Convergence

Background
Elias Marr once lived a quiet life—until he walked through a door that wasn’t supposed to be there. That was the first of many. That Earth is gone now, rewritten or collapsed. And Elias? He didn’t become a god. He became something worse: consistent.
  Across every version of Earth, Elias exists—always in the background, always walking through fractures, always watching. His mind bridges versions, and his identity threads through worlds like a skipped heartbeat in reality’s rhythm. He calls himself Convergence, a name that describes what happens when too many versions of something overlap—and something new, unstable, and permanent emerges.
  He moves between worlds not because he must, but because he can. The more unique a universe becomes—the more unpredictable—it becomes a beacon to him. This Earth, this timeline, has attracted his full attention. It’s rare. It’s strange. And it's interesting. For now.
  But he never stays forever.
He always leaves before the end.
  Personality
Elias Marr is not evil. He is not good. He is unfixed. He often appears whimsical, detached, or eerily knowing—dropping cryptic observations that don’t make sense until the world ends. He remembers conversations you haven’t had yet. He’ll apologize for things you haven’t done. Or thank you for what you will.
  To strangers, he’s a charming eccentric. To scholars of dimensional theory, he’s a nightmare of recursion. To enemies, he’s a wildcard with no predictable pattern.
  He is driven by curiosity and story. He seeks the unique, the unprecedented, the singular. He will help save a world if it entertains him—but might also let it burn if the ending feels too cliché.
  Despite his oddity, he shows moments of genuine empathy—comforting a dying version of a hero, warning a child to run, or planting the idea of resistance in a world not ready to hear it. But he cannot be counted on. He is not here for justice. He’s here for impact.
  Convergence is an urban legend among temporal scholars and dimensional anomaly responders. He appears without warning, offers cryptic advice, and vanishes just as something major shifts. Some call him a multiversal saboteur. Others believe he’s a failsafe built into the timeline. A few cults even revere him as a prophet of convergence points.
  To most, he’s “the man who shows up right before the impossible happens.”
To those who’ve spoken to him… he’s unforgettable.
  Elias wears a long, starlit coat woven from phased dimensional fabric. Its texture shifts depending on the light—sometimes matte, sometimes endless. His left eye constantly flickers with multiversal feedback—reflecting things that should not be. He wears simple black boots, dark slacks, and fitted layers beneath his coat—unassuming but tailored for motion. The coat never moves quite right with the wind. His shadow is always a half-second behind him.
  He doesn't take the coat off. But when blending in, he may tone down the shimmer and wear more grounded attire—black denim, soft cotton, layered tees. He blends easily, but always seems a little out of place—like he’s standing just slightly out of frame.
  His voice is warm, conversational, and occasionally distracted by the timeline bleeding into the edge of his vision.
Children

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