Professor Honeycutt (later the Fugitoid) is a fictional character from the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Mirage comics and 2003 animated series. His name is likely a reference to the character B.J. Hunnicutt from the TV show '.
Fictional character biography 2003 animated series
Honeycutt was a D'Hoonibian Federation scientist who worked on a project known as the teleportal. A device designed to transport people across the universe to promote peace. Yet General Blanque, leader of the Federation's armed forces, wanted him build this device to eliminate his enemies but Honeycutt declined. Though the Federation funded his project, they had no control of him. He rushed out to help his robot assistant Sal, who was caught in some wires. Suddenly, a lightning bolt struck him and Sal. With his mind levitator on his head, his body disintegrated and his mind was placed in Sal's body. General Blanque was watching everything and knew that, as robots had no rights within the Federation, he could now take the plans by force. So Honeycutt ran into the city and was cornered.
Luckily, the Turtles transmatted onto the scene and Honeycutt decided to help them. In exchange for his safety, Honeycutt would build the teleportal and the Turtles would take him home to Earth.
Unfortunately, it was not to last. The Federation's enemies, the Triceratons, "robo-napped" him. The Prime Leader offered to protect him, but changed approach when he found out the Turtles were his friends. If Honeycutt didn't build the teleportal, the Triceratons would kill them. Honeycutt couldn't think of a plan to get them all out of this mess. Luck came when the Turtles rescued him and stole the Prime Leader's ship. While he and Donatello worked on the teleportal, the others stalled for time. Unfortunately, the teleportal didn't work, forcing Honeycutt to fall back to his original plan - to destroy himself so the knowledge wouldn't fall into the wrong hands. Before this could be done, however, he, the Turtles, and a handful of Federation and Triceraton soldiers were transmatted out by the Utroms whose transmat the Turtles had used in the first place.
While enjoying the hospitality of their new Utrom friends, Honeycutt became embroiled in the abortive raid of the Utroms' Earth base. Despite being nonviolent, Honeycutt was able to provide a key reprieve in the battle by mimicking the Shredder's voice and deactivating the real Shredder's control over Baxter Stockman, now a spider-robot with only his head remaining. This forced the Shredder and his forces to temporarily retreat... but not before dropping an implosion time-bomb. Honeycutt then left for the Utrom homeworld, leaving the Turtles with a second round with the Shredder.
Months later, the Triceratons traced Honeycutt's transmat journey to Earth, and invaded the planet en masse, searching for Honeycutt or anyone with a transionic particle signature that might imply contact with him. After carving the planet up city by city, abducting and torturing many people with no inherent connection to Honeycutt, and decimating the Earth's military and superhero forces, it took the intervention of a captured Donatello to point out that a scan for the Fugitoid's positronic brain - not used beforehand due to the sheer abundance of positron technology in the Triceratons' corner of the universe - would easily pick out his presence (or lack thereof) on the planet. Satisfied that Honeycutt is indeed not on Earth, the Triceratons pull out - just as Honeycutt transmats back to Earth, hoping to help fend off the aborted invasion. The Triceratons quickly return.
Honeycutt's plan was to surrender himself to the invaders, after first deleting the teleportal plans from his memory. However, he also had a second reason to surrender himself to the enemy: to upload a virus to both the Triceration fleet and that of the Federation, who had been waiting in Earth orbit to capture him themselves. However, his friends, concerned for his safety, separated his body into four pieces, diverting the Triceratons all over New York. When they got him back together, they were captured by the Earth Protection Force, who were in alliance with the Federation for all aliens to leave Earth alone. When Blanque connected Honeycutt's body to computers, he was dismayed when the teleportal plans weren't there. Since he built the Federation tech, he had easy access to broadcast his message across Earth and in orbit. With both fleets disabled, their war-happy leaders were swiftly deposed and the former enemies united under a banner of peace. This armistice came at a high price, however: Honeycutt's mind was irreparably lost. The Turtles held a space funeral and let his body drift in space.
Honeycutt's "death" would not last long. During the 're-invasion', he had uploaded a partial, heavily-compressed copy of his mind to Earth's satellite and computer networks while trying to erase his positronic signature. Afterward, he made many attempts to contact the Turtles, all but one rejected as a mis-dialed fax call. Donatello eventually clues up to it, and sets up a PDA to intercept the transmission, which becomes an interactive Honeycutt. However, because there was limited data space within the PDA, Honeycutt had non-essential data deleted (i.e. Michaelangelo). With his knowledge of Triceraton technology, he helped the Turtles and Karai save the broken off sector of Bejing with it placed in the opposite direction. Some time later, with the help of Leatherhead, he acquired a new - if somewhat jury-rigged - robot body using Earth technology. It seems a bit crude but effective, and looks not like Johnny-5 in Short Circuit. He expresses that it seems a bit "Homemade".
During an assault on the Shredder's fortress, Honeycutt - back in the PDA - acted as a hacker to disable all the security systems and initiated a lockdown. Later on in the operation, stowing aboard the Shredder's ship, he helped hack into the vessel's computer systems, which were already sabotaged by Baxter Stockman. They almost succeeded, until the Shredder and Karai defeated them and nearly killed them all - an outcome prevented by an assault from orbital missile platforms under Agent Bishop's control. Although they are alive, the Shredder was now in a position to escape. With no other option, the Turtles unanimously vote to ask Honeycutt to overload the ship's energy core, destroying the ship and themselves, but taking the Shredder with them. Moments before the ship was destroyed, all hands were beamed off by the Utroms. Honeycutt was present at the Shredder's trial in his robot body. It is presumed he stayed to live with the Utroms permanently.
He was voiced by Pete Zarustica.
