Once upon a time there was a man fishing and caught a squid.
The squid begged him: You let me go, don't roast me to eat.
The man said, "Okay, so let me ask you a few questions."
The squid said happily: You take the test, you test!
Then the man grilled the squid.....
In myths and legends around the world, even if they are gods or heroes, the characters who still destroy order and disrupt the storyline with their unrestrained actions are called "Tricksters", and they are very important characters who bring about changes to the order and culture of human beings through destructive words and deeds. Serving as the head of the old rulers, Asathos, who is also a powerful messenger who quickly carries out the will of the gods, Naiyaratotip, who appears in all time and space, is a troublemaker in Cthulhu mythology.
The old ruler was imprisoned in all parts of the universe, and the only one who could move freely was Naiaratotipu, as shown by the nickname "creeping chaos", which is a concrete manifestation of contradiction and chaos, a contradiction crystallized by the ridicule of even the gods he serves, and its true meaning can never be guessed from its words and deeds of doing bad things with bad intentions and doing good things with bad intentions. Throughout history, many civilizations have flourished and decayed under the whims of Naiaratotipu, floating lands have sunk to the bottom of the sea, and revolutions and reactions have shaken countries.
Although Naiaratotipu is a lawless troublemaker, among the old rulers whose spiritual level surpasses that of humans on Earth, it has a personality that is closer to that of humans, and it is one of the few gods who can try to communicate in the normal way humans can.
However, Naiaratotipu is still the old ruler who transcends time and space, and like its alias "The One with a Thousand Faces", Naiaratotipu has countless names and forms, and it should be more reasonable to imagine that it is only imitating the human spirit and molding into several incarnations. According to Absheel, who wrote the Book of the Dead. The duplicitous Neyarattipu described by Al Hassad also seems to be unpopular among the old rulers.
As for the reason why it was not sealed, one school of thought claims that it was because Asathos was deprived of his intellectuality as Neratotip, but if, according to the Book of the Dead, order was instead located within Atsatos, relative to Asathos, who was in charge of the power of creation, Naiaratotipu was a symbol of the power of destruction.
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