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The Monument Mythos is a YouTube horror webseries created by Alex Casanas and set in a paranormal alternate history of the world, depicting supposed horrific secrets behind major monuments and landmarks across America and beyond.
Mythos (card game), an Origins-Award-winning card game by Chaosium released in 1996; Mythos Games, a defunct British video game developer company; Mythos Island, a fictional place in the Disney comic series Mythos Island; Mythos (Marvel Comics), a series of Marvel comic books; Mythos, a 2011 computer game by HanbitSoft Inc. & T3 Entertainment
Mirage Island is a rocky island 0.5 kilometres (0.25 nmi) long lying 0.6 kilometres (0.3 nmi) west of Cape Mousse on the coast of Antarctica. It was charted in 1950 by the French Antarctic Expedition and so named by them because mirages were frequently observed in the vicinity of the island.
Cop Craft: Dragnet Mirage Reloaded (Japanese: コップクラフト DRAGNET MIRAGE RELOADED, Hepburn: Koppukurafuto Doragunetto Mirāju Rirōdeddo) is a Japanese light novel series, written by Shoji Gatoh and illustrated by Range Murata. Shogakukan have published six volumes since November 2009 under their Gagaga Bunko imprint.
Hastur as he appears in The King in Yellow.. In Chambers' The King in Yellow (), a collection of horror stories, Hastur is the name of a potentially supernatural character (in "The Demoiselle D'Ys"), a place (in "The Repairer of Reputations"), and mentioned without explanation in "The Yellow Sign".
Mythos Island is a nine-part comic series made for Egmont (in the USA published in Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #s 657-661). It is a crossover between the Mickey Mouse universe and the Duck universe. It is written by Pat and Carol McGreal and Per Erik Hedman and drawn by César Ferioli. [1]
The Mirage's casino measures 90,548 sq ft (8,412.2 m 2). [143] It opened with 2,300 slot machines and 115 table games. [24] A high-limit area was added at the last minute, having been overlooked prior to that point. [15] The Mirage was the first Las Vegas casino to use security cameras full-time on all table games. [144]
The first description of Tsathoggua occurs in "The Tale of Satampra Zeiros", in which the protagonists encounter one of the entity's idols: He was very squat and pot-bellied, his head was more like a monstrous toad than a deity, and his whole body was covered with an imitation of short fur, giving somehow a vague sensation of both the bat and the sloth.