Note: In the Mirage Comics, Professor Honeycutt never "died", he has recently reappeared in Volume 4 with new abilities added to his body such as wings, jet boosters in his feet, and the ability to transform into a hulking fighting machine.
Fictional character biography 2003 animated series
Honeycutt was a D'Hoonibian Federation scientist who worked on a project known as the teleportal. A device designed to transport people across the universe to promote peace. Yet General Blanque, leader of the Federation's armed forces, wanted him build this device to eliminate his enemies but Honeycutt declined. Though the Federation funded his project, they had no control of him. He rushed out to help his robot assistant Sal, who was caught in some wires. Suddenly, a lightning bolt struck him and Sal. With his mind levitator on his head, his body disintegrated and his mind was placed in Sal's body. General Blanque was watching everything and knew that, as robots had no rights within the Federation, he could now take the plans by force. So Honeycutt ran into the city and was cornered.
Luckily, the Turtles transmatted onto the scene and Honeycutt decided to help them. In exchange for his safety, Honeycutt would build the teleportal and the Turtles would take him home to Earth.
Unfortunately, it was not to last. The Federation's enemies, the Triceratons, "robo-napped" him. The Prime Leader offered to protect him, but changed approach when he found out the Turtles were his friends. If Honeycutt didn't build the teleportal, the Triceratons would kill them. Honeycutt couldn't think of a plan to get them all out of this mess. Luck came when the Turtles rescued him and stole the Prime Leader's ship. While he and Donatello worked on the teleportal, the others stalled for time. Unfortunately, the teleportal didn't work, forcing Honeycutt to fall back to his original plan - to destroy himself so the knowledge wouldn't fall into the wrong hands. Before this could be done, however, he, the Turtles, and a handful of Federation and Triceraton soldiers were transmatted out by the Utroms whose transmat the Turtles had used in the first place.
While enjoying the hospitality of their new Utrom friends, Honeycutt became embroiled in the abortive raid of the Utroms' Earth base. Despite being nonviolent, Honeycutt was able to provide a key reprieve in the battle by mimicking the Shredder's voice and deactivating the real Shredder's control over Baxter Stockman, now a spider-robot with only his head remaining. This forced the Shredder and his forces to temporarily retreat... but not before dropping an implosion time-bomb. Honeycutt then left for the Utrom homeworld, leaving the Turtles with a second round with the Shredder.
Months later, the Triceratons traced Honeycutt's transmat journey to Earth, and invaded the planet en masse, searching for Honeycutt or anyone with a transionic particle signature that might imply contact with him. After carving the planet up city by city, abducting and torturing many people with no inherent connection to Honeycutt, and decimating the Earth's military and superhero forces, it took the intervention of a captured Donatello to point out that a scan for the Fugitoid's positronic brain - not used beforehand due to the sheer abundance of positron technology in the Triceratons' corner of the universe - would easily pick out his presence (or lack thereof) on the planet. Satisfied that Honeycutt is indeed not on Earth, the Triceratons pull out - just as Honeycutt transmats back to Earth, hoping to help fend off the aborted invasion. The Triceratons quickly return.
Honeycutt's plan was to surrender himself to the invaders, after first deleting the teleportal plans from his memory. However, he also had a second reason to surrender himself to the enemy: to upload a virus to both the Triceration fleet and that of the Federation, who had been waiting in Earth orbit to capture him themselves. However, his friends, concerned for his safety, separated his body into four pieces, diverting the Triceratons all over New York. When they got him back together, they were captured by the Earth Protection Force, who were in alliance with the Federation for all aliens to leave Earth alone. When Blanque connected Honeycutt's body to computers, he was dismayed when the teleportal plans weren't there. Since he built the Federation tech, he had easy access to broadcast his message across Earth and in orbit. With both fleets disabled, their war-happy leaders were swiftly deposed and the former enemies united under a banner of peace. This armistice came at a high price, however: Honeycutt's mind was irreparably lost. The Turtles held a space funeral and let his body drift in space.
Honeycutt's "death" would not last long. During the 're-invasion', he had uploaded a partial, heavily-compressed copy of his mind to Earth's satellite and computer networks while trying to erase his positronic signature. Afterward, he made many attempts to contact the Turtles, all but one rejected as a mis-dialed fax call. Donatello eventually clues up to it, and sets up a PDA to intercept the transmission, which becomes an interactive Honeycutt. However, because there was limited data space within the PDA, Honeycutt had non-essential data deleted (i.e. Michaelangelo). With his knowledge of Triceraton technology, he helped the Turtles and Karai save the broken off sector of Bejing with it placed in the opposite direction. Some time later, with the help of Leatherhead, he acquired a new - if somewhat jury-rigged - robot body using Earth technology. It seems a bit crude but effective, and looks not like Johnny-5 in Short Circuit. He expresses that it seems a bit "Homemade".
During an assault on the Shredder's fortress, Honeycutt - back in the PDA - acted as a hacker to disable all the security systems and initiated a lockdown. Later on in the operation, stowing aboard the Shredder's ship, he helped hack into the vessel's computer systems, which were already sabotaged by Baxter Stockman. They almost succeeded, until the Shredder and Karai defeated them and nearly killed them all - an outcome prevented by an assault from orbital missile platforms under Agent Bishop's control. Although they are alive, the Shredder was now in a position to escape. With no other option, the Turtles unanimously vote to ask Honeycutt to overload the ship's energy core, destroying the ship and themselves, but taking the Shredder with them. Moments before the ship was destroyed, all hands were beamed off by the Utroms. Honeycutt was present at the Shredder's trial in his robot body. It is presumed he stayed to live with the Utroms permanently.
He was voiced by Pete Zarustica.
