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Formless Oedon

Formless Oedon- the rune that symbolizes Oedon, the Great One that exists only in voice.

Great Ones are a race of powerful entities in Bloodborne.

Description[]

The Great Ones are group of extremely powerful, multi-dimensional beings that can exist across several planes of existence. They have often been described as gods, and play a mysterious yet crucial role in the game's plot, as well as its overall lore.

However, there is a certain amount of confusion surrounding what constitutes a true Great One and how to distinguish them from a Kin. This stems from the fact that Kin bosses have tremendous power and abilities that can be considered to be "god-like". Due to the fact that both have an alien appearance, it becomes hard to determine whether one is a "True" Great One, or an extremely powerful and oversized Kin.

The Kin are human beings that were graced by eldritch knowledge, through contact with the Great Ones. Great Ones themselves are unknown beings that are impossible to explain and comprehend through human thought. They merely exist, and they have desires and motives.

Distinguishing Factors[]

  • Great Ones bleed red when struck, whereas Kin will bleed a pale yellowish fluid.
  • Great Ones are unaffected by "Kinhunter" Blood Gems, that boost attacks against Kin.
  • Regardless, and most interestingly, this confusion that is made between Kin and Great Ones is not only true for players who try to understand the game, but also in-game, as many characters within the universe of Bloodborne will wrongly assume oversized and mighty Kin to be Great Ones.

Lore[]

The Healing Church has pursued a strange goal for a long, long time; a goal that has been hidden from all but the highest of rank among them which is to summon or harness the power of the Great Ones. The Great Ones are not of this world, but powerful enough to be seen as gods. They were worshiped by most Yharnamites, either directly or indirectly. Moreover, Great Ones are Eldritch beings that reside on a higher plane than humanity. Initially revered by the scholars in Byrgenwerth, the Great Ones either directly or indirectly caused the Scourge of the Beast, a blood-borne affliction tracing back to contaminated blood found within the lost labyrinth of Pthumeru.

They were here, in the labyrinth, long ago. They appear to be much closer than you'd think at Byrgenwerth, men were sent into the labyrinth, and an academy was built to understand the strange discoveries inside, generally called the Eldritch Truth. It seems the Truth is a terrible thing, slowly breaking the mind of anyone who delves too deeply. Awful things happened at Byrgenwerth, and as a result, the church closed off not only the academy, but the entire forest, calling it "forbidden".

Whether or not the Great Ones are actually gods or just higher levels of beings is inconsequential, the question itself is entirely academic. The important thing is: They exist. They have an influence on the world. They appear to be ageless, but they can be killed. Their powers are strange things, often involving teleportation or manipulation of energy, or things that people of the human world cannot do. Even perceiving the Great Ones properly requires great amounts of Insight--something Master Willem tried to do, at his own cost.

One of strongest Great Ones appears to be the Moon Presence, the creator of the Nightmare the Hunter is trapped within. Others are Oedon, Rom, Mergo's Wet Nurse, Amygdala, the Celestial Emissary, the Brain of Mensis, and Ebrietas. Oedon, one of their number, has transcended beyond the others, to the point that he no longer has a physical body but instead is just a voice and an influence. He is very powerful and has become sort of "timeless", thus potentially making him the most powerful, yet the most indirect, of the Great Ones.

He is also the only Great One explicitly referred to as male, with all the others' genders either female or undefined (assuming the Great Ones even have humanly-definable genders). Some items' descriptions tell about Great Ones living in "The Dream" and others living in "The Nightmare" (Which is the case of Amygdala whose function is still to be defined, and Mergo's Wet Nurse). Humans have been able to contact them through the use of Phantasms, little invertebrates found in the Labyrinth. Interestingly, Mergo's Wet Nurse and the Moon Presence are themselves never directly identified as Great Ones. Whether this is merely an oversight or an indication that they are indeed a different class of being is unknown.

The plague was used as an outlet by the Great Ones as an attempt to find a surrogate for their lost children. As evidenced in description of each One Third of Umbilical Cord, this process involved the Paleblood Moon and an attempt to foster a new child for a Great One that lost their own. In the world of Bloodborne, babies that are treated as “special” in one way or the other are offered as lures to the Great Ones. When it comes to living creatures, the stronger or more advanced you are, the fewer offspring you produce in your life. The Great Ones have all lost their children because of their positions, and as a result, they're attracted to these special babies. The babies are one way of calling them.

