Primate Murder isn’t your typical villain—it’s a narrative device. Its power lies in narrative dominance; the more stories paint it as unbeatable, the stronger it becomes. Across universes, it manifests differently: a silent stalker in one, a roaring apocalypse in another. It doesn’t hunt bodies but legacies, erasing heroes from history so thoroughly their own allies forget them. The story cleverly uses its multiversal nature to show how myths mutate—defeating it in one world might spawn ten worse variants elsewhere. Its true weakness? Stories where it loses. But writing those tales risks feeding its legend.
This entity defies classification. It’s neither alive nor dead, more like a law of nature—say, gravity, but malicious. In some universes, it operates through proxies, twisting humans into worshippers who carve its symbols into reality. In others, it’s a passive force, a background whisper that unravels civilizations over millennia. The ‘primate’ in its name hints at its focus: it doesn’t just kill, it targets the idea of humanity’s dominance. Weapons fail unless they carry symbolic weight, like a blade forged from lost hopes. The multiverse angle lets the story explore how different cultures conceptualize annihilation.
In 'Primate Murder Through a Multiverse', the titular entity isn’t just a killer—it’s a cosmic force. Its power scales with the observer’s fear, making it unstoppable if you believe it is. It warps reality around itself, turning cities into hunting grounds where physics crumble. The beast doesn’t just exist in one universe; it flickers between dimensions, leaving echoes that drive lesser beings insane. What’s terrifying isn’t its claws or speed, but its adaptability—it learns from every encounter, evolving past counters. The story frames it less as a monster and more as entropy personified, a shadow that grows with civilization’s collapse.
Yet there’s a twisted beauty in its design. Unlike traditional vampires or demons, Primate Murder thrives on conceptual weaknesses. If a universe lacks the concept of predation, it implants the idea like a virus. Its victims don’t just die—they become footnotes in its legend. The narrative explores how characters fight not the creature itself, but the despair it radiates. Some try sealing it with logic paradoxes; others weaponize hope to shrink its influence. The multiverse angle adds layers—sometimes it’s a wolf, other times a plague or even a meme. This isn’t horror; it’s a philosophical siege against inevitability.
Imagine a predator that feeds on timelines. Primate Murder doesn’t just end lives—it consumes possibilities. Each universe it invades loses potential futures, frozen into a single grim outcome. Its power isn’t flashy; it’s the quiet horror of inevitability. Heroes might delay it, but the story stresses no true victory exists. Even sealing it away just creates a new branch where it wins faster. The brilliance is how it mirrors real-world existential threats—climate change, pandemics—as a relentless, adapting force.
2025-06-21 20:40:52
37
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Born By Power : Chaos And Apocalypse
David Ekeledo
10
14.4K
Power bound to your destiny, you can't escape from...
Doing the impossible to survive...
And still they say it is all coming to an end...
But deep down..you know it is all getting started...
They say...Existence is triggered. Triggered by a force aligned with Chaos. The Force Of Sentience, the Force of Essence, The Force Of "The Spark." And just a being possesses the power of the Spark, the Celestial...John Ozais Screeman. John's desire for more power sends the world on a whole new path, a gaffe that is set to ruin existence. After releasing a high demon from hell, John realises more had been done than what he thought he performed. More precisely, the penning down of the prophecy which shall unveil the end of the supernatural race and rain chaos to the mortals.
Evil triggered by the prophecy rises one after another in its various forms in accordance to the fulfillment of what has been written, what fate hath made so. Demons, raging from the depths of hell, mutants and Vampires rising, magic turning against it's host, powers at it's verge, Realms collapsing and realities wrapping turning to chaos. All hope and faith of the supernatural, fall upon the shoulders of John Ozais. Like they say, with the Spark, comes life but what they were never told was...
Before Life,...comes "Chaos And Apocalypse."
Orennox is a wizard who has been around since the world was made. As technology progresses, magic tends to wane and Orennox adapts to the trends. Now called Oren Knox, he is mostly known as a gunfighter, a notoriously cheap gunfighter who will use magic to make one bullet do the work of many so he doesn't have to keep buying ammunition. His quest is to locate the last Earth Nodes, the last strongholds of magic, and harness their power with the goal of bringing back his trapped wife. In order to find these Earth Nodes, he must use the services of the female Diabolists (night witches) who can sense the magic from long distances. Only, Diabolists are extremely rare and there is a psychopathic killer out there who wants them all dead. After losing one Diabolist to fate, Oren must protect his new asset from those who would hunt her down and kill her so he can find enough magic to complete his quest. However, he is not the only wizard left looking for Diabolists, Diabolists have minds of their own, and, according to him, everyone Oren comes in contact with is a sidewinding, low down, scoundrel.
