially in a negative way, but is generally accepting of it and hasn't let it embitter her. Gagal was born with albinism; while he's not blind like Healing Song, he suffers from bad eyesight and he's extremely photosensitive, forcing him to wear sunglasses and carry umbrellas with him all the time. However, like Healing Song, he never let his disability embitter him and sees it as a fault that he's willing to work with. He was bullied for being albino as a foal, but he didn't let it affect him, and his albinism didn't really become a social issue anymore once he reached adulthood. Prince Crimson Star is also blind. He was previously an Insufferable Genius, but then he got horribly injured in a carriage accident caused by a worker's slip-up after he pushed a classmate out of the way of a runaway carriage, costing him his eyes. His blindness was treatable then, but it later became permanently untreatable thanks to a combination of a failed Deal with the Devil to restore his sight, his Jerkass Realization and suicidal depression that followed, and the vicious bullying he received from a few of his brothers. However, Golden Scepter refused to give up on him and helped him adapt to his blindness as best as he could by teaching him how to use magic to get around and hiring certain people to make reading materials that he's able to read without sight. He has since accepted his blindness, and sees it as both a sign that he was 'punished' for his foolishness and a reminder of what'll happen should he become arrogant again. Prince Varázsló is also blind, though it was self-inflicted - when he was younger, he and his twin brother Cselszövő were thrown into the Well of Eternity, which gave them both incredible knowledge and power, but transformed them into eldritch gods and drove them insane. He in particular was so tormented by the psychic visions he would constantly receive that he desperately tore out all of his eight eyes just to make the visions stop... except it didn't work because being blind now meant the potency of his visions increased. He has since learned to live with it, but it's common for people in his hell-fief to hear him screaming/muttering random prophecies. |
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Disabled Deity / int_bd8b694d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_bd8b694d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Codex Equus (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_bd8b694d | |
Disabled Deity / int_cf20c8f0 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_cf20c8f0 | comment |
Widdershins Adventures: After all but one member of his cult is slaughtered, Olgun is dependent on Widdershins for survival and is only capable of performing minor miracles, like swaying probability in her favor. | |
Disabled Deity / int_cf20c8f0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_cf20c8f0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Widdershins Adventures | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_cf20c8f0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_deaae920 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_deaae920 | comment |
In Dungeon Crawl Ashenzari, the god of knowledge and divination, deliberately had itself nailed to the sky. Being bound and crippled, Ashenzari gains the ability to see and know everything. As a result, it grants divine favor and knowledge for handicapping yourself by wearing cursed items and exploring the world. | |
Disabled Deity / int_deaae920 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_deaae920 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Crawl (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_deaae920 | |
Disabled Deity / int_e6758d93 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_e6758d93 | comment |
Scion: If a god is disabled in myth, they'll also be so in the game. Scion: Ragnarok introduces the concept of using disabilities as Birthrights (because they've become part of their owner's Legend), allowing the Scion/God to channel a related Purview without any relics... but if the disabled deity in question tries to get around the disability (Tyr getting a prosthetic hand is the example used), it cuts off the mythic connection that allows this to work. Both Odin and Tyr use this option, Odin with his missing eye allowing him to channel Prophecy and Tyr with his missing hand allowing him to channel Justice. | |
Disabled Deity / int_e6758d93 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_e6758d93 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Scion (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_e6758d93 | |
Disabled Deity / int_eb3ca096 | type |
Disabled Deity | |
Disabled Deity / int_eb3ca096 | comment |
The misfortune gods in Good Luck Girl! often walk around with bandaged limbs due to the various accidents that result from their divine powers. | |
Disabled Deity / int_eb3ca096 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Disabled Deity / int_eb3ca096 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Good Luck Girl! (Manga) | hasFeature |
Disabled Deity / int_eb3ca096 |
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