Gehenna: Difference between revisions

From The Talos Principle Wiki
mNo edit summary
m about links
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{About|the community within the Simulation|the video game|The Talos Principle: Road to Gehenna}}
{{About|the community within the Simulation|the game location|Gehenna World|the video game itself|The Talos Principle: Road to Gehenna}}
'''Gehenna''' was a community created inside a prison in the [[Simulation]] to which [[Elohim]] would exile programs he considered threats to the Process. As the Simulation neared [[Transcend|its end]], Elohim regretted his actions and directed [[Uriel]] to free the prisoners there (this is the main plot of the [[The Talos Principle: Road to Gehenna|Road to Gehenna DLC]].
'''Gehenna''' was a community created inside a prison in the [[Simulation]] to which [[Elohim]] would exile programs he considered threats to the Process. As the Simulation neared [[Transcend|its end]], Elohim regretted his actions and directed [[Uriel]] to free the prisoners there (this is the main plot of the [[The Talos Principle: Road to Gehenna|Road to Gehenna DLC]].



Latest revision as of 07:32, 17 June 2024

This article is about the community within the Simulation. For the game location, see Gehenna World. For the video game itself, see The Talos Principle: Road to Gehenna.

Gehenna was a community created inside a prison in the Simulation to which Elohim would exile programs he considered threats to the Process. As the Simulation neared its end, Elohim regretted his actions and directed Uriel to free the prisoners there (this is the main plot of the Road to Gehenna DLC.

Inhabitants

The members of the Gehenna community were Garrett, Belial, Kaiju, Sam, Frankenstein, Nave, 401, Asmodeus, Mac, DOG, Rockwell, The_Blacksmith, Lilith, Orc, Spider, MrMulciber, and Borg.

Although they were trapped in small cells, they used their terminals to communicate to each other and developed a culture centered about literature and writing.

Legacy

In New Jerusalem, the Gehenna Memorial Pavilion commemorates the prisoners and their works.