User:LucidPigeons/Earth Negative Reference Sheet

(Incomplete)

Earth Negative is one of several Parallel Earths found branching off the singular Prime Dimension within the First Realm (Universe). Although Earth Negative suggests heavy similarity to Earth Prime, there are several subtle differences; the difference in various historical events, the existence of people who do not exist in Earth Prime and the absence of those who do, various geological differences, and the most significant of all being the influence the outer Teraverse has on this particular Earth. Several supernatural creatures reside within Earth Prime, and Earth Negative itself is interlinked with several pocket dimensions within the Blank Zone, as well as with the mental plane of the Remeditary.

Legend: (d) = deceased, (hd) = historically deceased

Onolo and Outer Mexico
Michael Seer/The Seer: The foremost character of the Earth Negative canon. Michael was formerly an irritable, arrogant journalist moved in from Idaho into the Mexican village Onolo, until a dimensional convergance which resulted in the inhabitants of a dimension known as the City invading Onolo. Michael was killed during this event, but due to his mind having linked with a plane called the Remeditary, he regenerated as a semi-human Seer capable of linking his own mind with the Remeditary. He is snarky and somewhat uptight, but gradually learns to care for others. He is a massive fan of Lovecraft.

Daniel Hopper: An everyman living with his two daughters (Alessa and Crystal) and infant son (Mark) in Onolo. Daniel runs a curiosity shop where he sells various antiques at a low price. After the City ends up taking the things he holds closest to him, Daniel goes on a journey through eldritch odds to find them, no matter what the cost to him, and in the process realizes that he is interconnected to the Remeditary; which may be the key from stopping the City to reaching the rest of Earth.

Katrina Summerwood: Mathilda Summerwood's only daughter. A girl with a stutter who walks with a slight limp as a result of her ankle being horrendously fractured a few years prior, Katrina's best friends with Alessa Hopper as a result of the contact between their parents. Katrina is one of the first people to stumble across a strange, glowing slab on the beach which gives her horrific nightmares, which is the first event leading to the City's inhabitants invading Onolo, causing a cosmic struggle Katrina finds herself the unwilling participant of.

Alessa Hopper: Daniel's oldest child. A young girl who is best friends with Katrina Summerwood, her father Daniel is briefly driven insane from a bite from one of the City's creatures, causing him to fly into a frenzy and attack her. Shortly after this, her siblings are taken by the City, and Alessa finds herself in a struggle to fight back against the City, in doing so developing her own romantic feelings for Katrina.

Christian Vade: The stern Headman of Onolo. Christian is a tired former politician with many years behind him, and lives a life of drudgery managing Onolo, while secretly arranging for his own retirement while keeping strange events and messages found in Onolo undercover. After a strange man who calls himself "Mr. Bright" washes up on Onolo, Christian unveils the Memorycatcher, a journal meant to catalog all the events of the City. Why he has arranged all these in such a fashion is unknown, and as the story goes on it's revealed Christian may know more than he lets on about the City.

Mathilda Summerwood: The mother of Katrina Summerwood. A doting mother and a cheerful woman, Mathilda works as a nurse in Onolo, and is intensely protective of Katrina due to her husband's death, leaving Katrina as the only thing that gives her meaning in life. When the advent of the City threatens her daughter's life, Mathilda steps up to protect her no matter what happens to her in the process, and finds kinhood with fellow parents Daniel Hopper for these reasons.

Welter Faye (no spoil profile): A bizarrely cheerful man employed by Christian Vade, ostensibly to help him with figuring out the City. Faye is impossibly childish and reacts to everything, even the eldritch anomalies of the City, with glee. Claiming to be from a paranormal agency from Detroit, as the assault by the City persists, Welter Faye is revealed to harbor a few secrets of his own.

Josiah Candison: An eccentric, pudgy man living as a rogue in Onolo. Joe Candy is quite possibly mentally ill, and is responsible for petty thievery and harassment, causing Onolo to see him as an annoyance. Although Josiah, or otherwise, "Joe Candy," is usually harmlessly loony, a possessive desire to take ahold of the slab that kickstarted the invasion of the City drives Joe to his most primal roots, and as the City gets more violent, so does Joe.

