When Evil Supersedes, The World Will Be Claimed By The Wrath Of Marduk

In the ancient city of Babylon, where ziggurats scraped the heavens and priests speak forgotten incantations, one name echoed louder than all others — Marduk. To his followers, he was a savior, the slayer of Tiamat, and the king of gods. But buried beneath layers of praise and myth lies a darker, more horrifying truth: Marduk was not just a god… he was something else entirely. Something that never truly left.


Legends claim Marduk ascended to power after a cosmic war among celestial beings. When Marduk defeated Tiamat, the chaos dragon, he did not destroy her. He consumed her essence, absorbing the raw force of entropy and madness. From that moment on, Marduk's power became something unnatural. His temple in Babylon, the Etemenanki, was said to be not just a structure, but a dimensional anchor — keeping something vast and malevolent trapped beneath the earth.

In recent decades, archaeologists and explorers who dared excavate beneath the ruins of Babylon reported unexplainable phenomena — whispers in languages never spoken by humans, impossible shifts in time perception, and vivid dreams of a golden figure with a serpent's tongue and a thousand eyes. Some began sketching spirals with trembling hands, unable to stop. Others simply disappeared into the night, as if called by a voice only they could hear.

In secret meetings held by occult historians, the theory grows bolder: Marduk was never a deity, but a cosmic intelligence — an interdimensional parasite that fed on worship, fear, and blood. When the world ceased calling his name, he went dormant, trapped behind veils of space and myth. But now, in an age of rising chaos, war, and desperate prayers… he stirs.

It is said the stars will soon return to the same alignment as they were during his rise. When that moment comes, his "return" will not be glorious — it will be apocalyptic. The skies will churn black with unseen wings, and ancient temples will pulse like beating hearts. One by one, the old gods will bow again — not in reverence, but in terror. For Marduk does not forgive. He reclaims. And in his wake, the earth will remember what it means to fear its forgotten king.

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