Plutos

ABO Personality Quiz
Take a quick quiz to find out whether you‘re Alpha, Beta, or Omega.
Start Test

Related Books

Violet.

Violet.

Aliens are a real thing, they are hidden, they are a secret, but they have their own agreement with earth. They choose humans, ones that no one would miss, hated, forgotten, and abandoned kids, they are sent to a special facility, they are groomed and taught since birth about space, their new life, and their owner/CG/Lover. Violet is one of those kids, born to an addicted mother, and an MIA father, but she never believed in the system, she didn't believe there was someone out there for her, until he came. Now she refuses to let him go, space life would be coming sooner than later. This is a cgl story/fluffy story. Appologies for any misspelling or grammar mistakes.
0 42 Chapters
LUNA

LUNA

Alexandra is hated by her father and treated like a slave by her stepmother, while her stepsister Tracy is adored as the pack’s perfect princess—and the future Luna destined for Alpha Damon. Until Bond Night. When Alexandra unexpectedly bonds with Damon, the pack turns on her and Tracy takes her own life. Blinded by grief and rage, Damon makes Alexandra pay—publicly breaking her, branding her as his possession, and keeping her as the pack’s plaything. Then Damon’s uncle, Alpha Chris, returns with enough power to challenge him—and a hunger for Alexandra that’s anything but noble. As buried secrets surface and bodies start to fall, the fight for control of the pack becomes a fight for her. And when someone everyone believes is dead reappears, the bond between Alexandra, Damon, and Chris threatens to ignite something forbidden: a tri-bond that could either save her…or destroy them all.
0 76 Chapters
My Dominating Apollo

My Dominating Apollo

"D...Don't...Ah!!" I moaned even though I tried hard not to. He has something in him that always makes a woman moan his name as he touches them. "You know very well that you can't resist the temptation then why try..." He was pushing it deeper while brushing his lips over my earlobe. "Say the word..." He whispered. "Daddy," *** Clarissa Green, a sweet, beautiful, hot-headed and stubborn woman who hates it when someone disrespects or speak low of her. She has faced many obstacles in life which made her a strong and amazing woman. Apollo Villin, He's calm and collective, smart, manipulative, cold, notorious multi-billionaire who's famous for his looks and his mysterious personality. *** Secrets will be revealed, hearts will get broken and relationships get destroyed.
10 47 Chapters
House Of Zeus

House Of Zeus

Hayley stumbled upon a video sent to her by an anonymous sender, with just the descriptions of : Mount Olympia, Home of gods, House of Zeus. After few persuasions from her friend, she decides to go check it out. And she gets double the trouble. A long time ago, after the battle of heaven and the Underworld, Zeus and the other gods descended to earth, to keep, guide, and stop Hades from waging wars on the mortals. Their fights, jealousy and bickering doesn't stop on Mount Olympus, even on Earth, they're still the same. And Hayley gets caught up in the middle of it all. After getting struck by Zeus's lightning bolt. Greed, lust, Anger and jealousy comes with the gods on Mount Olympia, in Golden City.
10 19 Chapters
The Alpha Luna

The Alpha Luna

The North Lotus pack is thrown into complete jeopardy when under mysterious circumstances, their Alpha - Luna Dakota Dolphus - is declared missing, few weeks before the dreaded blood moon eclipse. To them, this can only mean bad news. Catori Dolphus, only child of Luna Dakota, has had all her life preparing to be Alpha one day, but what she never prepared for was the division and chaos rising amongst her pack. With the blood moon eclipse drawing closer with each day, the counsel gives Catori an ultimatum of either finding her Mum before the eclipse or having the Alpha position taken away from their lineage. When disaster keeps setting in at Catori’s every corner, her last option is getting help from the rumored Ghost reapers - a 4-man rogue gang of both urban myth and intrigue. However, Catori’s 4 unlikely heroes soon turn to be more trouble than she bargained for when she discovers that Fenris Covel, wickedly handsome as he was, was her betrothed - her mate. Only problem? Fenris Covel doesn’t ‘do’ mate. Raised in the wild, Fenris Covel was anything but controllable. He was wild, untamed and infuriatingly sexy. But most of all, he has no time for a mate - especially one like Catori Dolphus. His only concern was his job and at the moment, it was finding Catori’s mum. However, the matters of the heart can never be predicted and as their chemistry and intense desire for each other blossoms, danger lurks closer than they could imagine.
7 90 Chapters
OMEGA TO LUNA

OMEGA TO LUNA

"Can you help me kill the Alpha." Three years ago, Kai, Beta of the Silver Moon Pack was asked by his Luna to murder his Alpha. After disagreeing his life suddenly turned to a living hell. Accused of murder, prosecuted and set for death Kai has a second chance after escaping on the night he is to be killed. Given a second chance at life he goes undercover swarring to do nothing with his former Pack or any other pack eventually becoming a rogue wolf. Three years later. Delilah, an orphan and Omega of the Blue Moon pack constantly bullied and abused by her pack because she cannot shift, gets a second chance when she is suddenly picked by the Moon Goddess to be the mate to the Alpha of the Silver Moon Pack. Fate is against her as she is subdued and her position is taken away from her by Kate the Alpha's daughter of her pack. Forced to be the servant to Kate she finally flees and in a shocking turn of events is hunted by her mate. When at the last minute she is saved from the clutches of death by a rogue wolf with the name of Kai she begins to learn secrets surrounding her life. A rogue and wolfless wolf join forces to seek retribution on those who wronged them and uncover the secrets that have been stored deep in the cupboard of lies.
9 52 Chapters

Who is Plutos in Greek mythology?