"Every Great One loses its child, and then yearns for a surrogate, and Oedon, the formless Great One, is no different. To think, it was corrupted blood that began this eldritch liaison."

Characteristics[]

The Great Ones are supernatural beings with incredible strength and stamina. They are demonic and godly in both appearance and abilities. The Celestial Emissary has the ability to disguise itself as a lesser Kin to deceive enemies, the Brain of Mensis can cause Frenzy with its stare, Mergo's Wet Nurse can summon illusionary copies within a nightmare realm, the Moon Presence has the ability to levitate and controls the Hunter's Dream, Ebrietas, Daughter of the Cosmos is able to create a powerful star-like explosion akin to A Call Beyond, Amygdala resides within the Nightmare Frontier and can create devastating lasers with its eyes, and Rom, the Vacuous Spider is able to summon spider-like underlings at will, and alter how others view reality around them. As seen with the Hunter, it is possible for humans to become Great Ones.

"True" Great Ones[]

The following is a list of Great Ones:

Amygdala[]

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The Amygdala, considered a type of "lesser" Great Ones, which gather around the places where the influence of "higher" Great Ones may manifest.

This being takes a form that is more or less arachnid, with seven arms and a lean, almost sticklike body with an opening in the chest. It has six clawed fingers on each hand, two of which display a glowing light on the palm, and its legs are hunched and bent like a reptile. The head consists of an almond shaped organic cage containing the brain, which is host to dozens of large lidless yellow eyes and octopus-like tentacles, and it has a short tail. There is very little is known about this being, but it has by far the most prevalent iconography in the world, with statues of the being's likeness common in Yharnam, with the Grand Cathedral sporting a line of statues along its inside stairs. A very clear statue of it can also be found in the Hypogean Gaol. In addition, two tentacled versions of it appear in Yharnam and will draw the player into their hand with a vortex, which terrifies and inflicts Frenzy before simply dropping the player, and under special circumstances will send the player into a specific part of the Nightmare, with one giving access to the Hunter's Nightmare and the other given access to the Lecture Building.

Patches is a devoted worshiper of Amygdala, and is apparently on relatively good terms with it, jokingly asking it to have mercy when it encounters the player. Though he is shocked when it dies, Patches eventually leaves to find a new god in the labyrinth and states "Think not of poor Amygdala. Upon that piteous bastard, you bestowed salvation" before leaving, though it is not certain as to why he considered that being as such.

Brain of Mensis[]

Mother Brain

When they entered the Nightmare, the School of Mensis retrieved an immobile Great One from its depths, appearing as multiple horrid eyes within a rotting brain equipped with a misshapen claw. Though they knew this being, whatever it was once, had somehow gained the "eyes on the inside" that all seek, the eyes were of a clearly evil nature and had left the brain rotted, and neglected to pursue whatever methods were used to ascend its mind. Despite this, they recognized that it was a true Great One and left it in a tower within the Nightmare to serve as a guardian from intruders, and to stand as a living relic.

It is first encountered when approaching the castle in the Nightmare of Mensis, emitting a maddening aura that damages and induces Frenzy on whatever is caught in the light, requiring the player to sneak past the light to reach the door. Eventually one can discover the lever that keeps it suspended, and drop it down into the depths of the Nightmare, where it cannot do harm. Later it can be reached by elevator, where one can use the Make Contact gesture to eventually gain a Moon Rune before slaying the being.

Ebrietas, Daughter of the Cosmos[]

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Known by some as the left behind Great One, she was first met by the Choir after they used the Great Isz chalice to have an audience with her. She became the source of most of the Choir's cosmic knowledge, and caused an inquiry into the cosmos from Isz, which was transcended partially throughout reality. Together they look towards the sky, attempting to discover the secrets of the cosmos, and possibly allow Ebrietas to return to it. Most likely, it is the source of the Old Blood for the church (according to Alfred) and various experiments have been carried out with its use including attempts to create an artificial Great Ones.

She is encountered in a secret cavern beneath the Grand Cathedral called the Altar of Despair, bowed in front of the remains of a being resembling Rom, only attacking once she herself has been attacked.

