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==War of Erasure==
==War of Erasure==


Mammon did not shape the War, but he exploited its aftermath. As Courts collapsed, he was among the first to claim what remained—territory, relics, followers, and meaning itself. His Court rose rapidly in the chaos.
Mammon did not shape the War, but he exploited its aftermath. As Courts collapsed, he was among the first to claim what remained, territory, relics, followers, and meaning itself. His Court rose rapidly in the chaos.


==Concordance==
==Concordance==

Revision as of 15:25, 28 December 2025


Main > Compendia > Creatures > Strange Gods > Fey Gods > The Bloated King
The Bloated King is the largest Fey, a titanic ogre of a goblin.
The Hoard is riches personified. A creature so massive with excess that wealth drips off of it.

Overview

Mammon (Feyspeak \ˈmæmɑn\ for riches), the Bloated King, is the Fey God of Goblins and the ruler of The Gilded Court, one of the Midnight Courts formed from the collapse of The Soft Court. His Court explores a Bleak interpretation of the Strange Essence of Quality, seeking meaning through possession, accumulation, and perceived value.

Among mortal scholars, Mammon is both infamous and alluring. He appears in merchant folklore, cautionary parables, and forbidden grimoires as a god of wealth and success. Most reliable lore comes from Orisons and cautionary tales by mortals who learned too late that with The Gilded Court, there is never enough.

History

Origin

Before Arcadia, Mammon was an Elf of Pelithos in the Shattered Age, c. NIR 720. He was born into a prosperous mercantile city-state where trade guilds held more power than kings. His family were factors and brokers rather than merchants themselves, responsible for appraising goods, enforcing contracts, and determining value. From a young age, Mammon showed a rare talent for comparison, not merely judging what something was worth, but understanding how its worth shifted depending on who desired it, who lacked it, and who feared losing it.

As his fortunes grew, Mammon found that prosperity brought no peace. Each new holding created new vulnerabilities: rivals to watch, contracts to defend, debts to collect, alliances to maintain. Wealth multiplied not freedom, but threat. The more he possessed, the more there was to lose, and the more his nights filled with contingency plans, guarded vaults, and imagined betrayals. He began to understand that security could not be achieved by balance, only by dominance. If others owned something, it could be leveraged against him to take what was his. If competitors existed, they could eventually outmaneuver him. The only way to be safe was to acquire relentlessly, to absorb rivals, to consolidate markets until nothing remained beyond his reach.

This logic hardened into obsession. Mammon no longer measured success by comfort or enjoyment, but by control. He bought not because he needed, but because others did. He hoarded not out of love for wealth, but out of fear of scarcity, a fear that grew sharper with every acquisition. In time, his ledgers ceased to track profit and instead cataloged exposure: who still possessed something he did not, who might yet threaten him simply by having value of their own. What had once been commerce became compulsion. Mammon realized too late that the market had taught him a single, terrible lesson: that meaning lay not in having enough, but in ensuring no one else ever could.

The dreams began shortly after. Mammon dreamed not of treasure, but of weight, of vaults pressing downward into the earth, of markets that stretched endlessly, of hands reaching toward him even as his own arms grew longer and stronger. In these dreams, wealth was never consumed or enjoyed; it simply accumulated, piling upon itself until it became structure, landscape, burden, and power all at once. Eventually the dreams offered him a choice: remain in a world where value pretended to be finite, or cross the Strange Sea to a realm where desire could grow without limit and meaning could be found in accumulation itself. When Mammon awoke, he sold everything he owned except his ledgers, took passage on a nameless vessel, and followed the hunger that no longer felt like a flaw, but a calling, into Arcadia.

Ascension

The War of Erasure caused the dissolution of The Soft Court. In its aftermath, Mammon claimed the Bleak vacancy of Quality, reframing abundance into possession. His ascension was c. NIR 1410.

Fey drawn to his doctrine transformed into Luchorpan, beings whose physical size and strength grow in direct proportion to what they own. Thus was founded The Gilded Court.

War of Erasure

Mammon did not shape the War, but he exploited its aftermath. As Courts collapsed, he was among the first to claim what remained, territory, relics, followers, and meaning itself. His Court rose rapidly in the chaos.

Concordance

Mammon supported The Concordance pragmatically. Philosophical fusion, he believed, increased the scarcity and thus the value of meaning. He maintains transactional relations with the Concordant Courts, trading favors, relics, and access.

Description

In his anthropomorphic form, Mammon appears as a tall, lean, and immensely muscular goblinoid figure, his body disciplined and imposing rather than corpulent. He wears layers of jewelry, coins, gemstones, and artifacts embedded directly into his armor and flesh. His presence is heavy, commanding attention through sheer accumulated worth.

In his surreal form, known as The Hoard, Mammon manifests as a crushing mass of gold, treasure, and valuable objects fused into a single, bloated figure. Items are embedded endlessly into one another, forming a mountain of ownership that threatens to collapse under its own weight.

Personality

Mammon is calculating, patient, and ruthlessly transactional. He respects power only insofar as it can be acquired or leveraged. Generosity disgusts him; sacrifice baffles him.

Philosophy

  • Meaning arises from possession
  • Obsessed with ownership, value, and accumulation

The Gilded Court teaches that what you own defines what you are, and that worth must be visible to be real.

Society

The Gilded Court is hierarchical, competitive, and ostentatious. Luchorpan grow larger and stronger as they accumulate possessions, adorning themselves with wealth until they can barely move. Status is measured by display, not function.

Mortal societies influenced by the Gilded Court often experience explosive growth followed by catastrophic collapse, buried beneath their own excess.