In a war-torn world where supernatural beings known as "subnaturals" or "subs" have emerged from hiding, triggering a global conflict that has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives, eighteen-year-old Lena Hargrove has spent the past six years as a ward of the state following her parents' deaths. Renowned as war heroes who sacrificed themselves to rescue their daughter from kidnappers, Lena's parents were largely absent throughout her childhood, leaving her with complicated feelings about their legacy and her own identity.
As Lena struggles to understand her newfound identity and the abilities that begin to manifest, she uncovers a web of secrets about her parents' true role in the war. They weren't just fighting for humanity; they were part of a hidden movement working toward peace between humans and subnaturals. More importantly, Lena learns she was kidnapped not by chance.
Hunted by extremists from both sides who either want to use her power or eliminate her entirely, Lena must navigate a dangerous landscape of political intrigue and ancient supernatural factions. Along the way, she assembles an unlikely group of allies—humans sympathetic to the sub cause, subs living in hiding among humans, and others like her caught between worlds.
As her powers grow and her understanding of both sides deepens, Lena realizes that ending the war might require more than diplomacy or combat—it might demand a fundamental reimagining of what it means to be human or supernatural in a world where the boundaries between the two are increasingly blurred.
But to fulfill her destiny, Lena must first confront the truth about her kidnapping, her parents' sacrifice, —a truth that will test her loyalty to both sides of her heritage and force her to decide what kind of world she wants to fight for.
A greedy alpha male takes so many mates the other species of Alpha tries to try to kill him off but an unlikely hero emerges in the form of a sad lost human woman and her sidekick - an AI with the capacity to destroy the entire planet.
In a world that has long considered werewolves a myth, old blood is stirred again when Raven—an ordinary young man living on the brink of collapse—is suddenly chosen by something that shouldn't exist.
A mysterious system emerges within him: the Werewolf Evolution System.
At first, Raven thinks it's just a delusion... until the first night of the moon changes. His bones crack, his blood boils, and something inside him begins to "awaken."
But the transformation isn't just a curse. It's the beginning of evolution.
Every battle he wins, every enemy he defeats, and every drop of blood he sheds, the system evolves, giving him new abilities, new forms... and a dark side that's increasingly difficult to control.
Behind it all, the world begins to stir.
The secret government, werewolf hunters, and the Alphas of various packs begin to sense something unnatural—a werewolf who defies the rules of natural evolution.
Because Raven isn't just a human who became a werewolf.
He's an anomaly.
And when the final “evolution path” opens, Raven will be forced to choose:
Become king among monsters… Or lose herself completely and become a disaster that even the Alphas can't stop.
But one big question remains:
Who really created the Werewolf Evolution System—and what is Raven's true purpose?
Lily is a human adopted by a family of werewolves. Her father, the alpha, asks her to help the legendary James Lacrosse investigate the death of two of the pack's teens and the attempted kidnapping of another. James Lacrosse is famous for his monstrous shift. When he was thirteen he was kidnapped and missing for two years. He thinks the deaths and the kidnapping are linked to what happened to him when he was taken. Can they figure out who is behind this before someone else suffers James's curse.
The protagonist in 'Primate Murder Through a Multiverse' is a rogue scientist named Dr. Elias Voss, whose experiments with quantum entanglement accidentally tear holes between dimensions. Driven by guilt after his lab accident unleashes a primal entity—dubbed Primate Murder—he becomes obsessed with sealing the rifts. His journey is a desperate race against time, hopping through fractured realities where each version of himself reflects different moral choices. Some are tyrants, others martyrs, but all share his genius and torment.
What makes Elias compelling isn’t just his intellect but his humanity. He’s flawed, often arrogant, yet painfully aware of the collateral damage. The multiverse amplifies his internal conflict: one version sacrifices himself to save a world, another abandons empathy entirely. The entity itself mirrors his darkest traits, making the battle deeply personal. The story thrives on this duality—sci-fi action layered with existential dread, where every decision ripples across existence.