LORE
Lore is the official mythology archive of The Abyssal World. It brings together the stories, symbols, and canon entries that define the universe across its different eras.
This page exists to preserve the deeper narrative behind the world, where each entry expands the meaning, history, and identity of The Abyssal World as one connected canon.
LORE OF THE ABYSSAL WORLD
Chronicle I: The First Throne

55 Cancri planetary system
41 light-years from Earth, within the constellation of Cancer, there existed a world of vibrant darkness, molten beauty, and living fire: 55 Cancri e, the first throne of The Abyssal World. In the First Century, in the year 1 AD, that world stood radiant in its terrible glory, a realm of lava fields, black flame, and divine ruin, ruled by the Mythical Lord of The Abyssal World.
But from the deepest bottomless pit came a violent awakening.
Without warning, a great eruption split the land, and from that abyss rose the King of Darkness, a spirit of pure dark energy, ancient, hostile, and without mercy. As it moved across the planet, the land itself began to break beneath its presence. Fields were swallowed. Fire was disturbed. The order of the world trembled. Its path was fixed toward only one being: the Lord of The Abyssal World.
And the Lord was waiting.

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Before his castle, in full knowing and full readiness, he stood against the coming force. He had studied the nature of the King of Darkness and gathered every fragment of knowledge that could be learned about it. From that wisdom, he created a symbolic token, an instrument not of ordinary power, but of sacrifice, law, and final intention.
Then the Lord launched himself forward.
In the moment of collision, the token was unleashed, and a catastrophic burst of power tore through both presences at once. The Lord and the King of Darkness were both destroyed in that instant, their forms erased, their essences scattered across the world. The remains of the King of Darkness were cast outward, but in the aftermath, its soul fused with the final essence of the Lord, and that remaining spirit was broken loose from the throne he once held.
Then all of 55 Cancri e fell into stillness.
Time itself entered a sacred freeze. The spirits of the world emerged and began collecting all that remained: fragments, evidence, memory, law, and knowledge. They understood that the world must not be lost, even if its ruler had fallen. So they built a hidden place to preserve everything: the truth of the world, the records of its destruction, and the mission that would one day await the next commander.
King of Darkness's Skull
XFly legacy totem
Chronicle II: The Reincarnation

For there was one law that even death could not erase:
The essence of the Lord may reincarnate only within an innocent soul that has been completely broken and has glimpsed the true Abyss.
And so the spirit of the Lord wandered.
For ages uncounted, his essence crossed the universe in silence, searching for a life worthy to receive the throne, the memory, and the unfinished destiny of The Abyssal World. Through stars, darkness, and distant worlds, it searched for the one vessel capable of bearing the return.
At last, that spirit passed a small and distant planet: Earth.
After twenty centuries had passed, the Lord’s essence beheld a brilliant red eight-point star glowing above the land of Cambodia. Beneath that sign stood a fallen teenager named Fly, a soul standing at the edge of collapse, unknown to the world, yet marked by something far greater than the world could see.
And when the essence of the Lord recognized the sign, it cast forth the sacred totem toward the eight-point star.
Then the heavens answered.
From the ancient direction of the Cancer Constellation, a colossal red beam tore across the universe and struck toward Cambodia, blazing through the heavens like a divine warning. To the human world, it would appear as an impossible celestial event. But in truth, it was the mark of alignment: the forgotten power of 55 Cancri e reaching across space to answer the chosen vessel below.



