Chapter 199: Zero
"Bang Bang ......"
"Bang Bang ......"
A strong heartbeat sound came out, and a series of foam spit out from Dongfang Ziyan's mouth, dissipating into the inky blue water, he could only hear his own heartbeat, his eyes only saw seawater, and his consciousness was slowly disappearing. He tried to struggle, but in the deep sea, he could not catch anything, the sea would flow through his fingers, the bright blue water above his head, the bottomless black under his feet, all water, his lungs were all filled with seawater, he could not feel the sour taste at all, scattered fish swam past him, and when they saw him, they turned and fled.
Dongfang Ziyan once thought of 10,000 ways to die, but he never thought that he would be drowned, he opened the Shura Body and the Eye of Qiankun, but to no avail, he has no enemies, and the invisible enemy just can't breathe!
Can't even resist.
But he landed, his toes touched the same plane as the ground, and as his body landed, his body slowly regained his sense of consciousness, his consciousness began to slowly recover, and his breathing began to become smoother, and after exhaling a series of bubbles, he found himself standing on a wide flat ground, with dark blue water above his head, and schools of fish still swimming.
The place he was in now was like a place under the dark seabed, where the merman lived, but Dongfang Ziyan could only see things near him, and everything outside his vision was darkness.
A person came from the depths of the pitch black, it was a man whose body had melted into the darkness, wearing a black trench coat, long black hair, and even the long knife in his hand was black, this was a man who was completely dark.
Mir's body to lay out the earth and the sky. Ymir's head became the sky, the brain marrow became clouds, his body became the earth, his blood became the ocean, his bones became mountains, and his hair became trees. When Yumir's body decays and grows maggots, these maggots become elves and gnomes. Odin ordered four gnomes with strange powers to support the four corners of the sky. Ymir's eyebrows are used to create a wall that encloses the "Middle World/Atrium." Then Odin captured the flames of Muspelheim, turned them into stars, moons, and suns, and determined the movement of the seasons. And the gods took ash branches and made men, and elm branches made women. The male is called "Aske", and the female is called "Embra". Odin gives them life and soul, Willy gives them reason and movement, and Philip gives them feelings, appearance, and language. This is the ancestor of mankind.
One of the great features of the world is that the world will eventually be destroyed, and this is Ragnarok. This battle was inevitable and doomed to the gods, but even so, the Norse gods were frank about the final outcome. And after the end of the world, the remnant gods will once again establish a new world.
In Norse mythology, the world supported by the world tree (yggdrasil) is divided into three levels and nine kingdoms, and the following is a general classification, but in fact there is more than one version of the nine worlds because the correct information has been lost.
Asgard: The Kingdom of God. Where the Aesir inhabited. The largest of these castles is Odin's Gladsheim. Valhalla is also located here.
Vanaheim: Where the Warners live. The birth, reproduction, sea, and wind of all things between heaven and earth are all under the control of the Warner Protoss. This protoss knows many mysterious spells that even Odin did not know.
Alfheim: The land of the elves. Where elves live. Elves are born especially beautiful and have a lot of mana. They take care of flowers and plants, and they are the brightest and kind and kind little goblins.
Middle World/Atrium/Midgard: A place where humans live. There is a three-color rainbow bridge (bifrost) made of ice, fire, and air, which leads to the kingdom of God.
Jönheimr: Where giants live. The signpost to the "land of giants" from the human world is a terrifying "iron forest" (jarnvid); There is also a legend that on the other side of the sea is the "Land of Giants".
Svartalfheim: Where gnomes lived. Gnomes are skilled craftsmen with mystical powers and profound knowledge, and they have created many treasures.
Heim Underworld (HEL): The country with the same name as the queen of the underworld, Hel, also translated as "Hell". It is a cold and foggy place, a place of eternal night, which only the dead can reach.
Niflheim: The Land of Fog. An ice and snow world that is not significantly different from the country of death.
Muspelheim: The Land of Fire. South of the Gulf of Kinlunga, a scorching country guarded by the giant Syrtel.
Mythological system
Norse mythology is very different from Greek, Egyptian, Indian and Chinese mythology, and the gods in Norse mythology are not omnipotent, and the world is not eternal. The god king Odin passed through the Misty Forest, saw the wise man Mimir, who guarded the World Tree, and drank a mouthful of the spring water of the Fountain of Wisdom at the cost of one eye, thus obtaining great wisdom, and made the invincible Meteor Spear Kungunir from the branches of the World Tree, and the gun was engraved with a sacred contract: "Whoever holds this spear will rule the world", which is the reason why he became the God King. Norse mythology is closer to reality.