Note: In the Mirage Comics, Professor Honeycutt never "died", he has recently reappeared in Volume 4 with new abilities added to his body such as wings, jet boosters in his feet, and the ability to transform into a hulking fighting machine.
This is a list of notable locations in the world of The Order of the Stick, as seen in Rich Burlew's eponymous comic.
Major locations
The Gates
A series of five mystical gates spread around the world, the Gates form a major plot point in the adventures of the Order. Set up originally by a group of adventurers informally known as the , the Gates are designed to close off rifts leading to a prison plane which contains the Snarl, a creature of world-threatening power. Fearing that the Gates could be used for evil purposes, the five surviving members of the "Order of the Scribble" went their separate ways, each vowing to protect their Gate in whatever manner they deemed appropriate. The Gates are of great interest to the lich sorcerer Xykon, who intends to tap their energy for his own purposes. The Gates, each named after the member of the Order of the Scribble who protected it, are as follows:
*Dorukan's Gate: The largest of the five Gates, located in a dungeon stronghold in the Redmountain Hills, warded by the strongest sigils that the wizard Dorukan was capable of creating. Fell into the hands of Xykon for a period, but he was defeated by the Order of the Stick before he could successfully complete his plans. The Gate was then destroyed, along with the surrounding stronghold, when Elan set off a built-in self-destruct mechanism.
*Soon Kim's Gate: The smallest rift, sealed using a single gemstone set into the top of the throne of the ruler of Azure City. Originally located in the skies above the city, the entire castle was built with the aim of reaching the rift; concealing the Gate within the ruler's throne also neatly prevented questions about why the tower was so heavily defended. Defended by the Sapphire Guard, an order of paladins set up by Soon Kim and named after the Gate gemstone, in the belief that only the honour of a paladin was incorruptable, and currently led by Hinjo, who took the throne after his death. The gate has been destroyed by Miko Miyazaki.
*Lirian's Gate: Located within the elven homelands and defended by the creatures of the forest. This Gate was the first to be targeted by Xykon; it was destroyed by Redcloak in the battle, when a fire spell accidentally got out of control.
*Girard Draketooth's Gate: Located in a desert region, Girard hid his Gate behind a complex series of powerful illusions. According to the Oracle, Xykon will be within a 1000-foot radius of this gate before Serini's, these two being the only two Gates left.
*Serini Toormuck's Gate (also known as Kraagor's Gate): Located in a snowy environment, Serini set up her stronghold as a tomb for her fallen comrade Kraagor and filled it with the most vicious monsters she could find, to reflect his belief in physical prowess.
Azure City
The location of Soon's Gate and birthplace of characters Miko Miyazaki, Lord Shojo and Hinjo. Azure City is very large and is apparently well-known to most characters, both good and bad (both Roy Greenhilt and Sabine were already familiar with it when it was mentioned to them). The Order was staying here to defend the city from the ongoing invasion. Azure City is currently under assault by Xykon's forces as part of his quest to take control of one of the Gates. The walls have taken substantial damage from an attack by titanium elementals. Parts of the city are on fire and the central castle (containing the Gate) was destroyed in a massive explosion when Miko Miyazaki shattered the sapphire gemstone sealing the Soon Kim gate. The city is currently under the control of Xykon and Redcloak with the human population having been enslaved by the hobgoblins.
Places to Visit:
*Soon Kim's Gate : Originally located within the Palace, a sapphire gemstone set into the ruler's throne held one of the legendary "Gates of The Snarl". Xykon and Redcloak attacked Azure City to get to this gate, but it was destroyed by Miko to prevent this.
*Sapphire Guard Palace: The large and imposing castle where Lord Shojo, recently murdered leader of Azure City and the new leader, Shojo's nephew Hinjo, lived. Shojo's throne room doubled as a courtroom when alleged criminals (such as the Order) were brought here. The palace was largely destroyed in an explosion following the destruction of the Gate.
*Wizards tower : apperently recently built function unknown.
*The Inn: A large establishment where the Order stayed after their return from Cliffport. Nale Haley in her room, only to be interrupted by Sabine, Elan and Thog. The confrontation led to the defeat of the Linear Guild and their imprisonment.
*The Docks: The only currently-known way out of Azure City being by sea, the city features an extensive dock with numerous ships. Hinjo had Lien, an Azure City soldier, lead the Azurites aboard these to protect them from Xykon's impending invasion. The Order, minus Haley and Belkar (who are out retrieving Roy's body), are currently leaving the city in the Lord of the City's junk.
*The Tower: A structure created during Xykon and Redcloak's occupation. The tower seems to function as a main tower for security.
Cliffport
The town of Cliffport is where mentor, Fyron, lived before being killed by the then-living Xykon. The Order later went there to save sister Julia after she had been captured by Nale and the Linear Guild. Cliffport is the only other named major urban area apart from Azure City in the world inhabited by the Order.
Places to visit:
*Adventurers' Tavern: When Belkar was unable to kill Yokyok of the Linear Guild due to the former's Mark of Justice, he used a note tacked to the door of this place. Several adventurers were attracted by it and the "kobold menace" was quickly overwhelmed.
*Warthog's School of Wizardry and Sorcery: A parody of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry from the Harry Potter series, complete with a "Larry Gardner" (an obvious parody of Harry Potter), but who met his end at Thog's axe, much to popular acclaim. Students who aspire to become wizards (such as Julia and Pompey) or sorcerers attend this school. The principal is a human whose head, for some unexplained reason, resembles that of a warthog. The Linear Guild here to find a replacement wizard after their previous one, , had been dragged off by lawyers Mr. Jones and Mr. Rodriguez during the Guild's first battle with the Order.