Kos[]

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Resembling one of the Crawlers, but without tentacles and with a human face and arms with hands, she was the object of worship for the residents of the Fishing Hamlet. Due to her presence, they eventually mutated and became fishlike in appearance, and when they were discovered they were attacked by a group of Byrgenwerth's scholar hunters. Confirmed members of the party are Gehrman and Maria, but it is likely that Willem, Laurence, Micolash and possibly Ludwig were involved. They slaughtered the villagers, opening their skulls to find eyes, and eventually discovered the washed-up body of Kos, who had already died for unknown reasons. They desecrated her corpse, harvesting her blood and the parasites within it, as well as the Umbilical Cord of her unborn child, killing it as a result. When they were finished, Maria is thought to have been so disgusted by her actions that she threw her beloved weapon into a well, unwilling to stomach the sight of it, and was likely to have committed suicide.

But the Orphan of Kos' consciousness remained, and those that became drunk with blood were pulled into its Hunter's Nightmare, where they are trapped for eternity, living in an endless hunt without rest. Most of the old hunters were trapped in this world, with the exception of Gehrman, who became imprisoned by another being.

When the player finds the corpse, they see the Orphan emerge from its womb. Once they kill it and banish its essence, the Orphan is "returned to the ocean" and the curse is lifted.

Thanks to her blessing, Rom, the Vacuous Spider was turned into a Kin.

Mergo and Mergo's Wet Nurse[]

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Mergo is an infant Great One, suspected to be the child of Yharnam, Pthumerian Queen and Oedon.

The child appears to have been stillborn in some fashion, as evidenced by the item description of a certain Third Umbilical Cord, "Every Great One loses its child, and then yearns for a surrogate. This Cord granted Mensis audience with Mergo, but resulted in the stillbirth of their brains."

Resembling a six armed Grim Reaper with no visible head, Mergo's Wet Nurse appears to be the prime Great One associated with the School of Mensis and Mergo, and is located atop the castle in their Nightmare. As the name implies, it likely attended to the needs of Mergo, the child of Yharnam, the Pthumerian Queen. By using one of the Three Third Cords, the members of the School of Mensis performed the ritual (most likely as a result of which the inhabitants of Yahar'gul were petrified) which allowed an audience with Mergo (her physical body may have died in childbirth but her spiritual form survived) and the child's attendant - her crying caused the lowering of the Blood Moon, which turned the blood-infected Yharnamites into beasts, but it also damaged the school members' brains and left them inert. The sacrifice of their own physical bodies was needed to project their minds into the Nightmare of Mensis, but that sacrifice served their needs. This realm was hosted by Micolash, and it was by his own design or want that the Nightmare came to be - same as Gehrman after an audience with the Moon Presence was given a home that was tied to his hopes and desires.

Mergo in a pram

Mergo in a pram

When the player arrives, Yharnam is found looking up at the roof of the loft, her bloody dress implying a birth or cesarean that may or may not have caused the death of Mergo prebirth, in the womb, or very quickly after leaving it. They fight with Mergo's Wet Nurse atop the loft, and its death causes the death of Mergo, ending the Nightmare and halting the spread of the beast plague. Yharnam bows to the player and disappears after the fight, likely because her child was kept in the Nightmare by the Great Ones or the School of Mensis, and has been freed from it.

There is a theory that says the Wet Nurse is Mergo, or more likely was created by Mergo - possible explanation for it is that Mergo, after being pulled from her true mother's womb, needed someone to take care of her. Evidences are: the appearance of this being appears to be rather Pthumerian like her real mother; just like Mergo, her body is invisible and does not bleed (the pram seems empty which suggests that the baby is formless same as Oedon), during the fight we hear her cry but we don't see the baby anywhere, drops a Three Third Cords same as Arianna's child, who is most likely also the child of a Great One born of a surrogate mother; finally, she is able to create seemingly infinite copies of itself, indicating that the Wet Nurse is not a being of flesh and blood, but rather a projection or creation. The Orphan of Kos, though seemingly unborn, was still able to create a physical form in which to defend itself from within the Nightmare, so Mergo is presumably doing the same.