3 Answers2026-04-06 14:57:25
Plutos, often overshadowed by his flashier Olympian relatives, is one of those fascinating minor deities that make Greek mythology feel so richly layered. He represents wealth and agricultural abundance—specifically the kind that bursts from the earth, like ripe grain or hidden mineral treasures. Unlike Pluto (Hades), who rules the underworld, Plutos embodies the fertile, life-giving side of riches. I love how ancient Greeks personified concepts like this; it makes their worldview feel so tactile. There’s a poignant story where Plutos is blinded by Zeus to distribute wealth indiscriminately—because if he could see, he’d only favor the 'worthy,' whatever that means. It’s a biting commentary on how arbitrary fortune can be.

What really hooks me is how Plutos pops up in Aristophanes’ comedy 'Plutus,' where he’s cured of his blindness and chaos ensues as the 'wrong' people get rich. The play’s satirical edge still feels relevant today. It’s wild to think how a 2,400-year-old joke about wealth inequality lands just as hard now. Also, the duality between Plutos and Hades fascinates me—one governs earthly abundance, the other eternal shadows. Makes you wonder if they ever had family dinners.

What is the significance of Plutos in astrology?

3 Answers2026-04-06 22:44:13
Pluto's role in astrology is fascinating because it represents transformation, power, and the subconscious. Unlike the other planets, Pluto's influence is often subtle but profound, digging deep into our psyches to uncover hidden truths. It’s associated with rebirth—like a phoenix rising from the ashes—and forces us to confront what we’d rather ignore. I’ve noticed how people with strong Pluto placements in their charts tend to have intense lives, constantly evolving through crises or revelations. It’s not just about destruction; it’s about stripping away the unnecessary to reveal something stronger underneath.

In pop culture, Pluto’s energy mirrors themes in shows like 'Mad Men' or 'Breaking Bad,' where characters undergo radical transformations. Astrologers often link it to generational shifts, too, since it moves slowly and shapes entire eras. My friend once joked that Pluto is the universe’s way of saying, 'You think you know yourself? Think again.' And honestly, that sums it up perfectly.

How is Plutos different from Hades?

3 Answers2026-04-06 15:01:46
Plutos and Hades are both figures from mythology, but they hail from entirely different cultural backgrounds, which shapes their roles and characteristics. Plutos is a Greek god associated with wealth, often depicted as a blindfolded figure to symbolize the indiscriminate nature of fortune. He’s not as prominently featured in myths as Hades, who’s the ruler of the underworld, a much more central and fearsome deity. Hades commands the dead and is part of the Olympian pantheon, while Plutos feels almost like a minor personification, more symbolic than narrative-driven.

What’s fascinating is how their domains reflect human concerns—Plutos embodies our relationship with material abundance, while Hades represents the inevitability of death. In art, Plutos sometimes appears in comedies or satirical works, like Aristophanes’ 'Plutus,' where he’s a comedic character. Hades, though, is solemn, often portrayed in epics like 'The Odyssey' or modern retellings like 'Hadestown,' where his authority and melancholy are central. The contrast between wealth’s fleeting nature and death’s permanence makes their mythological roles starkly different.

Is Plutos the same as the Roman god Pluto?

3 Answers2026-04-06 20:03:36
The name 'Plutos' actually threw me off at first because it sounds so similar to Pluto, the Roman god of the underworld. But after digging into mythology and some modern media, I realized they're distinct. Pluto, in Roman mythology, is essentially the counterpart to the Greek Hades—ruler of the dead, stern but not inherently evil. Plutos, on the other hand, comes from Greek mythology as the god of wealth, often depicted as a blind figure to symbolize fortune's randomness. It's fascinating how a single letter difference leads to entirely different deities!

I stumbled upon Plutos while reading up on 'Fate/Grand Order,' where he's portrayed differently from Pluto. That got me curious about how often these two get mixed up in pop culture. Some games and stories blend elements of both, which can be confusing. Personally, I love when creators play with mythology, but it's also fun to untangle the original lore behind these figures. Pluto's all about the afterlife's solemnity, while Plutos embodies the chaotic nature of wealth—totally different vibes!

What are the powers of Plutos in mythology?