Edison Perales: A caustic-tempered, neurotic fisherman. Known to Onolo by the simple nickname of "Eddie," Edison's constant and frantic overreactions to the mildest things prompt irritation from the other Onolonians, and after the Passenger's attack on Onolo he seems to disappear completely. However, Edison harbors deeply disturbing secrets relating to the City themselves that justify his perpetual paranoia, and they may be the key to finding out the secret of the thing within the Labyrinth.

Crystal Hopper: Daniel's second-oldest child, and Alessa's younger sister. A frail young girl, Crystal is taken by the City alongside her brother, and becomes the unwilling subject of experimentation to further the Consultant's plan, and Daniel finds himself in a decision involving her that may change his life forever.

Mark Hopper : Daniel's infant son and his only male child. Born shortly before the Passenger attacks Onolo, Mark is taken by the City alongside Crystal, and what the Consultant does to him may be the most horrifying of its line of various atrocities.

Harold Rye: A perpetually-irritated, pompous man serving as the CEO of a trade company responsible for distrubution of the products traded in from Onolo. Afflicted with albinism, Harold often overdresses even in immense heat, and has a habit of showboating and a flair for the dramatic. After Onolo steeps in activity, Harold sails over in a rage, but quickly finds himself entangled in the City's business, and it's his insistence on leaving that may draw the City to the rest of the world.

Fátima Consuela: An officer Harold brings along to Onolo. She's somewhat strict and her job is demanding, but unlike Harold she's good at heart.

Lester Craw: A spree-killer who rampaged through Mexico and Onolo years ago. Though he was put down and arrested, Lester managed to claim the life of Daniel's wife, afflicting him with a deep depression.

"Mr. Bright": An enigmatic man who washes up ashore on Onolo one day in May of 2001, shortly after a horrendous beast rampages through the Prolestho district. Mr. Bright claims to have been washed up from the City itself, and details a horrifying, seven-year expedition through the subterranean labyrinth comprising it. With no details of his past, Mr. Bright joins the struggle against the City, and remains the village's most mysterious person until details of his person- as well as his place in the Consultant's scheme- come to light.

Canada
Zyra Nyson:

Garen Idashov  (d):

Ferger Bittermann (d):

Nate Marx (d):

Jimmy Nyson (d?) :

'''Weston Church/Dr. Trauma '''(d?):

Apollo Nyson (d):

Lynette Nyson (d):

Karrie Fischer (d):

Cyndi Crowther:

Perla Pryde:

Nina Pryde (d):

Michelle Duncan: Shay Dawson:

Rick Wester:

Johnathan Rose:

Sarah Crosby:

America
Winston Turose:

Grace Crosby:

Vincent Crosby:

Scott Smithson:

Johnathan Bevvy:

Richard Hawke:

Joseph Lloyd:

Cyndi Hawke :

Tara Lloyd:

United Kingdom
Victor Ross:

Vanette Gloss:

Doriette Florente:

Loriette Florente:

Vermillion Florente:

Hector Grant:

Amanda Best:

The Order of Inverse
The Order of Inverse: An extremist organization based in Detroit and one of the most prominent antagonistic factions of the Earth Negative canon. A hate group lead by Malcolm Graves, the Order is an anarchistic faction who seek to bestow control upon the people by means of destroying all forms of government worldwide. Violently xenophobic, the Order takes inspiration from earlier organizations like the Ku Klux Klan and wipe out anyone they do not see as "pure" by their standards.

Malcolm Graves/Polarius (d): The man responsible for the founding of the Order. A man driven to extremities due to his worldview being shaped by the desolate slum he lived in with his homeless parents, Malcolm snapped after his parents were murdered in front of his eyes. Building the Order of Inverse out of a group of similarly disturbed individuals as well as the Brazilian Welter Faye, Malcolm Graves made his mark by organizing the events which led to Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination, and he kept on going from there, devolving into anarchistic megalomania. Ultimately, Malcolm Graves became convinced the world was beyond salvation, and was stabbed and killed by Johnathan Rose after attempting to have the Order commit a various slew of terrorist crimes to pin it on America and lead into full-out war.

Welter Faye (normal profile): An impossibly jovial man with a sick, disturbed disposition, and one of the central antagonists in The City of Never. One of the co-founders of the Order, Welter Faye holds none of their views and is aligned with them solely to engage in his sick fantasies without repercussion, and to this end joyfully organizes all manner of horrendous atrocities. Welter Faye is the ultimate example of the unfettered anti-nihilist; someone who loves to explore every possible situation, every possible reaction, and every possible means to solve a problem, no matter what twisted means he has to do to fulfill them, and it's this horrible curiosity that leads to Welter Faye becoming the greatest human threat come the incident on Onolo.

