- Dead Three
In the
Forgotten Realms Dungeons & Dragons campaign setting , the Dead Three were a triad of evil gods known as Bane,Myrkul , andBhaal .In the mists of the past, the Dead Three were three power-hungry mortals: Bane the
Tyrant , Myrkul theNecromancer , and Bhaal theAssassin . The three forged a pact to achieve godhood or die trying. With their eyes on the ultimate prize of the portfolio ofJergal , Lord of the End of Everything, the three endured epic quests and obstacles until they finally faced the mighty god upon his throne. To their surprise, Jergal willingly stepped aside, claiming that he was happy to grant his powers to the three mortals. He then asked which among them would rule, at which point a fierce argument broke out among the three. However, Jergal resolved their dispute with a game of chance, and the succession was eventually decided thus: Bane took the portfolio ofhatred ,strife , andtyranny , Myrkul that of the dead, and Bhaal that ofdeath andmurder . Jergal remained as ademigod , aide to the new god of the dead, and thus the Dead Three became the most fearsome force of evil in the Forgotten RealmsWho|date=January 2008.However, the Dead Three's reign came to an end with the Time of Troubles. During this period, each of the three gods was slain:
Myrkul was destroyed by Mystra, goddess of magic, Bane by Torm, demigod of paladins, and Bhaal to the swordGodsbane (the god Mask in disguise), wielded by a young mortal namedCyric . At the conclusion of the Time of Troubles, when theLord Ao permitted the gods to return to their posts, Cyric, and Bane's sonIyachtu Xvim were granted all of the collective portfolio of the Dead Three between them.However, the Dead Three have proven difficult to destroy. Bane has returned from his grave, having sired Iyachtu Xvim as a sentient cocoon from which he recently emerged, restored to near-full power. Myrkul is knownWho|date=January 2008 to be inhabiting the evil artifact, the
Crown of Horns , whereabouts unknown, but certainly plotting his return to godhood. Bhaal, who foresaw his own demise, fathered scores of children during the Time of Troubles as part of a scheme to return to power, the details of which are central to the plot of theBaldur's Gate series .Further information regarding Myrkul can be found in .
*Plot Details Follow!*
It appearsWho|date=January 2008 that dead gods still have consciousness so long as mortals worship or fear them. In Myrkul's case he still has a following which sustains his consciousness. In addition the player character learns that he is harboring the soul of Myrkul's High Priest, Akachi The Betrayer, who led a revolt against Myrkul for sentencing his love to the wall of the faithless for not believing in a god. Akachi's punishment was to be himself placed in the wall of the faithless until the wall had consumed the memories and identity of his soul but not the entire soul. Then his soul was removed in placed into a mortal body in Rasheman where all it knew was the insatiable hunger to feed on other souls, primarily the spirits that are abundant in Rasheman but also, eventually, the person that it was inhabiting as well. Meanwhile, while the player character's body is inhabited by Akachi's soul, the player character's soul went to the spot in the wall of the faithless where Akachi's soul should be. This all leads up to the player character meeting the dead god Myrkul and possibly using his devour soul ability on the dead god, thereby ending his consciousness and finally killing the godOr|date=January 2008.
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