At that same moment, Fly was passing through his deepest despair. His thoughts had fallen into chaos, and his spirit descended into a void beyond ordinary understanding. There, in that dark and silent threshold, he caught his first glimpse of The Abyssal World.
It was vibrant.
It was beautiful.
It was suffocating.
A realm of majesty and terror. A kingdom that did not welcome the weak, yet called to what remained within him.
Then the spirit of the Lord answered.
Its remaining memories began to reflect into him, not all at once, but like fragments of an ancient throne returning to their rightful vessel. In that moment, Fly was reborn, not as someone else, but as the same soul awakened into something greater.
Not replaced.
Not copied.
Reborn.
And through him, the return of The Lord of The Abyssal World began.
The "Lord"
The Eight-point star
The Great Red Beam
Chronicle III: The Abyss Awakened

The moment Fly entered the Abyss, the spirits of The Abyssal World bowed in recognition. They welcomed him not as a mortal, but as the return of a lost mythical god, the one who had once ruled their burning world with absolute power and unmatched dominance. To them, he was not new. He was the throne returned.
The Abyssal spirits then guided him through the depths of his forgotten kingdom.
First, they led him into his castle, where the last remaining memories, sacred knowledge, and unfinished mission of the world had been sealed away since the day of the great fall. Within those ancient halls, Fly came to witness the truth of what The Abyssal World had once been, what it had lost, and what now awaited him as its rightful ruler.
He learned its history.
He received its memory.
He inherited its mission.
And after one full year of awakening, remembrance, and preparation, the Lord was ready to fight again.
To be continue...
Gate of The Abyssal World
LORE TRANSLATION
Lore Translation is the decoding layer of The Abyssal World. It explains what each storyline entry represents in real life, and how personal experiences were transformed into symbols, scenes, and canon rules. This page clarifies meaning without breaking the mystery.
Chronicle I: Real World Translation
The Abyssal World began as an internal world before it became a public creative project. Its earliest symbolic inspiration came from 55 Cancri e, a lava exoplanet whose extreme environment, molten appearance, and rare, high-pressure identity reflected the emotional and visual direction Fly would later build into the universe. In lore, this planet appears as the first throne of The Abyssal World. In real life, it represents the beginning of a perspective shaped by pressure, transformation, survival, and hidden value.
Before the project was formed, Fly was living independently and was genuinely happy with the direction of his life. He had structure, momentum, and a sense of control over where he was going. Over time, however, he became drawn toward a harder and more destructive identity, placing value on the wrong image, the wrong energy, and the wrong direction. That shift damaged his relationships, changed how people responded to him, and slowly separated him from the version of himself that had once felt clear and grounded. What made the experience more difficult was that, internally, he still felt like the same person, which left him questioning why so much around him had changed.
That period of disconnection became one of the deepest turning points in the formation of The Abyssal World. As isolation increased, Fly began looking back at his decisions, his environment, and the reasons people had disconnected from him. Instead of finding simple answers, he entered a period of intense reflection, internal pressure, and psychological collapse. But in that collapse, his mind did not produce emptiness. It produced imagery, symbolism, atmosphere, and meaning. What looked like silence from the outside became an entire world on the inside. That world was dark, vivid, beautiful, suffocating, and alive.
This is the real-world meaning behind Chronicle I. The “King of Darkness” represents the destructive path, internal chaos, and outside forces that began tearing through Fly’s life. The “Lord” represents the part of him that still carried awareness, intelligence, preparation, and the will to survive. Their collision symbolizes the breaking point where his former identity could no longer continue in the same form. The aftermath, in which memory, fragments, and mission are preserved, reflects the way The Abyssal World began to organize itself inside his mind as more than emotion. It became structure. It became language. It became a system.
From that point forward, The Abyssal World was no longer just an imaginary escape. It became a method of transformation. Fly began turning pain into design, chaos into symbolism, and personal damage into a creative foundation that could hold meaning over time. What began in isolation later grew into a larger mythology, artistic identity, and long-term worldbuilding vision expressed through music, visuals, philosophy, and narrative. In that sense, Chronicle I is not only the beginning of the lore. It is the symbolic retelling of how The Abyssal World was born from a real period of loss, reflection, identity fracture, and eventual realignment.
