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World Pillars
- 82 statements
- 15 feature instances
- 8 referencing feature instances
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Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_1'); })Fictional worlds can come in many shapes and sizes. Some are Flat Worlds, some are Hollow Worlds, and others can be of truly bizarre types. And then you get worlds which turn out to be supported by artificial megastructures. A type of Worldbuilding trope most commonly found in fantasy and science fiction works, World Pillars give off the impression to the characters (and by extension, the viewer) that their world isn't as natural as it may seem. In fact, the mere concept of a world being held aloft by giant structures may sound crazy to the local populace who're unaware they exist. Perhaps they were put there by Precursors or beings of divine origin, either to create a place where life can thrive, or to save their original world from total destruction. Either way, they're the literal foundation of the world itself. Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_2'); })Expect the plot to be centered on the eventual collapse of these pillars, either by natural decay or through deliberate sabotage by the Big Bad. When a World Pillar goes, it will often take out an entire city, region or continent with it. Naturally, this leads to the heroes trying to save their world by restoring and fixing the pillars back into their original states, which may prove more challenging if the pillars are a form of Lost Technology that was not passed on to newer generations. World Pillars can overlap with just about any setting type, just as long as it's evident that the setting itself is being supported by them. See also World Tree, which is the natural and symbolic variant of this trope. Not to be confused with Cosmic Keystone. |
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In God of War: Chains of Olympus, the world has held by a single pillar until it was destroyed by a Titan named Atlas. | |
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God of War: Chains of Olympus (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Dark Souls has the giant, stone-pillar esque archtrees that hold up Lordran. The lowest point in Lordran is Ash Lake, where you can see the forest of them stretching from horizon to horizon, implying the whole world is like this. | |
World Pillars / int_291e9857 | featureApplicability |
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Dark Souls (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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World Pillars / int_4695b45f | type |
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In Clockwork Planet, the newly reconstructed Earth has civilizations placed on giant gears, which are held aloft by enormous core towers that are stated in the novels to be 90,000 meters (90 km) tall. The plot of the first novel revolves around Naoto, RyuZU, Marie and Halter trying to stop the government from deliberately tampering with Kyoto's core tower and purging the city into the void below. | |
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ClockworkPlanet | hasFeature |
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WorldOfWarcraft: In Cataclysm, a major storyline is restoring the pillar supporting Azeroth from the underground realm of Deepholm, which was broken into pieces by Deathwing as he escaped to the surface. Unlike most examples, this pillar is bare unsculpted rock and it's not clear if it is natural or made by beings like the Titans. | |
World Pillars / int_49ad83ee | featureApplicability |
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World of Warcraft (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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World Pillars / int_59650b1f | type |
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In the Titan series the center of Titan is connected to the outer ring by vast spokes which serve to hold it together. | |
World Pillars / int_59650b1f | featureApplicability |
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Titan | hasFeature |
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Gravity Rush is set around a gigantic pillar, and there are different "levels" that are each populated by different societies. Several characters theorize as to what's at the top and bottom of the pillar, though the bottom specifically seem to be covered in black gravity storms. Unusually, at one point in the first game the player character actually gets to traverse inside the pillar. | |
World Pillars / int_8607fd53 | featureApplicability |
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Gravity Rush (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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World Pillars / int_97f9fbcf | type |
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In Thessaly: Witch for Hire, the titular witch alludes to there being pillars that keep the various Heavens from crashing down upon Earth. She mentions this in the context of mentioning that she's learned spells to topple them. | |
World Pillars / int_97f9fbcf | featureApplicability |
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Thessaly: Witch for Hire (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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World Pillars / int_9888e7c2 | type |
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In Dan Vs., Canada is seen to be supported by some sort of ice pillar in a cave inside a mountain which, after getting destroyed, ends up flooding Canada with snow and ruining it. | |