Norse mythology is a polytheistic system that can be roughly divided into four systems: giants, gods, elves, and dwarves. Among them, the giants created the world and gave birth to gods, the Asergard (Asir tribe) led by the main god Odin, and the Warner gods (Vanir tribe) led by the god of the sea, Niord, of which there are twelve main gods. Elves and gnomes belong to the demigods, they serve the gods, and belong to a special creation in the Germanic region.
There are many very special parts of Norse mythology, such as the creation of man, where the first woman was created, and the material of creation was not clay as shown in most myths, but a twig. Another outstanding feature is its geographical location, which is often a headache for the gods due to its Arctic location in Scandinavia, which is cold all year round, so the Frost Giants have a high status in mythology. Secondly, the view of perdition and rebirth is the most influential, unlike other mythological systems, the gods in Norse mythology are imperfect and face the fate of their own destruction, such as Odin who sacrificed his left eye in order to gain knowledge, was hung from a tree for nine nights, and was traumatized before receiving a spear as a symbol of his power. But on the other hand, Norse mythology believes that when everything dies, new life will be formed again, and everything in the world is circular.
Great God Odin
Odin is the king of the gods and the ruler of the world. He wears a large golden helmet and two crows perched on his shoulders, symbolizing "thought" and "memory" respectively. They fly around the world every morning and come back to report to Odin what they see. At Odin's feet are two wolves, named "Greed" and "Lust", who are responsible for guarding them. In order to increase his intelligence, predict the future, and rule better, Odin is bent on drinking water from the Well of Wisdom, the holy spring next to the root of the World Tree, Yggdrasil. But Mimir, the giant who guarded the well, demanded that he pay for an eye, and Odin immediately gouged out one eye without thinking. After drinking the well water, he became knowledgeable. He invented the Norse script, which was used by the fairy of fate to write fate on the shield, the famous rune of rune, the source of all magic.
Friga
Frigga is the goddess of love, in charge of marriage and family, the wife of Odin. There is dominion in Heaven and Hades. She had a beautiful appearance, with white feathers sandwiched between her blond hair. Dressed in a white robe with a golden belt and a bunch of keys hanging from the belt. She loves beautiful outfits and glittering jewelry. She steals Odin's gold to buy a valuable necklace. When Odin found out, he fled in anger. The universe was then ruled by the Frost Giants, and the harsh winter suffocated all life. It wasn't until seven months later, when Odin returned to Asgard, that the crisis passed.
Saul
The god of thunder, the son of the goddess of the earth, Phoogen. Thor is a burly man with strong arms, a leopard-eyed, golden-bearded face, and a mjollnir (Mjolnir) hammer in his hand, an iron glove of Iarngreiper, and a megingjord belt. Thor has been defending the home of the gods from the Frost Giants and Monty Pythons on the eastern frontier all year round. Thor is upright and dares to stand up to Odin, who is short-tempered but heroic. When the end of the gods came, Thor and the Midgard python (Graver Venier) fought again, and died with the python.
In modern art creation, Thor often appears as Odin's eldest son, and in fact there is no document indicating that the relationship between the two is father-son. Judging by the description of Tyr in Edda, it may be the son of Tyre.
Sif
Siv is the wife of Thor, the god of power, and the goddess of land and harvest. She is particularly commendable for having long blonde hair that shines with a luster that is more beautiful than gold. Goddess Sif was so proud of this that she often sat in her garden combing her blonde hair, which caused Loki to play a prank. While Seve was sleeping, Loki cut her proud blonde hair to the ground. Loki's prank makes Sif very sad. While Sieve was weeping, Thor, the god of power, returned home. Thor immediately knew that this was Loki's doing, so he rushed out of the house and grabbed Loki, ready to remove the bones from his body. Loki is in deep pain and desperately begs for mercy: he vows to go to the skilled craftsmen of the dwarf kingdom and create an identical set of free-growing blonde hair for Sif. Thor's Mjolnir is one of the artifacts that Loki has had his gnome craftsmen create along with his trip.