*Cliffport Police Department Headquarters: This building is where the CPPD operate from. It also contains a jail, which was destroyed by Thog when he and Elan escaped. They also had Leeky Windstaff of the Linear Guild, but he was later freed by his teammate Pompey.
Redmountain Hills
A rocky area with perpetually red skies and thunderstorms. This area is seen most extensively in the bonus strips found in the first compilation book of OOTS, Dungeon Crawlin' Fools.
Places to visit:
*Dungeon of Dorukan: The first dungeon visited by the Order of the Stick and the setting for the first one hundred and nineteen episodes of the webcomic. Constructed, along with the castle above, by the wizard Dorukan to protect the Gate located there, the dungeon was invaded by Xykon and his goblin forces. Dorukan was slain, leaving Xykon in possession of both the dungeon and the Gate it contains. Dungeon, castle and Gate were all when Elan inadvisedly set off a self-destruct rune that he found there.
*Small Unnamed Village: After the destruction of the dungeon, the Order of the Stick rested and restocked their supplies at a just outside the Redmountain Hills. The town included a blacksmith, a weapon shop, a barbarian's guild, a temple to Freya, a potion shop, a gnomish armorer, an inn, and a tavern.
Southern Mountains
An area of tall grey mountains that seems to stretch over most of the Southern Lands, up to and including the area right outside of Azure City. The secret escape tunnel that Redcloak followed after the destruction of the Dungeon of Dorukan .
Places to visit:
*Hobgoblin Settlement: A large settlement located in a valley with an estimated population of around thirty thousand, not including non-combatants. Redcloak was able to recruit the hobgoblins here to Xykon's cause after their alleged leader with a slay living spell; the real leader of the hobgoblins saw this and wisely chose not to correct Redcloak's assumption, putting the goblin in charge by default.
*Xykon's Tower: Located in the southern part of the region, Xykon considers this his back-up fortress, which he set up just in case he needed somewhere to hide out for a while. By his own admission, he hasn't been there for a few decades, strongly suggesting that he set it up before his conversion into a lich. When Xykon, Redcloak, and the Monster after the destruction of Dorukan's dungeon, the tower had been taken over by Good-aligned creatures, all of whom met their end when faced with Redcloak's hobgoblin army.
*Watchtower: One of a series of defensive positions by the people of Azure City, outfitted with to alert the city of impending invasion. Xykon and Redcloak successsfully negated each of these towers in order to keep their imminent attack a secret. In one such tower, they Miko Miyazaki.
The Afterlife
An extraplanar paradise where the souls of people who die reside. The comic has only thus far depicted the afterlife awaiting people who are of Lawful Good alignment, which is seen as a blueish-green mountain that stretches many times higher than the highest mountain.
Places to visit:
*Fluffy Cloud Demiplane: An unnamed extraplanar location that resembles white fluffy clouds in a blue sky, where creatures from the Upper Planes can come to on the mortal realm. Newly deceased souls are judged here before passing on to their final rest. Eugene Greenhilt cannot leave this demiplane until his Blood Oath is fulfilled.
*Sara Greenhilt's House: The home of Roy Greenhilt's mother, Sara, as well as his little brother, Eric.
*Attractions: Locations designed to allow dead souls to work out the frustrations and hang-ups of their mortal life, such as the .
Minor locations
Somewhere
The only location of note here is the Weary Travelers Inn, which the Order visited to rest after being confronted by Miko Miyazaki and agreeing to accompany her back to Azure City. Being located literally "somewhere", the region of Somewhere is one of several locations whose names easily confuse visitors: Somewhere, Anywhere, Nowhere, and Someplace Else. The strip uses these in a variation of the famous "Who's on First?" routine. In his confusion Roy stated (since the inn obviously had issues with royalty) that he was the "king of nowhere at all," which led to the inn management immediately welcoming him as the King of Nowhere. Roy did nothing to dispel the illusion, probably to avoid worse confusion, receiving complimentary treatment at the inn. The inn was accidentally destroyed by the dwarf assassin "Kaboom" Redaxe and his unnamed Shadowdancer partner, ending Roy's masquerade as king and also resulting in the loss of the Order's treasure (an event which culminated in Haley Starshine, the team's rogue, losing her ability to speak intelligibly).
Sunken Valley
Located a few days travel from Azure City, Sunken Valley is the home of an Oracle, a rather bad-tempered kobold seer who Roy and Durkon visited prior to the formation of the Order. They then made a second visit some time later, with the rest of the Order in tow. Both visits were to assist in tracking down Xykon. The Valley has a magical spell cast over it which causes visitors to forget the details of their visit, remembering only the answer given to them by the Oracle.
Wooden Forest
One of the generic "nature locations" in the Order's world, the Wooden Forest is incredibly large, even by forest standards. The forest is in no kingdom, and is home to the Bandit Camp formerly overseen by Samantha the sorceress, before a series of battles that ended with Durkon in charge of the bandit clan. Also located here underground is the Dragon's Cave, where the Order went to find a meteorite of Starmetal; the dragon who lived there was destroyed when Vaarsuvius used Disintegrate on it.
Order of the Stick, The
Major locations
The Gates
A series of five mystical gates spread around the world, the Gates form a major plot point in the adventures of the Order. Set up originally by a group of adventurers informally known as the , the Gates are designed to close off rifts leading to a prison plane which contains the Snarl, a creature of world-threatening power. Fearing that the Gates could be used for evil purposes, the five surviving members of the "Order of the Scribble" went their separate ways, each vowing to protect their Gate in whatever manner they deemed appropriate. The Gates are of great interest to the lich sorcerer Xykon, who intends to tap their energy for his own purposes. The Gates, each named after the member of the Order of the Scribble who protected it, are as follows:
*Dorukan's Gate: The largest of the five Gates, located in a dungeon stronghold in the Redmountain Hills, warded by the strongest sigils that the wizard Dorukan was capable of creating. Fell into the hands of Xykon for a period, but he was defeated by the Order of the Stick before he could successfully complete his plans. The Gate was then destroyed, along with the surrounding stronghold, when Elan set off a built-in self-destruct mechanism.