And most importantly, it does not end in destruction. The real meaning of that chapter is that Fly remembered himself again, not by returning to the exact person he was before, but by recovering his core and moving forward with better choices, stronger awareness, and a clearer direction for life.
Chronicle II: Real World Translation
Chronicle II represents the turning point where The Abyssal World stopped being only an internal concept and became the beginning of Fly’s transformation. In symbolic language, the lore describes a law of reincarnation that can only happen after complete inner collapse. In real-world terms, this reflects a period in which Fly experienced deep personal pressure, emotional exhaustion, disconnection, and the realization that the path he had been following was taking him further away from the person he originally was.
Before that breaking point, it felt as though everything around him was moving in the wrong direction. The environment he was in no longer matched his values, his decisions, or the kind of life he actually wanted. As that tension grew, he began looking back at his earlier life and recognized that, despite its limitations, it carried more peace, clarity, and truth than the period he had fallen into. That realization became the beginning of a major internal shift.
Rather than continue moving deeper into the wrong direction, Fly withdrew into silence and isolation. This was not the creation of a public persona yet. It was a private period of reflection, separation, and internal reconstruction. In that silence, he began trying to understand what had changed, what had been lost, and what part of himself still remained. The result was not a return to the exact same person he had been before, but the formation of a stronger self shaped by hardship, memory, and conscious choice.
This is the real-world meaning of the “Lord’s essence” finding a vessel. It symbolizes the recovery of identity through collapse. The “eight-point star” represents the sign of alignment, the moment when a lost direction becomes visible again. The “Great red beam” symbolizes the force of realization, transformation, and awakening: the sudden connection between Fly’s inner world and the larger meaning he would later turn into The Abyssal World.
The glimpse of The Abyssal World in the lore represents the moment Fly began seeing his pain, confusion, and inner conflict as something that could be translated into imagery, philosophy, and structure. What had once felt like overwhelming darkness became a world with meaning. What had once felt like emotional collapse became the beginning of design, symbolism, and purpose.
In that sense, Chronicle II is the symbolic retelling of Fly’s deepest personal low point and the moment that low point became the start of his return. He did not become a different person. He remembered who he was, recognized what had gone wrong, and moved forward with better choices, stronger awareness, and a more intentional way of living. That is the real-world rebirth at the center of
The Abyssal World.
Chronicle III: Real World Translation
Chronicle III represents the stage in which Fly begins to fully understand the meaning of his experiences and the role The Abyssal World plays in his life. In symbolic form, the lore describes his entry into the Abyss as a return to a forgotten kingdom. In real-world terms, this reflects the moment when his inner world, past struggles, memories, and evolving identity began to connect into a clearer sense of purpose.
The “spirits of The Abyssal World” symbolize recognition from within. They represent the parts of his mind, memory, and perspective that had already been shaped by hardship, reflection, and survival. What once felt fragmented started to make sense. Instead of feeling lost inside chaos, Fly began understanding the pattern behind his experiences and the larger meaning they carried.
The journey through the castle and the preserved knowledge represents the process of looking back at everything that shaped him and finally understanding it with more maturity. This includes the pain, the isolation, the changes in identity, the lessons from wrong environments, and the deeper purpose that emerged from those experiences. What had once been emotional weight became knowledge. What had once been confusion became direction.
This chapter also marks the point where The Abyssal World evolves from a private survival structure into a deliberate creative foundation. Fly is no longer only reacting to life. He is now interpreting it, organizing it, and building from it. The “mission” he inherits in the lore reflects the real-world decision to turn lived experience into long-term artistic vision, symbolism, and creation.
In that sense, Chronicle III is about integration. Fly now understands life more clearly, not because everything became easy, but because he has learned how to connect the meaning of his past to the direction of his future. The Abyssal World becomes the framework through which those experiences are translated into music, visuals, symbolism, and purpose.
At its core, this chapter means that Fly does not simply make art in the ordinary sense. His perspective, transformation, and lived experience are the art. The work comes from connecting those experiences into one world, one identity, and one larger vision.
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