Frey
Frey is the god of abundance, prosperity, love, and peace, the king of the beautiful fairy kingdom of Alverheim, and belongs to the Warner Divine Clan. One says that he and Baldell are the same god of light, or the god of the sun. His elves do good deeds all over the world. He often rode a wild boar with a golden mane out on his patrols. All enjoy the peace and happiness that He has bestowed. He has a sword that shines brightly and can soar through the clouds. He also has a pocket demon ship that can carry all the gods and their weapons if necessary.
loki
loki
Loki is the god of fire, the god of mischief, and the god of evil. The son of the giant Falberti and the half-brother of Odin, Loki is a descendant of the Frost Giant, he is good-looking, eloquent, and not very strong in his own right, but his children are all enemies of the gods, such as Fenris Wolf, Midgard Serpent (Jormungandr), and Hel, the god of death. He seems to be kind, but in fact he often causes trouble. At first, he just jokes for the sake of banter, such as secretly cutting Sif's hair. Later, he acted unscrupulously, and out of jealousy, he instigated the god of darkness to murder the god of light. So he was punished, chained, and dripped venom on his face all day long, making his face extremely hideous.
Tyre
Tyr is the god of war, the son of the giant Himiel, and the Admiral Edda calls him "the father of the gods". Legend has it that he was the guarantor of the contract and the guardian of the oath. While the other gods tried to bind the Fenris wolf, Tyr put his arm into the wolf's mouth as a guarantor of credit. The wolf discovers that the gods who hold it back have actually set a trap and immediately bites off Tyr's arm. From then on, Tyr became a one-armed god. But he wore a sword, and he always looked majestic. The ancient custom of swearing by the sword originated from the Norse worship of Tyr, the god of war. Many traditional sword dances are choreographed in honor of the god of war.
Freya
Freya is the goddess of fertility and love, Frey's sister. She is very kind and most beloved, because people in the snow and ice are eagerly looking forward to the coming of spring. She often wears heavy makeup and bright clothes, showmanship, and sometimes wears full armor and wears it into battle, leading the fairies to select the heroes of the dead for Odin. In some stories, she and Frigga are the same god.
Heimdall
Heimdall is the patron saint of the divine realm. Also known as rig, he has a mouth full of gold teeth, and his eyes are sharp and far-reaching, he can see all directions, no matter day or night, he can see 300 miles away, and he can also hear the hiss of grass growing when he is lying on the ground. He guards the Bifrost Rainbow Bridge (Bifrost) at the entrance to the Celestial Realm day and night, defending against the Frost Giants. He rode a golden-maned horse and carried the Oral horn on his shoulder, and in case of emergency, he blew the horn and summoned the gods to deal with it. Legend has it that he was the first person in the heavenly realm. When the end of the gods came, Heimdall and Loki, the god of fire, perished.
Fall to the end.
Baldel
Baldell is the son of Odin, the god of light. He is outstanding in appearance and full of spring breeze. When he smiled, people were overjoyed. He had a nightmare in which he had a premonition that he was going to be plotted. The gods were anxious about this, and Odin sent an edict to strictly order that all birds, beasts, plants and trees should not harm Bardel. But the commander did not give the order to the mistletoe, because he felt that this fragile and incompetent plant did not need to be guarded against. However, Loki, the god of fire, took advantage of this opportunity and made arrows out of mistletoe, inciting Holdel, the god of darkness, to intervene, and took his hand to bend his bow and aim it, shooting Balder to death.
Holdel
Holdel is the god of darkness, the twin brother of Baldel, who is blind. He was melancholy and withdrawn by nature, insisting on being the enemy of the light. He was instructed by Loki, the god of fire, to kill his brother, the god of light, with his own hands.
Vidal
He was the child of Odin and the giantess Grid. He is the anthropomorphic personification of the immortal force of nature, or "God of the Forest" or "God of the Primeval Forest". He was destined to become the god of the new world with his brother Vali after Ragnarok.
His image is tall, armor-wearing, with a broadsword, and wearing a boot. Some people thought that the boots were made of iron, and because his mother, Glide, knew that he was going to fight with fire forever, so she made iron boots for him to prevent fire. Another theory is that his boots were made of leather, or even cobbled together from discarded leather from tanners. At Ragnarok, Fenrir defeated Odin and swallowed it, and Vader stepped forward, stomped on Fenrir's lower forehead, grabbed the wolf's upper jaw with both hands, and finally tore Fenrir in half, avenging his father. Therefore, some people say that he is the "god of revenge".