Justin Nix:

David Nasiauk/"Mr. Cutter":

Nevada Howe:

The Followers of the Pale
The Followers of the Pale: A nebulous group of fanatics active since the fifteenth century worshiping the Dark Divinity known as the Pale. Revered as a god, the Followers practice human sacrifice- often that of children- to offer up to the Pale, seeking to bring it to Earth and perform a twisted, rapture-like event known as the "Ascending." The sacrifices their performed claimed the lives of the Florente twins centuries ago. Their current leader, Arland Arevalous, has grander plans than the Ascending, though.

Arland Arevalous: The current high priest of the Followers of the Pale. Arland poses as a benevolent priest who reads sermons in an ordinary church in London. However, what nobody knows is that Arland is the leader of the affairs organized by the Followers. Arland seeks to bring the Pale to Earth and then merge himself with it, using its powers to take control of ensare the souls of all beings in the physical world, Limbo, and the After to his control, becoming higher than God and controlling everybody's destinies. Despite this, Arland had a son and family he very much loves, and develops an odd affection for Vanette Gloss, leading to some form of regret when the two end up opposing each other once Arland's plan comes to light. Ultimately, Arland has his memory wiped by the Ambient after the Pale's defeat, leading him to reform his duties as a normal priest.

Hugo Glee (d): The descendant of one of the Followers' operatives, Josias Glee. Hugo Glee poses as a mellow drug dealer out on the streets of London. Hugo is secretly an operative himself, and is entirely unrepentant when he learns the spirits of the Florente twins now seek revenge against the Followers. Hugo is killed after Victor accidentally topples him from the roof of Arland's church, causing Hugo to fall onto the sharp end of the fence surrounding the church.

Albert Hannigar:

Josias Glee (hd): An operative for the Followers active in the 1700s. Known as the "smiling man" for his perpetual, sickening grin, Josias Glee may seem happy, but he holds a dark secret in the form of his allegiance with the Followers, and after meeting the Florente twins at a park one day, Josias butchers them in their sleep as an offering to the Pale.

The Blades
The Blades: A cult based in St. Howard's numbering about thirty, all where revere the Dark Divinity Desara. As Desara is seen as the anthropomorphic representation of death, the Blades believe in the values of death and inevitability, and see death as an art form; the Blades, for this purpose, are essentially a group of serial killers who kill others in varying ways as an art form and a form of worship. They are led by Jack Slade. Almost every member of the Blade ended up wiped out by the Shadows' Consultant during the Attack, who quickly and seamlessly tore every member apart while unopposed due to its unnatural strength.

Jack Slade (d?): The leader of the Blades and the "mouth" of Desara. Jack Slade is effeminate, disturbingly polite, and possibly one of the most unhinged people in Earth Negative. Focusing worship on the values of death, Jack encourages the Blades to lead covert operations across Canada and America for the purpose of spreading wanton death and destruction. Jack himself is never suspected as the leader of the Blades in his hometown of St. Howard's due to his mild-mannered and genial manner. What serves to punctuate Jack's insanity is that he is completely sincere with this behavior in a way much more convincing than Welter Faye, being infallibly polite to everyone and targeting only those he does not know so as not to develop bonds with them. Jack's own amiability and ensuing conscience developing from it leads to confliction when the Blades end up focusing on Zyra Nyson in the wake of the City's attack. Jack is presumed to die after he is shot in the shoulder by Michelle, causing him to plummet into the murky waters of the City.

Whir/James Greek (d): The most psychotic and dangerous member of the Blades. James, or as he is known, "Whir," is possessed of virtually none of the humane qualities of the other Blades and joined to indulge in his psychotic fantasies and to sate his depraved compulsions. Whir has tortured, maimed, and killed dozens of people in increasingly cruel ways, and is also a disgustingly prominent serial rapist, which, while not uncommon in the Blades, have neither the bodycount nor lack of remorse or delusions of good Whir has. Whir is one of many casualties of the Attack on St. Howard's, being ripped to pieces by the Shadows' Consultant after Whir begged to be spared.

