Super Caesar: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{Biography |caption = Super Caesar posing for a picture in the gallery of the Antivatican. |image = Super Caesar.png |name = Gaius Julius Caesar |birth = 100 BC |death = 44 BC (turned Super Ghost) |career = Super Ghost |known_for = Being the Antipope }} '''Super Caesar''' is the current Antipope. In life, he was known as Gaius Julius Caesar before his death and transformation into a Super Ghost at the hands of the Friendly Council in 44 BC.")
 
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'''Super Caesar''' is the current [[Antipope]]. In life, he was known as Gaius Julius Caesar before his death and transformation into a [[Super Ghost]] at the hands of the [[Friendly Council]] in 44 BC.
'''Super Caesar''' is the current [[Antipope]]. In life, he was known as Gaius Julius Caesar before his death and transformation into a [[Super Ghost]] at the hands of the [[Friendly Council]] in 44 BC.
One time, [[Rabo]] came to the Antivatican and handed  Caesar a book. He told him it contained ''the answer'', that he should hide it deep within the library and promise never to open it. Caesar did so, though after a few decades of curiosity, he could restrain himself no longer and broke his promise, opening the book.
In the end, it was empty. To this day, Caesar does not know whether this was all an elaborate joke, or whether he had been handed ''the answer'', but failed to understand it. Rabo never deigned to answer that question.

Revision as of 02:41, 20 August 2024

Super Caesar

Super Caesar posing for a picture in the gallery of the Antivatican.
NameGaius Julius Caesar
Birth100 BC
Death44 BC (turned Super Ghost)
CareerSuper Ghost
Known forBeing the Antipope

Super Caesar is the current Antipope. In life, he was known as Gaius Julius Caesar before his death and transformation into a Super Ghost at the hands of the Friendly Council in 44 BC.

One time, Rabo came to the Antivatican and handed Caesar a book. He told him it contained the answer, that he should hide it deep within the library and promise never to open it. Caesar did so, though after a few decades of curiosity, he could restrain himself no longer and broke his promise, opening the book.

In the end, it was empty. To this day, Caesar does not know whether this was all an elaborate joke, or whether he had been handed the answer, but failed to understand it. Rabo never deigned to answer that question.