*Soon Kim's Gate: The smallest rift, sealed using a single gemstone set into the top of the throne of the ruler of Azure City. Originally located in the skies above the city, the entire castle was built with the aim of reaching the rift; concealing the Gate within the ruler's throne also neatly prevented questions about why the tower was so heavily defended. Defended by the Sapphire Guard, an order of paladins set up by Soon Kim and named after the Gate gemstone, in the belief that only the honour of a paladin was incorruptable, and currently led by Hinjo, who took the throne after his death. The gate has been destroyed by Miko Miyazaki.
*Lirian's Gate: Located within the elven homelands and defended by the creatures of the forest. This Gate was the first to be targeted by Xykon; it was destroyed by Redcloak in the battle, when a fire spell accidentally got out of control.
*Girard Draketooth's Gate: Located in a desert region, Girard hid his Gate behind a complex series of powerful illusions. According to the Oracle, Xykon will be within a 1000-foot radius of this gate before Serini's, these two being the only two Gates left.
*Serini Toormuck's Gate (also known as Kraagor's Gate): Located in a snowy environment, Serini set up her stronghold as a tomb for her fallen comrade Kraagor and filled it with the most vicious monsters she could find, to reflect his belief in physical prowess.
Azure City
The location of Soon's Gate and birthplace of characters Miko Miyazaki, Lord Shojo and Hinjo. Azure City is very large and is apparently well-known to most characters, both good and bad (both Roy Greenhilt and Sabine were already familiar with it when it was mentioned to them). The Order was staying here to defend the city from the ongoing invasion. Azure City is currently under assault by Xykon's forces as part of his quest to take control of one of the Gates. The walls have taken substantial damage from an attack by titanium elementals. Parts of the city are on fire and the central castle (containing the Gate) was destroyed in a massive explosion when Miko Miyazaki shattered the sapphire gemstone sealing the Soon Kim gate. The city is currently under the control of Xykon and Redcloak with the human population having been enslaved by the hobgoblins.
Places to Visit:
*Soon Kim's Gate : Originally located within the Palace, a sapphire gemstone set into the ruler's throne held one of the legendary "Gates of The Snarl". Xykon and Redcloak attacked Azure City to get to this gate, but it was destroyed by Miko to prevent this.
*Sapphire Guard Palace: The large and imposing castle where Lord Shojo, recently murdered leader of Azure City and the new leader, Shojo's nephew Hinjo, lived. Shojo's throne room doubled as a courtroom when alleged criminals (such as the Order) were brought here. The palace was largely destroyed in an explosion following the destruction of the Gate.
*Wizards tower : apperently recently built function unknown.
*The Inn: A large establishment where the Order stayed after their return from Cliffport. Nale Haley in her room, only to be interrupted by Sabine, Elan and Thog. The confrontation led to the defeat of the Linear Guild and their imprisonment.
*The Docks: The only currently-known way out of Azure City being by sea, the city features an extensive dock with numerous ships. Hinjo had Lien, an Azure City soldier, lead the Azurites aboard these to protect them from Xykon's impending invasion. The Order, minus Haley and Belkar (who are out retrieving Roy's body), are currently leaving the city in the Lord of the City's junk.
*The Tower: A structure created during Xykon and Redcloak's occupation. The tower seems to function as a main tower for security.
Cliffport
The town of Cliffport is where mentor, Fyron, lived before being killed by the then-living Xykon. The Order later went there to save sister Julia after she had been captured by Nale and the Linear Guild. Cliffport is the only other named major urban area apart from Azure City in the world inhabited by the Order.
Places to visit:
*Adventurers' Tavern: When Belkar was unable to kill Yokyok of the Linear Guild due to the former's Mark of Justice, he used a note tacked to the door of this place. Several adventurers were attracted by it and the "kobold menace" was quickly overwhelmed.
*Warthog's School of Wizardry and Sorcery: A parody of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry from the Harry Potter series, complete with a "Larry Gardner" (an obvious parody of Harry Potter), but who met his end at Thog's axe, much to popular acclaim. Students who aspire to become wizards (such as Julia and Pompey) or sorcerers attend this school. The principal is a human whose head, for some unexplained reason, resembles that of a warthog. The Linear Guild here to find a replacement wizard after their previous one, , had been dragged off by lawyers Mr. Jones and Mr. Rodriguez during the Guild's first battle with the Order.
*Cliffport Police Department Headquarters: This building is where the CPPD operate from. It also contains a jail, which was destroyed by Thog when he and Elan escaped. They also had Leeky Windstaff of the Linear Guild, but he was later freed by his teammate Pompey.
Redmountain Hills
A rocky area with perpetually red skies and thunderstorms. This area is seen most extensively in the bonus strips found in the first compilation book of OOTS, Dungeon Crawlin' Fools.
Places to visit:
*Dungeon of Dorukan: The first dungeon visited by the Order of the Stick and the setting for the first one hundred and nineteen episodes of the webcomic. Constructed, along with the castle above, by the wizard Dorukan to protect the Gate located there, the dungeon was invaded by Xykon and his goblin forces. Dorukan was slain, leaving Xykon in possession of both the dungeon and the Gate it contains. Dungeon, castle and Gate were all when Elan inadvisedly set off a self-destruct rune that he found there.