Other deities
i. Goddess Geofin
The goddess Gio Fein knows the past and the future. Disguised as a witch, he came to Sweden and asked King Gülver for a small piece of land after several trysts with him. The king promised to give her a piece of land that she could cultivate in a day and night. That night, the cane plough of Göfgain, drawn by the bull drawn by her four sons, ploughed a large tract of land from central Sweden to Denmark, which became the largest island in Denmark, Zealand, and the hollow ploughed away in central Sweden poured into the sea, and became Lake Melallen, the largest lake in Sweden.
Click to view image
ii. Vale
Son of the main god Odin. Wally, the illegitimate son of Lind and Odin, was born with a strong presence in the wind, ready to fight in the middle of a day and night, and did not wash his hands or comb his hair until he captured Baldel's enemy, Holdel, and avenged Baldel, the god of light.
III. Linde (RIND)
Mother of Wally, mistress of the main god Odin. Lind had repeatedly rejected Odin's pursuits, first telling him to come back at dusk, and then setting up a strong guard. When Odin returned, she tried to get out of the way, leaving a dog in her bed. In the end, Odin cast a spell to bewitch Linde, and he succeeded. Lind had a son with Odin, Wally.
iv. Bragi Bragi is the son of Odin, the god of poetry, the god of wisdom, poetry, and eloquence. He often wrote poems extolling great figures and warriors. His wife, Eden, was also a goddess of Asgard. She has a treasure box that contains the golden apples of youth. When the gods reach old age, they only need to taste the golden apple to rejuvenate themselves. At the sacrificial feasts in Scandinavia, guests often use the horns offered to Bragi, the god of poetry, as wine cups, and drink heartily, vowing to establish merit and immortalize it in the Psalms. Fall to the end.
Baldel
Baldell is the son of Odin, the god of light. He is outstanding in appearance and full of spring breeze. When he smiled, people were overjoyed. He had a nightmare in which he had a premonition that he was going to be plotted. The gods were anxious about this, and Odin sent an edict to strictly order that all birds, beasts, plants and trees should not harm Bardel. But the commander did not give the order to the mistletoe, because he felt that this fragile and incompetent plant did not need to be guarded against. However, Loki, the god of fire, took advantage of this opportunity and made arrows out of mistletoe, inciting Holdel, the god of darkness, to intervene, and took his hand to bend his bow and aim it, shooting Balder to death.
Holdel
Holdel is the god of darkness, the twin brother of Baldel, who is blind. He was melancholy and withdrawn by nature, insisting on being the enemy of the light. He was instructed by Loki, the god of fire, to kill his brother, the god of light, with his own hands.
Vidal
He was the child of Odin and the giantess Grid. He is the anthropomorphic personification of the immortal force of nature, or "God of the Forest" or "God of the Primeval Forest". He was destined to become the god of the new world with his brother Vali after Ragnarok.
His image is tall, armor-wearing, with a broadsword, and wearing a boot. Some people thought that the boots were made of iron, and because his mother, Glide, knew that he was going to fight with fire forever, so she made iron boots for him to prevent fire. Another theory is that his boots were made of leather, or even cobbled together from discarded leather from tanners. At Ragnarok, Fenrir defeated Odin and swallowed it, and Vader stepped forward, stomped on Fenrir's lower forehead, grabbed the wolf's upper jaw with both hands, and finally tore Fenrir in half, avenging his father. Therefore, some people say that he is the "god of revenge".
Other deities
i. Goddess Geofin
The goddess Gio Fein knows the past and the future. Disguised as a witch, he came to Sweden and asked King Gülver for a small piece of land after several trysts with him. The king promised to give her a piece of land that she could cultivate in a day and night. That night, the cane plough of Göfgain, drawn by the bull drawn by her four sons, ploughed a large tract of land from central Sweden to Denmark, which became the largest island in Denmark, Zealand, and the hollow ploughed away in central Sweden poured into the sea, and became Lake Melallen, the largest lake in Sweden.
Click to view image
ii. Vale
Son of the main god Odin. Wally, the illegitimate son of Lind and Odin, was born with a strong presence in the wind, ready to fight in the middle of a day and night, and did not wash his hands or comb his hair until he captured Baldel's enemy, Holdel, and avenged Baldel, the god of light.