Moon Presence[]

Moon Presence 2

A tentacled beast-like creature made of exposed flesh and bone, it was the being beckoned by Laurence with one of the Three Third Cords. Using Gehrman as a surrogate child, it used his memories to shape the dimension it rules into the likeness of the workshop and create the Hunter's Dream, and kept him there to both serve as assistance for the hunters and simply to exist as its replacement child.

By consuming three of the Third Cords, the player gains the fabled eyes on the inside, sought by Willem to elevate his mind to the sort that the Great Ones have. When the player defeats Gehrman, the Moon Presence attempts to use the player to replace Gehrman as its surrogate child. Due to the power of the player's mind being of the sort that a Great One's is, the Moon Presence cannot shackle the player to the Hunter's Dream, and realizes that the player is a danger to them and any children it may find and replace Gehrman with. Upon slaying it the player transcends the bonds of humanity and becomes an infant Great One, adopted by the Doll and fated to lead humanity into its next stage of evolution. According to dialogue from the Doll and cut dialogue from Gehrman, its name may be Flora.

Oedon[]

Formless Oedon

This Great One is thought to be incapable of taking a physical form, and so exists only in voice, though he is also symbolized with a rune. This being is the reason that the blood is able to heal people, as the blood serves as a medium and essence for Oedon to interact with the world. Due to this, it can be said that all of Yharnam inadvertently worships and serves the will of the formless Great One, but what exactly it wills is uncertain.

Heard of throughout the story, Oedon only has two key roles, in which he attempts to have children with mortals. One of those moments is with Impostor Iosefka, whose experiments on people appeared to be in the effort of using one of the Three Third Cords to acquire the fabled eyes on the inside, and ascend to a higher plane. If she is killed before this can happen, she will drop a rune signifying her attempt to utilize the power of Oedon (she is clearly writhing when she is found and the rune is called Oedon Writhe), possibly meaning that she was pregnant with a child.

On the part of Oedon, the child birthed by Arianna is said to be born of "eldritch liaison" from her corrupted blood. By the sexual definition of liaison, her corrupted blood and sultry work likely made her a vulnerable candidate for Oedon to impregnate, using the transfer of blood as a medium to reach her. She goes mad from birthing her child, and the child's Three Third Cord is accessed by killing it, through Arianna will be killed as well.

Orphan of Kos[]

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Child of the being called Kos, it resembles a huge wrinkled pale man, with eldritch wings and uses its placenta as a weapon. Killed by the defilement of Kos' body by the old hunters, it became trapped in another reality which the old hunters would also be pulled into as punishment, called the Hunter's Nightmare. It sobs clearly, showing the sentience of the being, trapped by the sins of Byrgenwerth.

When it is encountered, it violently lashes out at the player, and remaining in a cosmic form after its physical body is destroyed. Banishing the remaining essence frees the Orphan, which pleases Kos to the point of lifting the curse of blood, and preventing those that have not yet died from ever becoming trapped inside that world.

It's unknown how Kos became pregnant and who the father of the Orphan was, but most likely he would be born dead anyway because the Great Ones cannot have children and need a human surrogate.

"Kin" Great Ones[]

The following is a list of very powerful Kin, that have a power almost equal to that of a Great One. And which are considered, even by the inhabitants of the game, as Great Ones.

Rom, the Vacuous Spider[]

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Little is known about the Byrgenwerth Spider, but she is said to actively prevent things from being discovered, as there are those who seek a sort of master (likely Willem) and are unable to because of the being's interference with their search. Micolash also said that Kos granted Rom with the eyes on the inside, but he likely meant that Kos's Umbilical Cord was used by Willem to ascend her into a Great One. Rom is said to have the knowledge of all secret rituals, and reveals nothing to others for no reason other then it being unnecessary, allowing her to hide knowledge from the naked eye. In an interview with Miyazaki, he states that Rom is female.

When the player encounters Willem, he points towards the lake, wishing for the player to go forth an uncover the last secret. Entering the water reveals the bulwark mentioned in some runes, which guards the minds of those who are asleep from accessing the higher planes, and is an auger for the world beyond humanity. Killing Rom reveals that she was the guardian of the bulwark of the Eldritch Truth, and her death dispels the power of the bulwark, unleashing the higher planes onto the world visibly and revealing what is required for the School of Mensis to accomplish their rituals.

