Status Updates From Chronicles of Ori: An Afric...
Chronicles of Ori: An African Epic by
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B
is on page 71 of 304
Things are heating up with the kushite empire.
— Feb 18, 2026 10:21AM
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B
is on page 22 of 304
Such beautiful and lush artwork. This is exactly the kind of magic story book I was looking for this year and my whole life. I love a good fairytale and an illustrated one to boot just makes it perfect.
— Feb 01, 2026 01:09AM
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Emily M
is on page 254 of 304
“As the humans…who had survived the ocean crossing set foot on the dock, they carried more than…scars…They also bore the knowledge to sustain their revered Orishas upon the foreign shore…Yemaya, the nurturing matron of humanity, had transformed into Mary…Shango, the wielder of thunder and lightning, was altered into Saint Barbara…Eshu, the guardian of crossroads, was now Saint Anthony of Padua”
— Jan 29, 2026 10:10PM
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Emily M
is on page 244 of 304
The retelling creativity in this part is really good! “Eve” being a savior, not a villain. The painting of her getting carried West on the back of the white lion echoing paintings of “the rape of Europa”. The trans-Atlantic slave trade never being NAMED, but still being used to transition Yemaya from freshwater African deity to ocean New World deity, who frees the chained primordial ocean goddess… 🔥🔥
— Jan 29, 2026 09:03AM
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Emily M
is on page 193 of 304
OMG, this image of Obba with her ear on a plate (it was a love spell ingredient) like it’s the head of John the Baptist, and her mauve robes shimmering against her skin and the dark background…stunning and disturbing all at once! Might be my favorite painting.
— Jan 27, 2026 09:48PM
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Emily M
is on page 166 of 304
“Oranmiyan, the conqueror, has sought conquest and glory, viewing other kingdoms as territories to be claimed. Moremi, the sovereign, saw that it was her sacred duty to lift up her people and enrich their lives, and to create a society rooted in compassion, innovation, and unity…Through her, Ife became…a legend, evidence of what is possible when you lead with love.”
— Jan 26, 2026 08:23AM
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Emily M
is on page 149 of 304
“If you are filled with pride, then you will have no room for wisdom - African proverb”
— Jan 25, 2026 09:47PM
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Emily M
is on page 111 of 304
Huh! Interesting alternate history of the Trojan war here!
(Catching the references to real countries like Punt and Kush and now Troy and Hellas is making me want to do some history googling)
— Jan 22, 2026 08:25AM
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(Catching the references to real countries like Punt and Kush and now Troy and Hellas is making me want to do some history googling)
Emily M
is on page 99 of 304
“Olokun’s womb ruptured, and a powerful spawn arose - Bida, the seven-headed golden serpent. Each head embodies the darkest shadows of human nature: Igberaga, the prideful; Ojukokoro, the greedy; Ilara, the envious; Ibinu, the wrathful; Ifekufe, the lustful; Alajeun, the gluttonous; and Ole, the slothful.”
Well, seven deadly sins as a golden hydra is definitely not a take I’d seen before!
— Jan 19, 2026 09:28PM
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Well, seven deadly sins as a golden hydra is definitely not a take I’d seen before!
Emily M
is on page 93 of 304
“‘What you fail to realize,’ [Obatala] said, ‘is that without destruction, there can be no creation…True change is vaster than a single mortal lifetime. It demands sacrifice!…The truth is far heavier than your preaching of hope.’…Oduduwa gathered his thoughts. ‘…We mortals do not have the luxury of immortality…But it is precisely because of this that hope is our foundation’”
— Jan 19, 2026 05:24PM
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Emily M
is on page 57 of 304
“Atum’s newfound understanding of the cultivation of crops caused a disruption within Aoki, splitting the divine being…From this division arose Oshun, who captured Oko’s feminine spirit, embodying love, beauty, and fertility. The other remained Olokun, though now his ashé was limited to planting and reaping.”
Huh. Different variant on humans affecting nature of gods than I’ve seen before!
— Jan 14, 2026 07:57AM
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Huh. Different variant on humans affecting nature of gods than I’ve seen before!
Emily M
is on page 40 of 304
OK, now I feel torn. Loved science syncretism of ocean goddess Yemaya and Olokun (here described as a god of magma/undersea volcanoes) giving rise to life. BUT when I looked up Olokun, they are an ocean deity who can be male, female, or androgynous. And while Yemaya is an ocean deity in the Americas she’s a freshwater/river goddess in West Africa. And now I want an ocean-river sapphic romance, damn it!
— Jan 12, 2026 09:10PM
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Emily M
is on page 22 of 304
“If you think you’re too small to make a difference, try spending the night with a mosquito- African proverb”
😂True.
— Jan 11, 2026 05:24PM
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😂True.
Emily M
is on page 6 of 304
Right off the bat, enjoying the fusion of myth and science:
“Olodumare, the reincarnation of the primordial being, was a divine force in constant motion…Drifting from one galaxy to another, he collected the minerals and microbial remnants of long-deceased planets…It was there, in the farthest reaches, that he chanced upon…the alluring Odua…Composed of pure hydrogen, she was a vision of transcendent luminosity.”
— Jan 11, 2026 04:02PM
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“Olodumare, the reincarnation of the primordial being, was a divine force in constant motion…Drifting from one galaxy to another, he collected the minerals and microbial remnants of long-deceased planets…It was there, in the farthest reaches, that he chanced upon…the alluring Odua…Composed of pure hydrogen, she was a vision of transcendent luminosity.”






