Aleph Null

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Revision as of 18:10, 14 May 2023 by ExcaliburZero (talk | contribs) (Added more information to Trivia section)

Eternal War Incarnate, Aleph Null, is A15 of the Archangels being the fusion of Archangel Aleph with Archangels Poppetox, Mourningstar, Nowhere Monarch, Heckahedron, Alice, Robin Goodfellow, Mammon, Lamento Mori, and Babelith. Serves as the final boss of the game.

Bio

After being intrigued by the player's power of Fusion, he decides to use it himself with the rest of his team as a form of "team building exercise". After becoming Aleph Null, the Archangel takes back his pervious offer of leaving the player's world alone, deciding to travel there first to cause misery to the "unblemished timeline". In response, the player's allies all jump on board the train the Archangels were using and help to battle the fusion.

Halfway through the fight, Aleph destroys the player's cassette and mocks them as being only human. As all hope seems lost, Morgante reveals that the power of fusion is something that humans inantely possess, which motivates the player to get back up and merge with all their allies, creating the Morgante Gestalt due to Morgante's essence still inside them. With this new form, Aleph Null is defeated, and as he dies, he realizes the power of humans.

Habitats

Unknown

Mechanics

He is capable of using various devastating attacks, and his Angelic Attacks are all borrowed from his components.

Moves

Trivia

Design

Alpeh Null's design is combines parts of each of the different Archangels it is comprised of:

Aleph Null's appearance is based on which Archangels you have defeated. For example, if you have not beaten Babelith, his crown and moon will not appear on Aleph Null's design.[1]

Name origin

"aleph-null" is the the size (cardinality) of the set of all natural numbers. "aleph-null" (also referred to as "aleph-zero" or written as "ℵ0") is asserted by the continuum hypothesis to be the smallest possible cardinality of infinite sets, with other larger sets of infinite numbers existing and their cardinalities described in comparison to ℵ0 (ℵ1, ℵ2, ℵ3, etc.).[2][3]

References

  1. Berry Bandit. "Traffikrab Plays Cassette Beasts - Unleash the Power of Retro Tech | Part 13". YouTube. May 13th, 2023. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mXV5iIZEOmE
  2. Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "transfinite number". Encyclopedia Britannica, Invalid Date, https://www.britannica.com/science/transfinite-number. Accessed 14 May 2023.
  3. Weisstein, Eric W. "Aleph-0." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. https://mathworld.wolfram.com/Aleph-0.html