The Prophecy of the Blade’s Rise
The Prophecy
“When the Veil hungers, a devourer stirs—scaled in shadow, eyes of void. From ash and stillness, two eagles rise—wings of gleam, talons forged unyielding. Fang rends skull, and the beast lies broken. The galaxy exhales, its breath a storm. Two stand as wards—the rift mends, yet echoes linger forevermore.”
Explanation of the Prophecy
Etched into the tablets of Vorithra, this prophecy emerged from a vision granted to Eldris Vey’an, a revered forgemaster of the Veyd, as he meditated upon the Veil’s currents amidst the crafting of Vyrion Blades. It foretells a crisis born of the Veil’s ravenous turn—a shadowed devourer, a force threatening the galaxy’s core with unchecked hunger. Two eagles, bearers of a blade of steady gleam, rise from ruin to confront the beast, their talons shattering its skull in a decisive strike. The galaxy’s “exhalation” suggests a shift or reprieve following the act, with the eagles enduring as guardians. The “rift mends” implies a restoration of balance or order, though “echoes linger forevermore” warns of unresolved traces—whether remnants of the Veil’s unrest or the devourer’s influence. The prophecy hinges on a pivotal moment, its outcome bound to the survival and purpose of the two who wield the fang.
Vey’an interpreted the vision as a call to action against the Veil’s growing chaos, which he believed was exemplified by Acaron’s blood rites under the Draethar. To him, the devourer symbolized a corruption of the Veil’s essence by the Draethar—a beast fattened on sacrifice and ambition—while the eagles embodied the Veyd’s vow to restore equilibrium, their “gleam” a manifestation of disciplined clarity rather than divine light. The blade, he deduced, was the instrument of this reckoning—a fang to pierce the devourer’s heart. Driven by this understanding, Vey’an forged the first Noctran Blade, threading the Veil’s steady hum into vethrite and kaerith ferrite, powering it with an Ardanis Crystal. He saw it as the prophesied weapon—its unyielding edge a physical echo of the “talon of gleam”—crafted to fulfill the vision’s promise. This act marked the Noctran Blades’ origin, birthed as tools to confront the devourer and mend the galaxy’s fractures, a legacy that would ripple beyond Vorithra’s fall.
Different Interpretations
The Veyd viewed the prophecy as their mandate—the eagles symbolizing their finest, rising from Vorithra’s fall to quell the Veil’s chaos with a Noctran Blade. The “exhalation” is interpreted as a return to balance, the “wards” as protectors of that order, though the “echoes” unsettle their hope for finality. The Draethar dismiss it as delusion, with few claiming the devourer represents their rightful strength, and the eagles are doomed pretenders. Scholars among fringe worlds suggest the beast is an external force beyond the galactic comprehension, with the eagles yet to emerge.
In Recent Years
Tyran Cassel’s defeat of Vaer’Kalth, the Wraith Emperor, aligns partially with the prophecy. Armed with his Noctran Blade, he slew the ruler of Acaron’s blood rites, a figure some equate with the devourer. The strike in Kethra’s temple broke Vaer’Kalth’s dominion, and the galaxy shifted as the Acaronian Empire bent to Tyran’s will.
Yet only one eagle stood—Tyran alone—and rather than mending the rift, he claimed the throne, ushering in the Galactic Cold War. The “exhalation” became a strained stalemate, not peace, and no second ward arose. Stillwards cite this as an incomplete fulfillment; Bloodforged argue it proves the prophecy’s irrelevance.
Contradictions
Discrepancies mar the prophecy’s clarity. It demands two eagles, yet Tyran acted alone. The “ash and stillness” evokes Vorithra, but the act unfolded on Acaron, misaligning the origin. The “rift mends” suggests resolution, yet the Cold War persisted until the Alliance was destroyeds, and even so, the galaxy remains fractured. Some posit Tyran struck a lesser foe, mistaking the Wraith Emperor for the true beast.
Summary
Historical Basis
Spread
Variations & Mutation
Cultural Reception
In Literature
In Art
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Is this prophecy true??? Because it kinda kills thre Role Play if it is, as the Empire will always loose
The "prophecy" stems more from interpretation than from an objective standpoint, leaving its significance open-ended. It's more of a belief held by the Veyd than an incontrovertible fact. However, this ambiguity doesn't necessarily imply that they will lose. It's possible that both factions involved might undergo significant changes, or even that a third party could emerge and change everything. The story intentionally leaves it ambiguous whether the prophecy will truly dictate the salvation of the galaxy, allowing for a range of outcomes and interpretations.
I like this subversion
Thanks, I will notify you if I develop this any further, probably as a manuscript