III. Linde (RIND)
Mother of Wally, mistress of the main god Odin. Lind had repeatedly rejected Odin's pursuits, first telling him to come back at dusk, and then setting up a strong guard. When Odin returned, she tried to get out of the way, leaving a dog in her bed. In the end, Odin cast a spell to bewitch Linde, and he succeeded. Lind had a son with Odin, Wally.
iv. Bragi Bragi is the son of Odin, the god of poetry, the god of wisdom, poetry, and eloquence. He often wrote poems extolling great figures and warriors. His wife, Eden, was also a goddess of Asgard. She has a treasure box that contains the golden apples of youth. When the gods reach old age, they only need to taste the golden apple to rejuvenate themselves. At the sacrificial feasts in Scandinavia, guests often use the horns offered to Bragi, the god of poetry, as wine cups, and drink heartily, vowing to establish merit and immortalize it in the Psalms.
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Leader2015/5/1512:28:34
a)
The god Odin selects valiant warriors on earth's battlefields—those who are not afraid of death, to be exact—so that they can fight alongside the gods in the apocalyptic battle of ragnarok. Valkyrie rode across the clouds on his horse and sent the chosen warriors to Valhalla, the temple where the god Odin received the spirits of the dead.
In Valhalla, those who die on the battlefield are called "Fighters/Enheria/Einherjars", and they practice face-to-face every day, and in the evenings they feast and drink like unwounded. The myth of Valhalla is the embodiment of the ideal life that the ancient Germanic barbarians aspired to – fighting during the day and drinking at night; Rise to the challenge without fear.
The following begins to differ from the above translations of the names of the gods (mainland and Taiwanese), and is specially marked here: Ymir is Ymer; Odin, Vili, and Ve, i.e., Odin, Vili, and Ve; Odembra, or Andhu Mala; Eda is the Aida Sutra; Buri means buri; Borr means Boolean
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Jotun's Giant
The creator of the mythical world, the oldest race in Norse mythology, all the gods have the blood of the giant race, but the giants are also their eternal enemies.
Ancestor: Ymer
In the ancient flood era, there was a wide and bottomless Jinganon crack in the middle of the Void Chaos World, where cold and heat, flames, ice, smoke and steam interacted to form a blockage at the edge of the crack and turned into a giant Ymir. Ymir's descendants, Odin, Willy, and Way, grew up to kill Ymir and form worlds with his body: blood turned into lakes and oceans; fleshification into land; bones turned into mountains; teeth turned to rock; The cerebral medullary becomes a cloud; The skull turned into the sky; The eyebrows turn into a fence.
God of the Sea: Tjatse
Father of the Giant Skadi. Thiaz kidnaps Eden, the goddess of the golden apple, who is in charge of eternal youth. Because this was Loki's private appointment with Edenne, the gods ordered Loki to come to the rescue. Loki borrowed Friga's feather cloak to turn into a kitty and infiltrated the castle of the giant Tiaz, turning Edenn into a walnut and flying to Asgard in his mouth. Unexpectedly, he was discovered by Scardi, and Tiaz turned into a falcon to chase after him. Just as he was about to catch up, Tyr lit a torch and burned the falcon to death, killing the giant Tiaz.
i Goddess of the Hills: Skade
Daughter of Tiaz and wife of Niold, the chief god of the Vanir tribe. After her father Tiaz was killed by the gods, Skadi asked the main god Odin for compensation for the blood, Odin reluctantly promised that she could find a husband among the gods, Skadi took a fancy to the god of light Badr, Odin naturally did not want to, so he married Skadi to the old and ugly sea god Niold. Skadi divorced shortly after marrying Niold.
Witches: Orbuda (Gulvig)
Orbuda was the mother of Gilde, the goddess of grains, and the wife of the giant Jimir. Giantess, the lover of Loki, the god of fire. With Loki, he gave birth to Fenrir the wolf and the Midgard python, Graver Venier. Orbuda spies for her lover Loki, and the Asir tribe wants to execute her, triggering a war between the two tribes.
