
ĭespite everything that has befallen him, he still loves the Judgements, like the other Aeginae. Storm also granted his high priest eternal youth, allowing Slivvy to hold his position for quite a long time. His anger sometimes gets the better of him he seeks children as his followers because they do not have regrets, making them more useful to his means and allowing him some semblance of peace. He used to be an Aeginae in the service of the Sun, but he committed some kind of fault, and now is in exile in the Neath. He has been dead for a long while, and remembering that fact makes him quite enraged.

You can find out more about our spoiler policy here. This may include endgame or Fate-locked content. "Are you quite sure you want to know this?"īeyond this point lie major spoilers for Fallen London, Sunless Sea, or Sunless Skies. Storm is known to possess individuals, whose eyes turn gray and who become convinced that they are Storm himself. The urchins' high priest of sorts is a boy called Slivvy, with a stutter and a port-wine birthmark on his cheek. Storm is worshipped not only by zailors, but also by London's suspicious number of urchins. His curse is as relentless as the weather bearing his name, as he sends storms and fog into the path of an ill-fated ship. Those who draw his ire meet the most unfortunate of ends, and captains who have drawn his attention have found their crew members attacking each other with unprecedented bloodlust. Zailors claim that the source of these phenomena is a god called Storm he is a vengeful, spiteful deity who dislikes change and maintains an ancient sort of order.

The Neath is a cold, deep, and dark place, mostly devoid of any kind of weather, but sometimes London finds itself battered by strange winds and squalls. Storm is one of the three gods of the Unterzee. This one has smashed the glass of a deck-binnacle. The sound is one no land-lubber knows, and no zailor will ever forget. The decks of older ships are pocked with scars. "Now and then, rocky fragments fall from the roof of the Neath.