Celestial Emissary[]

Celestial 2nd form

This being is one of the more human of the Great Ones, with a bulbous head containing feelers that channel the energy existing in the cosmos, and a body more or less in resemblance of a giant blue Martian. Its humanoid form is likely because it is the result of the Healing Church experimenting on patients located in the Orphanage, in an effort to create a sort of cosmic think tank, by having patients gain eyes on the inside by imbibing parasite-infested water. The patients would hear the sound of water deep in the ocean, described as a "sticky" sound, which was the inhuman voice of a celestial being. Eventually a patient gained the ability to see the voice itself, and transcribed the Milkweed Rune from it, allowing others to become Kin.

Several failed attempts, called the Living Failures, were kept in the gardens above the one where those in the process of becoming Kin were permitted to be amidst the flowers. This location is where players fight the Celestial Emissary in the real world, and the patients there can utilize the same power, implied by an item there to consist of phantasms using the body to generate cosmic fields.

Due to the Communion Rune it drops, the being is clearly important to the Church, but its exact role is not certain. Most believe it to be the means of communication between humans and Ebrietas, and it is possible that it is the leader of the Orphanage, and by extension, the Choir.

Failed Great Ones[]

Living Failures[]

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The Healing Church, even in its infancy, began experimenting with methods to trigger the evolutionary process of humanity, all in order to transcend it beyond its mortal coil. As such, they experimented with the patients in the Research Hall and despite their many tries, they only managed to be the source of several insane, screeching humanoid beings, with bulbous leathery heads and bodies that became stretched.

The only patients that came close to success were ultimately failures. That is what the Living Failures are; the prototype to what inevitably became the Celestial Emissary. And their parallels are not only evident by their physical appearance, with a pale blue body, stretched limbs and bloated heads, but also by their abilities, as they are capable of unleashing several Arcane blasts, and even one that appears to be similar to Rom's Arcane Meteors. They are labeled Kin of the Cosmos in the official guide.

The One Reborn[]

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The One Reborn was the final, presumably failed result of an unholy experiment to ascend humankind to the status of the Great Ones. It is also speculated that it may be the last line of defense of the School of Mensis against the Choir or the player character and is summoned by the Bell-ringing Women as a mass of beings from other worlds (they could be dead inhabitants of Yahar'gul or the Mensis scholars who died as a result of the previous ritual) to prevent them from trespassing into Nightmare of Mensis.

Notes[]

  • Great Ones are not Kin, but Kin can become so large and powerful, that in-game they might be recognized as such, by the NPCs or folk of the land.

Trivia[]

  • The Great Ones are inspired from the works of H. P. Lovecraft, who wrote various books about eldritch horrors called "Great Old Ones"; cosmic entities with god-like powers and forbidden knowledge.
    • The term "Great Ones" in his fiction actually referred to the so-called "gods" of The Dreamlands, but they are not as powerful as the Great Old Ones and are not even as intelligent as most humans. However, they are protected by the Outer Gods, especially Nyarlathotep. While they once lived on peaks across the world they were driven off of lower mountains by the spread of humanity until they had to leave earth entirely, leaving only a mark on Mount. Ngranek. The Great Ones now rule from their hidden fortress of Kadath, whose location in time and space is unknown. As well as occasionally returning to white capped Thurai, Lerion and Hatheg-Kla on cloud ships under the cover of a light mist, they abandoned Kadath for a brief period for the "sunset city" that Randolph Carter conjured in his dreams. The beings of this game are closer in nature to the "Great Old Ones" that subjected the Great Ones. Lovecraft's Great Ones were also residents of "The Dreamlands," much like the Great Old Ones of the game.
  • While many assume that beings such as Rom and the Celestial Emissary are not Great Ones, it should be noted that trophies gained for defeating them identify them as such. According to their lore and implications, however, they are still technically Kin. This can be explained as a result of their human origins, but they have been able to reach a point where they transcend humanity entirely, be it from whatever process it may.
  • A Lore Note at Byrgenwerth states "When the red moon hangs low, the line between man and beast is blurred. And when the Great Ones descend, a womb will be blessed with child." The same states are applied for the Amygdalae in the artbook. Arianna gets pregnant during Blood Moon and a lesser Amygdala lives just outside the Oedon Chapel.
  • In Japanese, 'Great One' is written as '上位者', meaning a 'person of high rank or position'.
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