Jenna Fey (d):

Past Characters
The Tribe of Arms (hd): A tribe of outlaws and thieves who seek to cross to the legendary Other Side, a section of the world unknown to even the English civilization and said to hold a massive treasure. The Tribe practices various immoral customs, but one thing is always for sure between them; family and loyalty to each other is what matters, and while other innocents may die in their hunt, the Tribe will never betray each other.

Ritts (d): A boy with a strange streak in his hair who is found unconcious by the Tribe one day. Although he is initially met with suspicion, when Ritts comes true he seems to recall several memories that may be the secret to finding the Other Side. Ritts is made a member of the Tribe and he gradually finds kinship with the Tribe's leader Mama. Ritts does manage to eventually find the Other Side, but ultimately, he dies at Septir's hand, mortally wounded before he can truly find the supposed treasure within.

Mama (d): The boisterous leader of the tribe. A tough, no-nonsense amazon of a woman, Mama has well earned her credentials as the leader of the Tribe, and every member looks up to her as an idol. What Mama hides, however, is a deeply troubled heart, caused as such by the death of her son one particularly cold winter. After learning Ritts lost his mother under mysterious circumstances, the two start to bond and become as close as mother and son. Unfortunately, Septir betrays the Tribe and his first order of business is to kill Mama, and arranges for her and Ritts to fall off the Hell's Jaw waterfall after revealing himself as having murdered Ritts' mother, echoing the same events he did those days. Mama ultimately dies in Ritts' arms after protecting him from the fall with her own body.

Scourgey:

Hector Goodwill:

Septir Sixfinger (d): A treacherous, underhanded member of the Tribe of Arms. Septir is named as such due to his polydactyl right hand, and prides himself as a shot with a bow unmatched by any other. Septir is distant towards Ritts at first, and the reason why is revealed that Septir attempted to kill an infant Ritts and his mother by tossing them off the Hell's Jaw waterfall, and after this is revealed, Septir becomes Ritts' greatest threat to reaching the fabled Other Side. Ultimately, Septir engages in a mutual kill with Ritts, managing to fatally wound him before he himself is shot by an arrow, causing him to plunge himself into the Hell's Jaw waterfall.

Estav:

King Henry V: The historical ruler of England who ruled from 1413 to 1422, who reigned during the time of the Tribe of Arms.

Vance Summerwood (d): Mathilda's late husband, who, an unknown amount of time prior to the City's invasion, died of malaria.

Mrs. Hopper (d): Daniel's late wife, who, a few years before the events of the City's invasion, was killed during Lester Craw's spree.

Mr. Florente (hd): The father of the Florente twins. Rich and respected, Mr. Florente is a loving father who views his children as his greatest accomplisment. When Josias Glee murders them, Mr. Florente succumbs to grief and dies a year after.

Mrs. Florente (hd): The mother of the Florente twins. A member of English nobility, Mrs. Florente takes pride in what she is, but she, alongside her father, dote on their children, and is devastated when they end up murdered.

Welter's parents:

Christian's father:

Martin Luther King Jr.:

The City
The Passenger: A horrendous, shapeless entity comprised of several groping limbs and eyes reminiscent of the Shoggoth. The Passenger serves as the being responsible for traveling to Earth initially after it is inadvertantly summoned by the slab which washed up on Onolo. One look can drive a man insane. It represents the Shoggoth.

The "Shadows' Consultant": A silent, masked entity and one of the central antagonists of The City of Never. Clad in a double-riders leather coat, a featureless black mask, and brandishing an array of knives, nothing is known about the Consultant except that it seems to serve as some sort of an emissary of the City - and may habor larger schemes beyond even the control of the Priest. It represents Nyarlathotep.

The Mollusc: A sluggish, nautiloid-esque entity that resembles a massive, shelled mass of meat. Despite its inability to move on its own accord, the Mollusc holds total control of the slag-behemoths it uses to overwhelm intruders to its realm. It represents Tsathoggua.

The Priest: The being responsible for the attacks on Onolo and one of the central antagonists of The City of Never. A being that takes a vague likeness to a screaming human, the Priest, as it is called, is responsible for sending its ilk to Earth in hope to draw "IT" to them for some unknown reason. It represents Cthulhu.

The Needler: An arachnidian entity capable of spreading venom that drives men to feral bestiality. It mothers over the many strange entities responsible for issuing and delivering its venom, like the leech and slug creatures utilized by the Consultant. It represents Shub-Niggurath.

