

While Atrus and his sons were visiting Myst, she was captured by ninja-monkeys of death (under the elite command of Chuck Norris himself) and was sold into slavery to Atrus's five-hundred-year-old father, Mr.

Normally, Atrus and Catherine get along just fine, but when Atrus wanted to take a month-long vacation to Myst with his sons, she stubbornly refused to go.

Plus, he also enjoys beheading people.Ĭatherine is Atrus' wife.
#Myst ages movie#
Achenar has seen Natural Born Killers over seventy-three thousand times, in fact it's the only movie he owns. Achenar listens to System of a Down and iron maiden. He is completly insane from eating too much pie. Achenar owns a copy of Mein Kampf, which he uses for rolling papers. Achenar did shrooms a lot in the Tall Tree Age. The deranged, meth-addicted psychopath, and older brother to Sirrus. In the game, the player must rescue Atrus from the Dunny before it is too late. The player cannot carry more than one page at a time, either, because he is a weak little girly-man. And to prevent their escape, Atrus tore out 6 pages each from the books, which magically decided to hide in 12 random locations, 1 for each page. The game tells us that they were actually put there because they were blamed for burning all but four of Atrus' books, but there is speculation that they were put in there to prevent them from having gay sex with each other. In addition, Atrus also wrote two special books, one red & one blue, to hold his sons Sirrus & Achenar. Therefore, the construction of a giant rocket ship with a music keyboard in it which can not fly, a massive fake tree with an elevator hidden in it, a sailing ship on a planet consisting entirely of just one small island, and an inexplicable pair of giant cogs, and some other useless puzzles for you to find out. However, it's mostly useless except for this one page). Luckily for Atrus, his forward-planning paid off, because someone indeed did burn all but four of his books (Technically, a fifth book was still intact, if a bit charred. For reasons known only to himself, he created an island for his family to live on, comprised of almost no living-quarters or bathrooms, and instead, almost entirely of security mechanisms which would be used should anyone ever burn all but four of his books. Soon, players discover an island built by a man named Atrus who lives in a giant Dunny (that means "toilet" in Strine). This is very mysterious, and to make it extra-mysterious, the reason why is never explained. In the game Myst, the first thing that happens is a man jumps into a hole, disappears, and then his book falls through space until a man who happens to be standing around there picks it up. The gameplay is very simplistic, as is the plot. Myst was created by two brothers who liked each other so much they decided to create a game about two brothers who try to kill each other, and then to make sure the irony wasn't lost on people, decided to dress up and act out those characters themselves. To be exact, it had four, and of the four people completing the game only one saw the "real one", the other three were content living with the fact that the bad endings are kind of funny and uninstalled the game shortly afterwards. This is sad because Myst had an extremely exciting ending. It was bought by ten million people, given as a Christmas present by eight million people, unwrapped by three million people, installed by 120,000 people, played by seventeen people, completed by four people, and enjoyed by one. The game was unbelievable and inexplicably popular. Myst was a mysterious computer-based exploration experience (Note: it was not a game) created in the early 1990s to show everybody how awesome computer graphics were and how boring it would be to actually create them. The listing tries to be hierarchical: if one Age is to be accessed via another, or is only mentioned in the context of another, it is mentioned therein.For those without comedic tastes, the so-called experts at Wikipedia have an article about Myst. Multiples of listings of the same age are thus possible. the game, novel or other places (for example, the D'ni Restoration Council (DRC) web site). This listing is sorted by where the ages were introduced, shown or described, i.e. 1.1.5.2 Uru Live, Uru: To D'ni, Untìl Uru.