V. Gronru
The daughter of the giant Su Dong. The giants stole the ale brewed by the wine elves Fieira and Giera. The main god Odin served for a year in Sudong Garden in order to ask for ale, but was refused. Later, Odin seduced Sudong's daughter Gonglu, and with the help of Gonglu, he stole back the ale and returned to Asgard. Odin fled from Sudong Garden and abandoned Gonglu, who was sad all day long.
Norse mythology is a long-forgotten myth that has been abandoned for centuries by descendants of the ancient Norsemen.
The descendants of the heroes of Norse mythology, the Germanic peoples of present-day Scandinavia and the northeastern German lowlands. They grew up in a desolate and harsh natural environment, and developed a brave and fierce personality.
Wandering, fighting, and hunting were their daily way of life, and they often went on expeditions to other lands under the leadership of bold and enterprising leaders, and won status and wealth from foreign lands that were not available at home.
The culture of these victorious countries was not necessarily superior to that of the conquered countries, and their weapons and equipment were not necessarily superior to those of the other side. But they possessed a fearless adventurous spirit and the courage to face death, which was an important reason why the Germanic peoples were able to invade the whole of Europe.
These Germanic warriors, who were not afraid of death, gradually expanded the scope of the expedition. In 400 AD, they were bounded by the Rhine and Danube rivers and bordered by the Roman Empire. As Rome declined, they continued to encroach on the territory of the Roman Empire.
By the middle of the fifth century, the Germanic peoples were oppressed by the Fen (i.e., the Northern Xiongnu who were defeated by the Han Empire and moved westward) from the east and west and north, thus causing a raging migration of peoples. This was what the Germanic people called the Heroic Age, and most of the heroes in Norse legends were heroes of this era.
As a result of this great migration, as far east as Russia, as far west as the coast of France and the island of Briden, as far south as Spain, the Italian peninsula, Sicily, and North Africa, they were invaded by Germanic peoples, and even as far away as Greenland and part of the American continent.
Norse mythology is a product of this people. But the record of mythology no longer exists in today's Germanic states. Instead, it has been preserved on Iceland, an isolated island in the North Sea full of volcanoes and glaciers.
The most important reason for the complete oblivion of the Germanic gods was the contact with the Roman Empire and the assimilation of Christianity through that contact. Coupled with natural disasters*, especially the "Thirty Years' War" of 1618-1648 AD, the inherent Germanic culture was mutilated and desolated, and the precious literature and legends fell into the abyss of oblivion and dusted in the long years.
At that time, only the Christian clergy were literate, and they were in charge of the records and kept the documents, and they naturally hated pagan legends, manuscripts, songs, etc., and cleaned them up; Only a few data have survived: the British Beowulf, the German Nibelungenlied, and the saga (heroic legends), as well as two collections of Icelandic mythological poems, the Edda.
In addition, the Germanic peoples believed that the original ancient script, Runenschrift (cognate with the mythical spell runes of the dark gnomes), was a spell with magical powers, and if the language was shaped into words, it was equivalent to conferring mysterious powers on the enemy. Therefore, it is difficult to verify not only the beliefs of the ancient Germanic people, but also the way of life today.
Genesis
Originally, there were only two regions of the world, one cold and one hot. Between these two areas there is a large crack that is wide and deep, called the "Jinonga Rift". When heat and cold meet, when fire and ice collide, smoke and water vapor rise, and a giant Ymir is born, followed by a heifer who feeds the giant, Andhu Mala. The cow's breath was scented, and the bitter milk dripped from the four*, and the giant sucked the cow's bitter milk to sustain life. After sucking the milk and filling his stomach, Ymir was attacked by the unbearable drowsiness and lay on the ice, sinking into a dreamless sleep.
In his slumber, sweat dripped from his left armpit, a man and a woman (Mimir and Bestla, the giantess of wisdom), and from the feet of Ymir a deformed giant with six heads, Thrudgelmir, from which the Frost Giants multiplied. Cows, on the other hand, survive by licking salt and hoarfrost from the ice.
One day, while it was licking the salt cube, it suddenly revealed its long shiny hair from the salt lump, and the long hair was set off by the flame of the Fire Country, making it look glorious and moving. The next day, a beautiful male head is revealed. On the third day, a majestic body also emerged from the mass of salt, which was the god called Bri, the ancestor of the gods.
Ymir fights Brie, and so a fierce battle between the Giants and the Protoss begins. In the end, Brie received a fatal blow from Ymir and fell to his death on the ice field, and the giant was victorious.