3 Answers2026-04-06 07:38:11
Pluto, often overshadowed by flashier gods like Zeus or Poseidon, has this quietly terrifying aura in mythology. He’s the ruler of the Underworld, sure, but his powers go way beyond just 'king of the dead.' He controls all the riches beneath the earth—gemstones, precious metals, you name it. There’s a reason his Roman name, 'Dis,' ties to wealth. He’s not just a grim reaper; he’s a god of abundance, but the kind that comes with a price. And let’s talk about that invisibility helmet, the 'Cap of Hades'—gifted by the Cyclopes during the Titanomachy. Imagine a deity who can vanish at will, sneaking up to drag souls to his realm. No wonder mortals avoided saying his name out loud.

What fascinates me most, though, is how he’s portrayed as almost… fair? Unlike other gods who capriciously smite humans, Pluto’s domain operates on rules. Souls are judged, punishments fit crimes (looking at you, Sisyphus), and he’s rarely the one initiating torment—that’s left to the Furies. Even his 'abduction' of Persephone has interpretations where she wields power as queen, not victim. It’s a nuanced role: feared but respected, hidden but essential, like death itself.

How is Plutos depicted in ancient art?

3 Answers2026-04-06 15:31:49
Pluto, or Hades as he was known in Greek mythology, has this fascinating duality in ancient art that always grabs my attention. Sometimes he’s shown as this stern, regal figure enthroned in the underworld, holding a scepter or the key to the gates of the dead—super symbolic, right? Other depictions lean into his darker side, with shadowy features or even a helmet of invisibility (the 'Cap of Hades' from myths like 'Perseus and Medusa'). I love how vase paintings often place him alongside Persephone, emphasizing their shared rulership. There’s one Attic black-figure amphora where he’s got this intense gaze, offering her pomegranate seeds, and the composition just oozes tension.

What’s wild is how regional styles tweak his image. Etruscan art, for instance, sometimes gives him a more gaunt, almost wraithlike appearance, while Roman mosaics post-Greek influence soften him slightly—still authoritative but less overtly menacing. And don’t get me started on the occasional three-headed Cerberus at his feet! It’s like artists couldn’t resist reminding viewers of his domain’s terror. Personally, I think these variations reflect how cultures negotiated their fear of death: sometimes confronting it, sometimes tempering it with narratives of order.

Who are the main characters in Pluto series?

3 Answers2026-05-24 19:15:30
The 'Pluto' series is such a masterpiece, and its characters are layered in ways that still haunt me. At the core is Gesicht, a Europol robot detective who's investigating a string of murders targeting both humans and robots. His journey is profoundly human—grappling with memory, guilt, and what it means to exist. Then there's Atom (or Astro Boy, if you know the original), reimagined here as a gentle, conflicted hero. The antagonist, Pluto, is terrifying yet tragic, a weapon with a shattered psyche. The cast also includes Brando, a robot wrestler with a heart of gold, and North No. 2, a war robot seeking redemption. Each character feels like a puzzle piece in a larger meditation on violence and humanity.

What's wild is how Urasawa makes even side characters unforgettable. Like Hercules, the proud robot who idolizes human strength, or Epsilon, the pacifist caretaker robot hiding a painful past. The humans are just as compelling—Dr. Tenma, Atom's creator, is a shadowy figure drowning in regret. The series doesn’t just juggle these personalities; it lets them collide in ways that expose raw truths about prejudice, war, and forgiveness. I still get chills thinking about Gesicht’s final arc—no spoilers, but it rewired my brain.

How many episodes does Pluto series have?

3 Answers2026-05-24 00:22:30
The 'Pluto' anime adaptation is such a gripping watch! Based on Naoki Urasawa's manga, which reimagines a classic 'Astro Boy' arc, it dives deep into themes of humanity and justice. I binged the whole thing last weekend—it's 8 episodes long, but don't let the count fool you. Each episode runs about an hour, so it feels more like a mini-series with the depth of a film. The pacing is deliberate, letting you soak in every emotional beat and philosophical dilemma. I actually prefer this format over a bloated 20-episode season; it’s tight, impactful, and leaves you craving more.

What’s wild is how they pack so much nuance into those episodes. The character arcs, especially Gesicht’s, unfold with this heartbreaking precision. By the end, I was wiping tears and immediately googling if there’d be a second season (no luck yet). If you haven’t seen it, carve out a day—it’s worth every minute.

Why is Pluto series rated so highly?

3 Answers2026-05-24 01:21:48
The 'Pluto' series is one of those rare gems that transcends its medium. Based on Naoki Urasawa's reimagining of a classic 'Astro Boy' arc, it blends hard-boiled detective noir with profound philosophical questions about humanity, war, and what it means to be alive. The storytelling is masterful—every character, even the antagonists, feels deeply human (ironic, given many are robots). Urasawa’s art is cinematic, with panel compositions that feel like they’re pulled from a Hitchcock film.

What really elevates 'Pluto' is its emotional weight. The series doesn’t shy away from grief, guilt, or the cost of vengeance. Episode 5, focusing on the robot North No. 2, had me in tears—a robot’s final moments carrying more pathos than most live-action dramas. It’s not just a 'great manga'; it’s a meditation on memory and loss that lingers long after you finish it. The high ratings? Absolutely deserved.

Related Searches

Popular Searches
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status