*Small Unnamed Village: After the destruction of the dungeon, the Order of the Stick rested and restocked their supplies at a just outside the Redmountain Hills. The town included a blacksmith, a weapon shop, a barbarian's guild, a temple to Freya, a potion shop, a gnomish armorer, an inn, and a tavern.
Southern Mountains
An area of tall grey mountains that seems to stretch over most of the Southern Lands, up to and including the area right outside of Azure City. The secret escape tunnel that Redcloak followed after the destruction of the Dungeon of Dorukan .
Places to visit:
*Hobgoblin Settlement: A large settlement located in a valley with an estimated population of around thirty thousand, not including non-combatants. Redcloak was able to recruit the hobgoblins here to Xykon's cause after their alleged leader with a slay living spell; the real leader of the hobgoblins saw this and wisely chose not to correct Redcloak's assumption, putting the goblin in charge by default.
*Xykon's Tower: Located in the southern part of the region, Xykon considers this his back-up fortress, which he set up just in case he needed somewhere to hide out for a while. By his own admission, he hasn't been there for a few decades, strongly suggesting that he set it up before his conversion into a lich. When Xykon, Redcloak, and the Monster after the destruction of Dorukan's dungeon, the tower had been taken over by Good-aligned creatures, all of whom met their end when faced with Redcloak's hobgoblin army.
*Watchtower: One of a series of defensive positions by the people of Azure City, outfitted with to alert the city of impending invasion. Xykon and Redcloak successsfully negated each of these towers in order to keep their imminent attack a secret. In one such tower, they Miko Miyazaki.
The Afterlife
An extraplanar paradise where the souls of people who die reside. The comic has only thus far depicted the afterlife awaiting people who are of Lawful Good alignment, which is seen as a blueish-green mountain that stretches many times higher than the highest mountain.
Places to visit:
*Fluffy Cloud Demiplane: An unnamed extraplanar location that resembles white fluffy clouds in a blue sky, where creatures from the Upper Planes can come to on the mortal realm. Newly deceased souls are judged here before passing on to their final rest. Eugene Greenhilt cannot leave this demiplane until his Blood Oath is fulfilled.
*Sara Greenhilt's House: The home of Roy Greenhilt's mother, Sara, as well as his little brother, Eric.
*Attractions: Locations designed to allow dead souls to work out the frustrations and hang-ups of their mortal life, such as the .
Minor locations
Somewhere
The only location of note here is the Weary Travelers Inn, which the Order visited to rest after being confronted by Miko Miyazaki and agreeing to accompany her back to Azure City. Being located literally "somewhere", the region of Somewhere is one of several locations whose names easily confuse visitors: Somewhere, Anywhere, Nowhere, and Someplace Else. The strip uses these in a variation of the famous "Who's on First?" routine. In his confusion Roy stated (since the inn obviously had issues with royalty) that he was the "king of nowhere at all," which led to the inn management immediately welcoming him as the King of Nowhere. Roy did nothing to dispel the illusion, probably to avoid worse confusion, receiving complimentary treatment at the inn. The inn was accidentally destroyed by the dwarf assassin "Kaboom" Redaxe and his unnamed Shadowdancer partner, ending Roy's masquerade as king and also resulting in the loss of the Order's treasure (an event which culminated in Haley Starshine, the team's rogue, losing her ability to speak intelligibly).
Sunken Valley
Located a few days travel from Azure City, Sunken Valley is the home of an Oracle, a rather bad-tempered kobold seer who Roy and Durkon visited prior to the formation of the Order. They then made a second visit some time later, with the rest of the Order in tow. Both visits were to assist in tracking down Xykon. The Valley has a magical spell cast over it which causes visitors to forget the details of their visit, remembering only the answer given to them by the Oracle.
Wooden Forest
One of the generic "nature locations" in the Order's world, the Wooden Forest is incredibly large, even by forest standards. The forest is in no kingdom, and is home to the Bandit Camp formerly overseen by Samantha the sorceress, before a series of battles that ended with Durkon in charge of the bandit clan. Also located here underground is the Dragon's Cave, where the Order went to find a meteorite of Starmetal; the dragon who lived there was destroyed when Vaarsuvius used Disintegrate on it.
Order of the Stick, The
The Utroms are an alien species in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles universe.
Description
Physically, an Utrom is a small and light creature, hairless and usually with a uniform pink, orange, yellow or red tone. They are not unlike a human brain in physical appearance. They have two eyes and a mouth with teeth, but no visible nose, and have a number of short tentacles underneath them. These tentacles serve as both hands and feet, as the Utrom can walk on them or use them to manipulate objects. However, most Utroms tend not to enjoy walking on their tentacles, and prefer to use some form of mechanical transport, such as a hover pad or a human-shaped exosuit.
History within TMNT
The Utroms are present in the original TMNT comic and the 2003 cartoon, where they are responsible for creating and losing the Ooze which mutated the turtles and Splinter. Though they do not appear in the 1987 cartoon, it does feature Krang, a villain who is very similar to an Utrom in appearance. However, Krang is actually a disembodied brain and has a completely different personality and backstory.
Mirage Comics
The Utroms were stranded on Earth, and interacted secretly with humans through a front company, TCRI (Techno-Cosmic Research Institute). When the stranded Utroms were finally able to communicate with their homeworld, they were ordered to stay and study the people of Earth. Eventually, they were forced to leave Earth by teleporting themselves to another world. Later, the Utroms returned to establish a base on Earth and open official relations with humanity and with other alien cultures (in Volume 4 of the comic).
Initially portrayed as an uniformly peace-loving race, more recent comic books have shown several elements of their culture, some unsavory.
* Utrom Preservi: Described as a secret and illegal society of Utrom memory preservers, they steal the bodies of dead Utroms and extract their memories for archival.