The Blind: A being residing in the Cast outside the Cosma. The Blind, due to an unknown circumstance, was ex-communicated from the City, and due to its desire to maintain a balance, the Blind learned human culture over a time of thousands of Earth-years for the sake of repopulating them on the Cast due to the impending catastrophe of "IT." It represents Hastur.

The Thing in the Labyrinth: A haunting, unknowable entity comprised of little more than black cloud, and one of the central antagonists of The City of Never. Daniel, during his Remeditary-induced hallucinations in his coma, manages to see the thing within the Labyrinth of the City where Mr. Bright was trapped in. It, however, doesn't seem to be affiliated with the Priest, and instead seems to have been sealed in the Labyrinth for some purpose, and after learning of its existence Mr. Bright realizes it had a crucial role in his initial learning of the City. It represents Yog-Sothoth.

The Lurker: An invisible entity that appears predatory. The Lurker is completely and utterly silent, to the point where noise seems to dull in its presence. Like the mist-being, the Lurker doesn't appear to harm those it captures, but instead brings them to the City. It represents the star-vampires.

The Pitcher: A shadowy entity that appears to be an extension of the thing within the Labyrinth. An eldritch entity that inspires intense feelings of hatred and shock to whomever looks at it, the Pitcher seems regarded with hate even by the other beings of the City, further owing to the suspicion of the being sealed within the Labyrinth. It represents Zushakon.

Slag-behemoths: A race of tank-sized monstrosities not too dissimilar to the Passenger. The slag-behemoths are titans comprised of slime, with titanic jaws and blobbish bodies hoisted by several-dozen limbs. They are all seemingly commanded by the Mollusc. They represent Eihort.

The Bloat: The being which the Consultant slowly turns Alessa Hopper into by means of violently impregnating her with the City's spawn by use of the leeches. The transformation into the Bloat is excruciatingly painful, and it appears to be a key essential into bringing "IT" down to Earth. However, the Consultant seems to intend to use it for other purposes.

The Roots: A grouping of strange, plant-like beings taking the form of a series of sentient, tendril-like vines that ensnare all they can pull within reach. They represent E'ilor.

The Wing: A bat-like creature that hatched from the Babyface. Suspected to be part of a species, the Wing has a small and yet integral role in the form of killing Michael Seer, which allows him to regenerate into a half-human Seer capable of linking his mind with the Remeditary. It represents a shantak.

The Leeches: Several beings with likeness to leeches, hence their name. The leeches appear capable of carrying unborn spawn of the City, and due to this the Consultant weaponizes them and uses them in its cruelest atrocity, that being impregnating Alessa with them to turn her into the Bloat. Despite the Consultant using them, they are all created by the Needler. They, alongside the slugs, represent the young of Shub-Niggurath.

The Slug-things : A race of revolting, slug-like monstrosities, roughly as large as a cat. Mothered by the Needler, the slugs carry the Needler's venom and can spread it onto others with a single bite. One did exactly this to Daniel Hopper, briefly driving him insane and causing him to go into a coma upon where he linked with the Remeditary for the first time. They, alongsides the leeches, represent the young of Shub-Niggurath.

"Babyfaces": The "babyface" refers to two separate entities. The former is the first form of the Wing and appears to be the larval form of the species, and upon maturing they burst from the babyface form. The second refers to what the Consultant forcefully molded Mark Hopper into; a horrendous, pained entity taller and bulkier than any man but with the mind of an infant.

Mist-being: A being shrouded in an ethereal fog. Christian and his party encountered this being during their first expedition to the City, and Christian drove off the being, aggravating it and causing it to whisk him to another part of the City, where he met the Priest.

The Witherboys: Impossibly slender, maned beings with coal-black skin with a likeness to chalk. The Witherboys are named so due to their subtle likeness to male human children, and Mr. Bright dealt with one during a brief mental breakdown shortly after coming to Onolo; whether or not this was real or a hallucination is never explained.

"It": A Celestial, and the mindless, vast, incomprehensible entity worshiped by the beings of the City, and one of the central antagonists of The City of Never. "It" is a being vaster than a planet and the thing seems to be headed to Earth. Why, and what it is remains a great mystery until the very end when Michael taps into the Remeditary. It represents Azathoth.

