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This story is told in first-person with the main character as the only point-of-view. I like the classic television model, so the main character [[Conor Cullen | Conor]] will be the series lead, with a few supporting roles and other recurring and guest roles.
This story is told in first-person with the main character as the only point-of-view. I like the classic television model, so the main character [[Conor Cullen | Conor]] will be the series lead, with a few supporting roles and other recurring and guest roles.


== Synopsis ==
== Book 1: [[The Blessed Son (novel) | The Blessed Son]] ==


In a universe besieged by incomprehensible '''outsiders'''—cosmic entities that erode reality itself—the ancient '''deities''' stand as the last unbreakable bulwark. They hold the primary invasion fronts sealed, preventing total annihilation, but the strain births countless cracks in the cosmic fabric. Through these fissures slip lesser but still devastating outsiders: probing horrors, corrupting essences, and ravenous swarms. To contain the threat and turn defense into opportunity, the deities forge '''dungeons'''—engineered chokepoints that channel incursions into predictable, defensible arenas where mortals can fight, harvest power, and grow strong enough to push back.
In a universe besieged by incomprehensible outsiders—entities that erode reality itself—ancient deities hold the line against total annihilation. The strain tears cracks in the cosmic fabric, letting horrors slip through.


Yet the native species are too young, too fractured, or too insular to mount an effective resistance. Soulless by a failure of design, they fall easily to possession, their bodies twisted into puppets for the invaders.
To contain the breach and create opportunity, the gods forge dungeons: engineered chokepoints that funnel incursions into defensible arenas where mortals can fight, harvest power, and grow strong enough to push back.


Centuries ago, the elven Euraidd were drawn in—soul-bearing, organized, and capable of behaving as the deities intended: forming societies, ascending gods, and holding defensive lines. But their numbers and power prove insufficient against the relentless, scaling threat.
Native species are too young, fractured, or insular to resist effectively. Centuries ago, soul-bearing elves were drawn in—organized and capable of even godhood—but their numbers fall short against the relentless tide.
 
The war evolves across multiple theaters: mortal battlegrounds where dungeon overflows unleash waves of possessed horrors; divine planes where nascent gods clash over faith and domain; and abstract fronts where ascended beings combat outsiders directly. The original deities can only hold the line—they cannot win it alone.
 
The first breakthrough comes from an unexpected quarter: a '''Panthryne''' ascends as the realm's youngest god, a fierce but inexperienced deity of hunt, pack, and survival. His emergence offers hope, but also a glaring target—outsiders seek to corrupt or shatter fledgling divinities before they mature.


Then Earth dies.
Then Earth dies.


In the cataclysm that consumes humanity's homeworld, tens of thousands of souls are yanked across the void and bootstrapped into the universe's desperate '''litRPG system'''. These newcomers arrive with pre-existing souls forged in old gods' fires—resilient, adaptable, and hungry for survival.
Tens of thousands of human souls are ripped across the void and thrust into this failing defense. Resilient, adaptable, forged in older fires, humanity arrives not as saviors but as desperate reinforcements. They must forge a lasting society in this crucible of divine warfare.
 
In this grim sci-fantasy crucible of isekai survival and divine warfare, humanity isn't summoned as saviors—they're the desperate reinforcement thrown into a failing defense. They'll forge a lasting society.  
 
Or die trying.
 
== Book 1: The Blessed Son ==


In [[The Blessed Son (novel) | The Blessed Son]], Conor briefly survives an eldritch apocalypse, then he and his companions are transported to a different universe where they establish a post-scarcity absolute monarchy and scramble to protect it.
Or die again.


== Book 2: The Lost Lady ==
== Book 2: [[The Lost Lady (novel) | The Lost Lady]] ==


The novel [[The Lost Lady (novel) | The Lost Lady]] is planned, but currently unwritten.
The novel [[The Lost Lady (novel) | The Lost Lady]] is planned, but currently unwritten.


== Useful Links ==
== Useful Links ==
*[[Special:AllPages | List of every page on this wiki]]
*[[:Category: Commissioned Art | All commissioned art]]
*[[Development Notebook]]
*[[Development Notebook]]
*[[RPG Elements]]
*[[RPG Elements]]

Latest revision as of 07:56, 10 March 2026

Welcome! This wiki serves as the story bible for the Echoes from Elsewhere web novel series.

Echoes from Elsewhere is a pending series of sci-fantasy web novels, beginning with The Blessed Son. Expect space navies and power armor, with some litRPG progression elements, deities, dungeons, and drama. For themes, expect found family, with a focus on friendship, duty, and perseverance.

This story is told in first-person with the main character as the only point-of-view. I like the classic television model, so the main character Conor will be the series lead, with a few supporting roles and other recurring and guest roles.

Book 1: The Blessed Son

In a universe besieged by incomprehensible outsiders—entities that erode reality itself—ancient deities hold the line against total annihilation. The strain tears cracks in the cosmic fabric, letting horrors slip through.

To contain the breach and create opportunity, the gods forge dungeons: engineered chokepoints that funnel incursions into defensible arenas where mortals can fight, harvest power, and grow strong enough to push back.

Native species are too young, fractured, or insular to resist effectively. Centuries ago, soul-bearing elves were drawn in—organized and capable of even godhood—but their numbers fall short against the relentless tide.

Then Earth dies.

Tens of thousands of human souls are ripped across the void and thrust into this failing defense. Resilient, adaptable, forged in older fires, humanity arrives not as saviors but as desperate reinforcements. They must forge a lasting society in this crucible of divine warfare.

Or die again.

Book 2: The Lost Lady

The novel The Lost Lady is planned, but currently unwritten.

Useful Links