* Utromi Obscura Secreti: A black-ops group on the payroll of the Utrom government, carrying out jobs it does not want made public. Little is known about the group, although it has been confirmed that they were responsible for covering up the existence of the original Utrom homeworld, Magonia. It is also speculated by other races that they secretly work to prevent other races from developing teleportation technology.
* The Illuminated: A group of rogue and fanatical Utroms who believe that peace through the galaxy can only be achieved through the total annihilation of violent species. To that purpose, they kidnapped Leatherhead with the intention of using him as a template for a clone army. They were stopped thanks to the efforts of the turtles and Emissary Rikby.
It has also been revealed that the Utrom were responsible for the extinction of the J'Gel, a race of shape-shifting aliens, which, thanks to the Utroms, had spread throught the galaxy, consuming entire planets.
Notable Utroms within the Mirage universe include:
* Korobon: Korobon is an Utrom who declared himself ambassador to Earth from the Utrom Confederation. He addressed the U.N. on live television and explained what the Utroms had planned to do on Earth. He appeared in Volume 4 of the comic.
* Glurin: Glurin is a young Utrom scientist who was stationed on their Earth base. When April O'Neil was infected by nanobots placed in her body by Dr. Baxter Stockman, he came up with the idea of using other nanobots to combat them. He designed the new nanobots after the Turtles and called them the nanoturtlebots. He appeared in Volume 4 of the comic.
* Professor Obligado: Obligado was a brilliant Utrom scientist whose death and life are chronicled in Tales of the TMNT vol. 2.
*Emissary Rikby: The Utrom driving the TCRI truck which carried the ooze that mutated the turtles and Splinter. Wishing to see his “children”, whom he felt responsible for, he recruited the turtles to save Leatherhead, who had been kidnapped by The Illuminated. In order to save the mutants, he implanted a bomb into himself, which he used to destroy the Illuminated’s base.
*Sargeant Xitor: An Utrom who serves as a police officer on Earth, under the guise of a female human. In her appearances, she unsuccessfully tries to prevent the Utrom Preservi from taking the late Professor Obligado's memories.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003 animated series)
One thousand years ago, an Utrom ship was transporting Ch’rell, a dangerous Utrom criminal. Unfortunately, Ch’rell escaped and sabotaged the ship, causing it to crash on Earth near feudal Japan. The ship was damaged beyond repair, and in the confusion Ch’rell escaped on Earth.
Unable to repair their ship, the Utroms decided to take advantage of their long lifespans (which allowed them to live for centuries, even millennia, of human time) and hide and peacefully wait for Humanity to advance and develop the technology they needed to go back home. In order to hide among the Humans, the Utroms developed Human-shaped exosuit, and revealed themselves to a few trustworthy Humans, which they named their guardians. Centuries later, Hamato Yoshi, Splinter’s master, would be an Utrom guardian, until The Shredder hunted him down and killed him in an attempt to find the Utroms.
In the present day, the Utroms operate through a front company, TCRI. Though the official business of TCRI is never specified, unofficially, it serves to hide the Utrom’s advanced technology, such as their Transmat (a teleporter that can reach across the galaxy) and their Oracle Pod (a virtual reality chamber that replays historical records).
Shortly after meeting the turtles, TCRI is attacked by the Shredder's forces. Fortunately, with the turtles help, they manage to evacuate all the Utroms via transmat.
The Utroms later return to help the Turtles in their final battle against the Shredder. Thirty seconds before Shredder's ship blew up, the Utroms put the ship in a stasis field and transmatted everyone out. On their homeworld, the Shredder--now identified as the Utrom Ch'rell--was placed on trial and sentenced to exile on an icy asteroid.
Notable Utroms within the animated series include:
* Mortu: Mortu was the captain of the Utrom ship that crashed on Earth. After the crash, he remained the field-leader of the marooned Utroms, and worked as their liaison to the Humans. In the modern day, this makes him CEO of the front company TCRI. His name is "Utrom" backwards.
* Council of Three: These three otherwise unnamed Utroms are the highest leaders of the Utroms on Earth. Although it is not explicitly stated, it is strongly implied that they are the same as the brain-navigators that Captain Mortu took orders from one thousand years ago.
* Ch’rell: The true identity of the Utrom Shredder. Prior to his arrival on Earth, he was responsible for the deaths of millions of people in his attempts at universal domination.
Description
Physically, an Utrom is a small and light creature, hairless and usually with a uniform pink, orange, yellow or red tone. They are not unlike a human brain in physical appearance. They have two eyes and a mouth with teeth, but no visible nose, and have a number of short tentacles underneath them. These tentacles serve as both hands and feet, as the Utrom can walk on them or use them to manipulate objects. However, most Utroms tend not to enjoy walking on their tentacles, and prefer to use some form of mechanical transport, such as a hover pad or a human-shaped exosuit.
History within TMNT
The Utroms are present in the original TMNT comic and the 2003 cartoon, where they are responsible for creating and losing the Ooze which mutated the turtles and Splinter. Though they do not appear in the 1987 cartoon, it does feature Krang, a villain who is very similar to an Utrom in appearance. However, Krang is actually a disembodied brain and has a completely different personality and backstory.
Mirage Comics
The Utroms were stranded on Earth, and interacted secretly with humans through a front company, TCRI (Techno-Cosmic Research Institute). When the stranded Utroms were finally able to communicate with their homeworld, they were ordered to stay and study the people of Earth. Eventually, they were forced to leave Earth by teleporting themselves to another world. Later, the Utroms returned to establish a base on Earth and open official relations with humanity and with other alien cultures (in Volume 4 of the comic).
