Frankenstein's World: Difference between revisions
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“'''Frankenstein's World'''” was one of many universes in which [[Baron Frankenstein]] was a real person as opposed to a fictional character. In trade-off, [[Sherlock Holmes]] was fictional there. The [[Crew of the Copper-Colored Cupids]] discovered “Frankenstein's World” many decades prior to 2020. A Cupid apprenticed himself to the Baron, something which [[Pythagoras-858]] deemed “slightly concerning”. Pythe took Sherlock Holmes to [[Castle Frankenstein | “'''Frankenstein's World'''” was one of many universes in which [[Baron Frankenstein (Frankenstein's World)|Baron Frankenstein]] was a real person as opposed to a fictional character. In trade-off, [[Sherlock Holmes]] was fictional there. The [[Crew of the Copper-Colored Cupids]] discovered “Frankenstein's World” many decades prior to 2020. A Cupid apprenticed himself to the Baron, something which [[Pythagoras-858]] deemed “slightly concerning”. Pythe took Sherlock Holmes to [[Castle Frankenstein (Frankenstein's World)|Castle Frankenstein]] in this universe to get the Baron's insights into the psyche of [[the Clown Emperor|a rebellious creation]] of [[Madame Tarsa]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Time of the Toymaker (novel)|The Time of the Toymaker]]'') | ||
[[Category:Universes]] | [[Category:Universes]] | ||
[[Category:Ordinary Universes]] | [[Category:Ordinary Universes]] | ||
[[Category:Universes without a confirmed native Jenny Everywhere]] | [[Category:Universes without a confirmed native Jenny Everywhere]] |
Revision as of 13:47, 4 February 2024
“Frankenstein's World” was one of many universes in which Baron Frankenstein was a real person as opposed to a fictional character. In trade-off, Sherlock Holmes was fictional there. The Crew of the Copper-Colored Cupids discovered “Frankenstein's World” many decades prior to 2020. A Cupid apprenticed himself to the Baron, something which Pythagoras-858 deemed “slightly concerning”. Pythe took Sherlock Holmes to Castle Frankenstein in this universe to get the Baron's insights into the psyche of a rebellious creation of Madame Tarsa. (PROSE: The Time of the Toymaker)