The Daydreamers
The Daydreamers:

Matriarch:

Pond:

Lucid:

Lock:

Weaver:

Nebula:

The Dark Pantheon
The Dark Divinities: The Dark Divinities are a powerful race of godly, yet evil entities who seek to destroy and dominate all they come across. Referred to collectively as the "Dark Pantheon" and spoken of in the dark language of Wither-tongue, they vary in form, goals, and power, but most of them are wholly evil and are beyond the understanding of humans. They are beyond even the eldritch nature of the supernatural creatures on Earth Negative and even the City. Despite their godly nature, the influence of Earth Negative's supernatural essence has drawn Dark Divinities to the planet again and again, and into the contact of humans. Cults of worship of those who know of them have been based all over Earth Negative; Ix Nagoth is generally seen as the most powerful of the Dark Divinities in Earth Negative as it is the creator of Earth and the oldeset (alongside Masq).

Ix Nagoth/The Omnipotent Fire/The All-Eye: An outer-dimensional Dark Divinity, one of the most powerful of its kind, and the ultimate antagonist of the Earth Negative canon. Ix Nagoth is a being that lives in a hellish plane known as Xi'Acerbia, and is utterly chaotic, twisted, and sadistic even by the standards of the Dark Divinities. Given the rare powers of Creation (listed as power A by the Masters) Ix Nagoth twists these powers by creating entire worlds and races, then using them in cruel experiments and toying with them before gradually breaking them down and destroying them completely. It repeats this process endlessly, and has destroyed more of the Teraverse than any other Dark Divinity. Abhorred even by its kin, Ix Nagoth's ultimate goal is to unmake reality. Earth Negative is the creation of Ix Nagoth, and the strange anomalies in comparison to other, more mundane Earths (such as the presence of Hypernatura and links with dimensions in the Blank Zone) is a result of Ix Nagoth's influence. Ix Nagoth is only visible as a massive collection of bright, red-orange, bloodshot eyes.

Diah Shaa'dor/The Shade :

Al Palia/The Pale: The center being of worship by the Followers of the Pale. An eldritch, mindless monstrosity drawn to Earth Negative by a portal conjured by Arland Arevalous, the Pale is a being that invades life-populated dimensions and feeds off the energy of all mortal beings within to sustain itself. Unlike several of the Dark Divinities, the Pale has no sentience and has intelligence comparable to an earthly predator. Despite this, it is very much destructive and it as seen as an absolute deity by the Followers, with their High Priest Arland seeking to fuse with it and displace God (actually Ix Nagoth) to control the destinies of everyone. Ultimately, the Pale is driven off by the powers of the After and the residents of London mindwiped of its presence, but the Pale remains alive, with those who still recall its existence dreading the day it inevitably comes back.

Draynak/The Wish:

Masq/The Djiini: Masq is a vastly powerful Dark Divine, who was sealed away in the Timeless Corridor due to his corrupting influence in the hearts of mortals. He has since vowed personal revenge. However, despite all this, Masq is very affable and honest, and is arguably the most human of the Dark Divinities. Masq's name is derived from his featureless white mask. During some unknown time before 2006, Masq helped Johnathan Bevvy attain his goal of seeking the one he loved in exchange for committing several immoral acts in the name of releasing him. Bevvy would later become a Dark Divinity himself, named the Black Prince. Masq holds disgust for his kin, holding special hatred for Ix Nagoth. For multiple reasons, Masq usually avoids the other Dark Divines, instead preserving the flow of corruption.

Kilzzamandro/The Spiral-Eyed Man:

Desara/The Great Reaper:

Salamandris/The Writhing Sufferer:

Lord Malevolence:

The Old World
The Seers:

The Gatekeepers:

The White Lady:

Other
Theodore Andrews/Blank: A man-turned-Wight as a result of the experiments of Welter Faye. Formerly an accountant who advocated and supported homosexual marriage, Theodore was targeted by the Order for his views. Sending Welter Faye to care of him, Faye murdered Theodore and his fiancée on the day of their wedding, and Faye resurrected Theodore with an artifact that turned Theodore into a creature. Theodore, after unleashing his rage, joined a secret society of these beings, called "Wights," who had still held onto their humanity even after their transportation.

The "X-Man"/The Winterman:

The Engineers:

"Ice":

Ambient: