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[[File:Immortal_Clock.jpg|thumb|center|350px|Type 1 is the most common type of immortality.]]
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[[File:Immortal_Clock.jpg|thumb|center|350px|Type 1 is the most common type of immortality. Some Jellyfish are real life examples of Type 1 Immortality.]]
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<br />
 
=='''Brief Summary'''==
 
=='''Brief Summary'''==
 
'''Immortality''' is a term for characters that have the inability to die through conventional means alone.
 
'''Immortality''' is a term for characters that have the inability to die through conventional means alone.
 
=='''Types'''==
 
=='''Types'''==
'''1: Longevity.''' ''Characters with this immortality are incapable of dying through aging and senescence. In some cases they're also uncapable of dying through disease, though not always, unless otherwise stated—though the statement isn't necessarily required, it makes determining it far easier. Not to be confused with [[Longevity]].''
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'''1: Biological.''' ''Characters gifted with this type of immortality cannot die from natural causes, such as old age, but can be killed by unnatural causes. To clarify, this type of immortality can include both those who do not age at all, and those who still grow old, but will never die of old age. Typically this immortality relates to the character having an eternal and/or infinite life span as opposed to having [[Longevity]]. In some cases they're also incapable of dying through disease or conventional illness, though not always, unless otherwise stated—though the statement isn't necessarily required, it makes determining it far easier.''
   
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*'''Examples:''' The Valor (Lord of the Rings), Shadow the Hedgehog (Sonic the Hedgehog), Dimentio (Super Mario Bros)
'''2: Resilience.''' ''Characters with this immortality are highly resilient towards physical attacks, but can't regenerate from it. For example, the character will be still alive if he's cleaved in half or split into pieces, but he can't paste himself back together. Severed limbs won't grow back, nor will destroyed organs.''
 
   
 
'''2: Resilient.''' ''Characters with this immortality are highly resilient towards physical attacks, but can't regenerate from it. For example, the character will be still alive if he's cleaved in half or split into pieces, but he can't paste himself back together. Severed limbs won't grow back, nor will destroyed organs.''
'''3: Regeneration.''' ''Characters with this can simply regenerate. The usefulness of this is all dependent on the user's degree of [[Regeneration]].''
 
   
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*'''Examples:''' Frieza (Dragon Ball), Hidan (Naruto), Magical Girls (Puella Magi Verse)
'''4: Godhood or God Protection.''' ''Characters with this have been granted immortality through godhood, or through divine intervention. This is generally more so treated as a state of being rather than an actual immortality.''
 
   
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'''3: Immortality via Regeneration.''' ''Characters with this can simply regenerate from their wounds. The usefulness of this is all dependent on the user's degree of [[Regeneration]]. However, simply having any [[Regeneration]] wouldn't inherently classify a character for having this type of immortality. Unless the characters ability allows them to regenerate endlessly, it's a passive ability, doesn't require energy to regenerate, and/or doesn't involve the loss of stamina. At a bare minimum, Characters with [[Regeneration]] (Mid) or higher may classify as having this level of immortality, but not inherently.''
'''5: Absolute.''' ''Characters with this have literal incapability of dying whatsoever. It's generally reserved for Omnipotent beings, rather than those much lower; although '''some''' exceptions '''DO''' exist, albeit very, very, '''very''' rare.''
 
   
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*'''Examples:''' Majin Buu (Dragon Ball), Deadpool (Marvel Comics), Zamasu (Dragon Ball)
'''6: Parasitic.''' ''Characters with this immortality are capable of bodyhopping or utilizing [[Possession]] to stay alive, moving their spirit, soul, essence, concept, mind, consciousness or embodiment to another body to take control of.''
 
   
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'''4: Immortality via Resurrection.''' ''Characters who are capable of coming back from death by simply being reincarnated or auto-reviving in some shape or form. Technically speaking, the character in question CAN be successfully murdered — they'll just come back after you've done so. Typically paired with abilities such as [[Resurrection]], [[Duplication]], or [[Acausality]] (Type 3).''
'''7: Undead.''' ''For the most part, this immortality is self-explanatory, and characters with it have a habit of doubling up with other types of immortality. A common one would be Type 1, and for ghosts, they normally end up having Type 3 as well.''
 
   
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*'''Examples:''' Majorita (Nippon Ichi), Neptune (Hyperdimension Neptunia), Sailor Moon (Sailor Moon), All versions of Doctor Who (Doctor Who), Doomsday (DC Comics), The Avatar (Avatar: The Last Airbender)
'''8: Reliant.''' ''Characters with this immortality are incapable of being killed so long as a certain object, artifact, phenomenon, concept or something else exists or is intact, or they cannot die during a certain situation or circumstance. If the thing broken, destroyed, killed or deactivated or the situation ends, the character will either die or become mortal.''
 
   
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'''5: Deathless:''' ''Characters who exist unbound by conventional life or death, or do not exist at all, and thus cannot be traditionally killed. Typically, abilities such as [[Existence Erasure]] are needed to destroy them.''
'''9: Transcendental.''' ''Characters with this immortality are actually separate from the realm where they can be killed. For example, a conceptual being doesn't die even if its body, soul, etc. are erased from existence.''
 
   
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*'''Examples:''' Pain (Naruto), Phoenix Ikki (Saint Seiya), Nemurin (Magical Girl Raising Project), Ash (Nippon Ichi)
'''10: Meta.''' ''Characters with this immortality are not dead, nor are they alive. They are completely metaphysical, and thus are outside of reality, temporality and dimensionality of any measurement. If possible to kill such a character, you would need to be on a similar plane of power, or higher.''
 
   
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'''6: Parasitic.''' ''Characters with this immortality aren't restricted to a singular physical form, body and/or host. And are capable of body hopping or utilizing [[Possession]] to transfer their spirit, soul, essence, concept, mind, consciousness and/or embodiment to another body in order to stay alive/live on. More rarely, they can even take possess inanimate objects. This is more so than just solely having the ability of [[Possession]]. As the character is not only capable of taking control over someone else's body, but they are capable of utilizing that body as a new host and/or husk that they can live on within. Typically, you can destroy the physical body the character was inhabiting without killing the character themselves. As long as what remains of them can still utilize the ability to possess another physical form.''
'''11: Emotion-Connective.''' ''Characters with this immortality are completely incapable of dying so long as a specific emotion exists towards them. They can be defeated, but never truly killed. If those emotions towards them were to vanish, they would vanish along with those emotions, die or become mortal.''
 
   
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*'''Examples:''' Orochimaru (Naruto), A.D.A.M. (Sonic the Hedgehog), Xehanort (Kingdom Hearts), Baby (Dragon Ball), Deadman (DC Comics), Cheap Trick (JoJo's Bizarre Adventure)
'''12: Retroactive.''' ''Characters with this immortality can be killed--it's just that, one way or another, they'll come back. Normally associated with [[Resurrection]], though users may or can also reincarnate in another body, wether it be the same species or not.''
 
   
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'''7: Undead.''' ''Characters who cannot die due to technically being already dead. For the most part, this immortality is self-explanatory, and characters with it have a habit of doubling up with other types of immortality. For example, the conventional zombie would be considered with having Type 7, along with 1 & 2 (sometimes Type 3). Another example being the conventional ghost, normally ends up having Type 7 along with Type 1 & 3. However this type of immortality should more or less just be seen as a mere classification; and it mainly relies on the other types that it doubles up with to make the character at all impressive.''
'''13: Robotic.''' ''Characters with this immortality will always be robots or cyborgs, and they can be killed, but will always be capable of being rebuilt and/or repaired.''
 
   
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*'''Examples:''' Dio Brando (JoJo's Bizarre Adventure), Fencer (Trevor Henderson Mythos), Zombies (Yakuza), Jason Voorhees (Friday the 13th), Edo Tensei zombies (Naruto), Nanashi (SMT 4 : Apocalypse)
'''14: Selective.''' ''Characters with this immortality can only be truly killed by one person, weapon or attack. There are two types; the first, weaker type is the one where these characters can still be defeated, it's just '''FAR''' more difficult to '''KILL''' them without their specific weakness. The second and strongest type is that they can literally only be killed with/by that one thing and '''NOTHING''' else.''
 
   
 
'''8: Reliant.''' ''Characters with this immortality are incapable of being killed so long as a certain object, artifact, phenomenon, concept or something else exists or is intact, they cannot die during a certain situation or circumstance or for as long as a certain emotion exists towards them or they exist for only one purpose (anymore). If the thing is broken, destroyed, killed or deactivated, the situation ends or the purpose has been fullfilled, the character will either die or become mortal.''
'''15: Physical.''' ''Characters with this immortality are completely incapable of dying through physical means alone. A good way to kill them would be through [[Reality Warping]] or attacks from a higher dimensional being.''
 
   
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*'''Examples:'''  Travis Touchdown (No More Heroes), Voldemort (Harry Potter), Seven Great Demon Lords (Digimon), Hades (Saint Seiya), Melzagard (One Punch Man), Frisk (Undertale)
'''16: Multiple Lives.''' ''The same as Type 12, but the characters in question can only come back for a limited number of times, having multiple lives. Wether the user can regain lives, get extra lives, how many they have and wether they return in their actual body or in another all depends on the character.''
 
   
 
'''9: Transcendental.''' ''Characters with this immortality typically have their true forms are separate from the realm where they can be killed. For example, a conceptual being doesn't die even if its body, soul, etc. are erased from existence. Usually, these are higher-dimensional forces or characters with a lower-dimensional avatar/manifestation.''
'''17: Form-Retroactive.''' ''Another variation of Type 12, where the character comes back in a different form. May be an infinite cycle or a limited number of times. In the case of the first, the forms the character returns in are likely in a specific order in an infinite cycle, but can also be completely random.''
 
   
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*'''Examples:''' Pennywise (IT), SCP-682 (SCP Foundation), Dark Schneider (Bastard!!), Featherine (Umeniko)
'''18: Transformation-Retroactive.''' ''The final variant of Type 12. The character in question will return in one of his/her/it's transformations or other forms. Usually in the case of being able to return only a certain amount of times, the character cannot revert or transform into forms that are already "dead."''
 
   
 
'''10: Meta-Immortality.''' ''Characters with this type of immortality are neither dead or alive in the conventional sense. They are completely metaphysical, and thus are outside of reality, temporality and dimensionality of any measurement. Typically one of the only ways to kill characters with this type of immortality being on a similar or higher plane of existence or power.''
'''19: Mecha-Parasitic.''' ''Characters with this immortality are generally machines and/or computer virus characters, capable of uploading their own data to other software to avoid termination.''
 
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*'''Examples:''' The Phantom Stranger (DC Comics), Chaos Gods (Warhammer 40,000), Darkseid (DC Comics)
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'''11: Selective Immortality.''' ''Characters with this immortality can only be truly killed by one person, weapon, attack or a specific weakness.''
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*'''Examples:''' The Grool (Goosebumps), Zero-Two (Kirby), Aku (Samurai Jack)
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=='''Important Notes'''==
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*Type 11 immortality is an in-verse only type; which cannot be applied to any VS Threads and/or Crossover Vs Battles. As attempting to apply it in those scenarios is often regarded and would be classified as a [[Fallacy#16.%20No%20Limits%20Fallacy%20.28NLF.29|No Limits Fallacy]].
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*Types 8 and 11 '''cannot''' be bundled (The definitions of these types directly conflict)
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* While Types 6 and 8, as well as 4 and 8, '''can''' be paired, this may only be done if the reasonings are unrelated to each other. In other words, the character may still reincarnate, even if their Type 8 is negated through whatever means, meaning they do '''not''' have Types 6 solely based on them having Type 8.
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*The reason why Type 3 wouldn't be given to characters with only levels of [[Regeneration]] lower than Mid is because they still have the ability to die if certain conventional injuries were applied which would instantly kill them. This distinction allows us to capable of differentiating a character with Type 1 and/or 2 Immortality and Low to Low-Mid [[Regeneration]] and a character with Type 3 Immortality. But as stated within the definition, a character having Mid levels of [[Regeneration]] does NOT inherently grant it Type 3, unless at least one of the prerequisites was made.
   
'''20: Other Reason.''' ''Characters with this type of immortality have a type of immortality not yet described above. The reason(s) why they can't die or description must be stated on the pages of characters with this immortality.''
 
 
[[Category:Powers and Abilities]]
 
[[Category:Powers and Abilities]]

Revision as of 06:08, 26 March 2022

Immortal Clock

Type 1 is the most common type of immortality. Some Jellyfish are real life examples of Type 1 Immortality.


Brief Summary

Immortality is a term for characters that have the inability to die through conventional means alone.

Types

1: Biological. Characters gifted with this type of immortality cannot die from natural causes, such as old age, but can be killed by unnatural causes. To clarify, this type of immortality can include both those who do not age at all, and those who still grow old, but will never die of old age. Typically this immortality relates to the character having an eternal and/or infinite life span as opposed to having Longevity. In some cases they're also incapable of dying through disease or conventional illness, though not always, unless otherwise stated—though the statement isn't necessarily required, it makes determining it far easier.

  • Examples: The Valor (Lord of the Rings), Shadow the Hedgehog (Sonic the Hedgehog), Dimentio (Super Mario Bros)

2: Resilient. Characters with this immortality are highly resilient towards physical attacks, but can't regenerate from it. For example, the character will be still alive if he's cleaved in half or split into pieces, but he can't paste himself back together. Severed limbs won't grow back, nor will destroyed organs.

  • Examples: Frieza (Dragon Ball), Hidan (Naruto), Magical Girls (Puella Magi Verse)

3: Immortality via Regeneration. Characters with this can simply regenerate from their wounds. The usefulness of this is all dependent on the user's degree of Regeneration. However, simply having any Regeneration wouldn't inherently classify a character for having this type of immortality. Unless the characters ability allows them to regenerate endlessly, it's a passive ability, doesn't require energy to regenerate, and/or doesn't involve the loss of stamina. At a bare minimum, Characters with Regeneration (Mid) or higher may classify as having this level of immortality, but not inherently.

  • Examples: Majin Buu (Dragon Ball), Deadpool (Marvel Comics), Zamasu (Dragon Ball)

4: Immortality via Resurrection. Characters who are capable of coming back from death by simply being reincarnated or auto-reviving in some shape or form. Technically speaking, the character in question CAN be successfully murdered — they'll just come back after you've done so. Typically paired with abilities such as Resurrection, Duplication, or Acausality (Type 3).

  • Examples: Majorita (Nippon Ichi), Neptune (Hyperdimension Neptunia), Sailor Moon (Sailor Moon), All versions of Doctor Who (Doctor Who), Doomsday (DC Comics), The Avatar (Avatar: The Last Airbender)

5: Deathless: Characters who exist unbound by conventional life or death, or do not exist at all, and thus cannot be traditionally killed. Typically, abilities such as Existence Erasure are needed to destroy them.

  • Examples: Pain (Naruto), Phoenix Ikki (Saint Seiya), Nemurin (Magical Girl Raising Project), Ash (Nippon Ichi)

6: Parasitic. Characters with this immortality aren't restricted to a singular physical form, body and/or host. And are capable of body hopping or utilizing Possession to transfer their spirit, soul, essence, concept, mind, consciousness and/or embodiment to another body in order to stay alive/live on. More rarely, they can even take possess inanimate objects. This is more so than just solely having the ability of Possession. As the character is not only capable of taking control over someone else's body, but they are capable of utilizing that body as a new host and/or husk that they can live on within. Typically, you can destroy the physical body the character was inhabiting without killing the character themselves. As long as what remains of them can still utilize the ability to possess another physical form.

  • Examples: Orochimaru (Naruto), A.D.A.M. (Sonic the Hedgehog), Xehanort (Kingdom Hearts), Baby (Dragon Ball), Deadman (DC Comics), Cheap Trick (JoJo's Bizarre Adventure)

7: Undead. Characters who cannot die due to technically being already dead. For the most part, this immortality is self-explanatory, and characters with it have a habit of doubling up with other types of immortality. For example, the conventional zombie would be considered with having Type 7, along with 1 & 2 (sometimes Type 3). Another example being the conventional ghost, normally ends up having Type 7 along with Type 1 & 3. However this type of immortality should more or less just be seen as a mere classification; and it mainly relies on the other types that it doubles up with to make the character at all impressive.

  • Examples: Dio Brando (JoJo's Bizarre Adventure), Fencer (Trevor Henderson Mythos), Zombies (Yakuza), Jason Voorhees (Friday the 13th), Edo Tensei zombies (Naruto), Nanashi (SMT 4 : Apocalypse)

8: Reliant. Characters with this immortality are incapable of being killed so long as a certain object, artifact, phenomenon, concept or something else exists or is intact, they cannot die during a certain situation or circumstance or for as long as a certain emotion exists towards them or they exist for only one purpose (anymore). If the thing is broken, destroyed, killed or deactivated, the situation ends or the purpose has been fullfilled, the character will either die or become mortal.

  • Examples:  Travis Touchdown (No More Heroes), Voldemort (Harry Potter), Seven Great Demon Lords (Digimon), Hades (Saint Seiya), Melzagard (One Punch Man), Frisk (Undertale)

9: Transcendental. Characters with this immortality typically have their true forms are separate from the realm where they can be killed. For example, a conceptual being doesn't die even if its body, soul, etc. are erased from existence. Usually, these are higher-dimensional forces or characters with a lower-dimensional avatar/manifestation.

  • Examples: Pennywise (IT), SCP-682 (SCP Foundation), Dark Schneider (Bastard!!), Featherine (Umeniko)

10: Meta-Immortality. Characters with this type of immortality are neither dead or alive in the conventional sense. They are completely metaphysical, and thus are outside of reality, temporality and dimensionality of any measurement. Typically one of the only ways to kill characters with this type of immortality being on a similar or higher plane of existence or power.

  • Examples: The Phantom Stranger (DC Comics), Chaos Gods (Warhammer 40,000), Darkseid (DC Comics)

11: Selective Immortality. Characters with this immortality can only be truly killed by one person, weapon, attack or a specific weakness.

  • Examples: The Grool (Goosebumps), Zero-Two (Kirby), Aku (Samurai Jack)

Important Notes

  • Type 11 immortality is an in-verse only type; which cannot be applied to any VS Threads and/or Crossover Vs Battles. As attempting to apply it in those scenarios is often regarded and would be classified as a No Limits Fallacy.
  • Types 8 and 11 cannot be bundled (The definitions of these types directly conflict)
  • While Types 6 and 8, as well as 4 and 8, can be paired, this may only be done if the reasonings are unrelated to each other. In other words, the character may still reincarnate, even if their Type 8 is negated through whatever means, meaning they do not have Types 6 solely based on them having Type 8.
  • The reason why Type 3 wouldn't be given to characters with only levels of Regeneration lower than Mid is because they still have the ability to die if certain conventional injuries were applied which would instantly kill them. This distinction allows us to capable of differentiating a character with Type 1 and/or 2 Immortality and Low to Low-Mid Regeneration and a character with Type 3 Immortality. But as stated within the definition, a character having Mid levels of Regeneration does NOT inherently grant it Type 3, unless at least one of the prerequisites was made.