World Pillars / int_9888e7c2 | featureApplicability |
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Dan Vs. | hasFeature |
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World Pillars / int_b4816c2e | type |
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Legacy of Kain: The Nine Pillars of Nosgoth support the eponymous world throughout the series, overlapping with Cosmic Keystone. In order the nine pillars are Mind, Dimension, Conflict, Nature, Balance, Energy, Time, States, and Death. In Blood Omen, the Pillars have become corrupted, and in order to restore the Pillars Kain must commit a Heroic Sacrifice. He refuses, instead destroying the Pillars and becoming a Vampire Monarch, ruling the world for thousands of years. | |
World Pillars / int_b4816c2e | featureApplicability |
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Legacy of Kain (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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World Pillars / int_c6d9f70e | type |
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Matter by Iain Banks takes place on a shellworld, where different worlds are nestled inside each other, held up by pillars through which you can connect to other levels. | |
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Matter | hasFeature |
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World Pillars / int_d02b6ba0 | type |
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World Pillars / int_d02b6ba0 | comment |
In Atelier Lulua: The Scion of Arland, it's revealed that both the Fellsgalaxen and Orthogalaxen ruins are part of a greater infrastructure supporting the world of Arland itself. The plot of the game eventually shifts to Lulua trying to prevent the collapse of the Fellsgalaxen ruins, which would destroy all of the Arklys region if allowed to happen, as well as save its operator, Stia. | |
World Pillars / int_d02b6ba0 | featureApplicability |
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Atelier Lulua: The Scion of Arland (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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World Pillars / int_e8d13e52 | type |
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In the Urusei Yatsura movie Beautiful Dreamer, the world to which the cast have become confined is revealed to be flat and standing upon caryatids. | |
World Pillars / int_e8d13e52 | featureApplicability |
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Urusei Yatsura (Manga) | hasFeature |
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World Pillars / int_ef445f2b | type |
World Pillars | |
World Pillars / int_ef445f2b | comment |
Zigzagged in Sonic the Hedgehog: The Movie: the world of Planet Freedom is divided into two portions; an array of Floating Continents collectively known as "The Land of the Sky", and the planet's conventional surface, which is known as "The Land of Darkness" due to the perpetual shadow it lies under. Whilst the continents of the Land of the Sky float naturally, they are anchored to the Land of Darkness by a massive glacial mountain range at the planet's northern pole. Robotnik's plan turns out to be having his new super-minion Hyper Metal Sonic destroy this mountain, which will result in the combination of Planet Freedom's rotation and the Land of the Sky's natural Anti-Gravity properties sending the Land of the Sky hurtling out beyond the atmosphere, where they will shatter into pieces. This will, naturally, kill everything living in the Land of the Sky, leaving Robotnik to claim technical victory as the sole ruler of the half of Planet Freedom left undestroyed. | |
World Pillars / int_ef445f2b | featureApplicability |
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World Pillars / int_ef445f2b | featureConfidence |
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Sonic the Hedgehog: The Movie | hasFeature |
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World Pillars / int_f10619d8 | type |
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Tales of the Abyss overlaps this with World Tree with the Sephiroth Trees, which hold the Outer Lands from the deadly miasma-filled underworld below called the Qliphoth, and are powered by lost fonic technology from the Yulia age. Over the course of the game, Big Bad Van Grants shuts down some of the trees and causes some parts of the world map to fall into the Qliphoth. As a subversion, rather than attempt to preserve what's left of the Outer Lands, the heroes instead resolve to stabilize the core of Auldrant itself and safely lower the Outer Lands into a miasma-free Qliphoth, effectively returning the world back to its original state before the uplift. | |
World Pillars / int_f10619d8 | featureApplicability |
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World Pillars / int_f10619d8 | featureConfidence |
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Tales of the Abyss (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Saint Seiya has the "Poseidon Saga", in which the eponymous Greek god (reincarnated in the billionaire playboy Julian Solo) kidnaps Saori Kiddo/Goddess Athena into the underwater world. To free her (being imprisoned in the Master Pillar that works as a Drowning Pit), Bronze Saints have to break every of the World Pillars, seven of them that represent every of the oceans (five, in fact, having two for Pacific and Atlantic oceans) and guarded by the seven Generals that protect every pillar. | |
World Pillars / int_fe83990a | featureApplicability |
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Saint Seiya (Manga) | hasFeature |
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