Initially portrayed as an uniformly peace-loving race, more recent comic books have shown several elements of their culture, some unsavory.
* Utrom Preservi: Described as a secret and illegal society of Utrom memory preservers, they steal the bodies of dead Utroms and extract their memories for archival.
* Utromi Obscura Secreti: A black-ops group on the payroll of the Utrom government, carrying out jobs it does not want made public. Little is known about the group, although it has been confirmed that they were responsible for covering up the existence of the original Utrom homeworld, Magonia. It is also speculated by other races that they secretly work to prevent other races from developing teleportation technology.
* The Illuminated: A group of rogue and fanatical Utroms who believe that peace through the galaxy can only be achieved through the total annihilation of violent species. To that purpose, they kidnapped Leatherhead with the intention of using him as a template for a clone army. They were stopped thanks to the efforts of the turtles and Emissary Rikby.
It has also been revealed that the Utrom were responsible for the extinction of the J'Gel, a race of shape-shifting aliens, which, thanks to the Utroms, had spread throught the galaxy, consuming entire planets.
Notable Utroms within the Mirage universe include:
* Korobon: Korobon is an Utrom who declared himself ambassador to Earth from the Utrom Confederation. He addressed the U.N. on live television and explained what the Utroms had planned to do on Earth. He appeared in Volume 4 of the comic.
* Glurin: Glurin is a young Utrom scientist who was stationed on their Earth base. When April O'Neil was infected by nanobots placed in her body by Dr. Baxter Stockman, he came up with the idea of using other nanobots to combat them. He designed the new nanobots after the Turtles and called them the nanoturtlebots. He appeared in Volume 4 of the comic.
* Professor Obligado: Obligado was a brilliant Utrom scientist whose death and life are chronicled in Tales of the TMNT vol. 2.
*Emissary Rikby: The Utrom driving the TCRI truck which carried the ooze that mutated the turtles and Splinter. Wishing to see his “children”, whom he felt responsible for, he recruited the turtles to save Leatherhead, who had been kidnapped by The Illuminated. In order to save the mutants, he implanted a bomb into himself, which he used to destroy the Illuminated’s base.
*Sargeant Xitor: An Utrom who serves as a police officer on Earth, under the guise of a female human. In her appearances, she unsuccessfully tries to prevent the Utrom Preservi from taking the late Professor Obligado's memories.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003 animated series)
One thousand years ago, an Utrom ship was transporting Ch’rell, a dangerous Utrom criminal. Unfortunately, Ch’rell escaped and sabotaged the ship, causing it to crash on Earth near feudal Japan. The ship was damaged beyond repair, and in the confusion Ch’rell escaped on Earth.
Unable to repair their ship, the Utroms decided to take advantage of their long lifespans (which allowed them to live for centuries, even millennia, of human time) and hide and peacefully wait for Humanity to advance and develop the technology they needed to go back home. In order to hide among the Humans, the Utroms developed Human-shaped exosuit, and revealed themselves to a few trustworthy Humans, which they named their guardians. Centuries later, Hamato Yoshi, Splinter’s master, would be an Utrom guardian, until The Shredder hunted him down and killed him in an attempt to find the Utroms.
In the present day, the Utroms operate through a front company, TCRI. Though the official business of TCRI is never specified, unofficially, it serves to hide the Utrom’s advanced technology, such as their Transmat (a teleporter that can reach across the galaxy) and their Oracle Pod (a virtual reality chamber that replays historical records).
Shortly after meeting the turtles, TCRI is attacked by the Shredder's forces. Fortunately, with the turtles help, they manage to evacuate all the Utroms via transmat.
The Utroms later return to help the Turtles in their final battle against the Shredder. Thirty seconds before Shredder's ship blew up, the Utroms put the ship in a stasis field and transmatted everyone out. On their homeworld, the Shredder--now identified as the Utrom Ch'rell--was placed on trial and sentenced to exile on an icy asteroid.
Notable Utroms within the animated series include:
* Mortu: Mortu was the captain of the Utrom ship that crashed on Earth. After the crash, he remained the field-leader of the marooned Utroms, and worked as their liaison to the Humans. In the modern day, this makes him CEO of the front company TCRI. His name is "Utrom" backwards.
* Council of Three: These three otherwise unnamed Utroms are the highest leaders of the Utroms on Earth. Although it is not explicitly stated, it is strongly implied that they are the same as the brain-navigators that Captain Mortu took orders from one thousand years ago.
* Ch’rell: The true identity of the Utrom Shredder. Prior to his arrival on Earth, he was responsible for the deaths of millions of people in his attempts at universal domination.
Zeuxilogy is an alternative, perception-based theoretical system for defining musical rhythmic surfaces, developed by Andrei Pogorilowski. Unlike classical rhythm theory which is based on durational relationships between different time-spans, the zeuxilogic theory is grounded on time-related perception phenomena such as entrainment, Gestalt structuring, creptitus threshold, holistic vs. analytical processing of neighboring pulsations, specific rates of attention shift, natural resonance at the level of the human central nervous system, perception vs. estimation of isochronicity etc. That leads to the possibility of describing different time-spans – or inter-onset-intervals (IOIs) – without relating their durations by means of mathematical ratios. Instead, any time-span is directly related to one or more corresponding perceptual phenomena.
Zeuxilogy also includes perception-related definitions for: the thesis-arsis (accent-nonaccent) dichotomy, subjective vs. non-subjective chunking of discrete time structures and it features a specific notation called "the zeuxilogic (or perceptual) notation".
Zeuxilogy also includes perception-related definitions for: the thesis-arsis (accent-nonaccent) dichotomy, subjective vs. non-subjective chunking of discrete time structures and it features a specific notation called "the zeuxilogic (or perceptual) notation".