Hactor
Gods - Egyptian Mythology
Card 457
-
Gods
The gods are very powerful.
"And the time will come when the gods will hear the cry of their priests."
(the gods do not need books to teach them how to handle magic, for they created them)
The Gods influence battles, fighting the enemy of those who have their favor.
Important: The gods fight a battle and withdraw from the war, until someone conquers their favor again.
To approach a god and fight directly with him and his upgrades (weapon, mount, etc.), you first need to survive your powers.
Note: Gods are immune to many powers, only rare spells created directly against the gods, can reach them
* If two gods meet, the one who is defeated (gods can not die), withdraws from the battle. And the other continues to face the enemies of his favored.
Battle Area:
- Water = 10
- Earth = 30
- Heaven = 10
Attack and Defense
- Wisdom = 30
- Dexterity and Strength = 20
- Powers = 30
- Fire = 15
Game
NUC Cards is a board game. With trays representing the opponents' lands and the battlefield.
The characters exist timelessly. In one era, historical, mythological and literary characters meet in this game.
An epic oxygen game of great kings, notable warriors, heroes and anti-heroes, mighty magicians and gods between creatures and beings ...
Sign up and get access to rules details and more cards.
Collect!
Hactor
Gods - Egyptian Mythology
Hator was one of the main deities in the religion of Ancient Egypt that plays a variety of different roles. As goddess of heaven she was the mother or consort of the god Horus and the sun god Ra, both of whom were connected with royalty, so she was the symbolic mother of her earthly representatives, the pharaohs.
Story
It was one of several deities that acted as the Eye of Ra, the god's female counterpart, possessing a vengeful look in that form that protected Ra from her enemies. Her benevolent side represented music, dance, joy, love, sexuality and maternal care, also having acted as consort of various deities and mother of her children. These aspects of Hator exemplified the Egyptian conception of femininity. She also crossed the boundaries between worlds and helped the dead souls to move into the afterlife.
Hator was often represented as a cow, symbolizing her maternal and celestial appearance, but her most common form was of a woman wearing a headdress formed by cow horns and a solar disc. It could also be represented as a lioness, snake or a banana tree. Cattle goddesses similar to Hator were depicted in Egyptian art during the Early Dynastic Period, but it only appeared in the Old Kingdom. It became one of the most important deities of Ancient Egypt from the pattern of the rulers of the Old Kingdom.
She had more temples dedicated to her worship than any other goddess, with her principal staying in Dendera in Upper Egypt. She was also venerated in the temples of her consorts. The Egyptians connected it with foreign lands such as Nubia and Canaan and their valuable goods, with some people from these areas adopting their veneration. In Egypt he was one of the deities commonly invoked in private prayers and votive offerings.
Goddesses like Mut and Isis invaded Hator's position in real ideology during the New Kingdom, but she continued as one of the most widely worshiped deities. Hator was increasingly overpowered by Isis from the Third Intermediate Period, especially during the Ptolemaic Kingdom, when the new Greco-Roman rulers connected their own deities with the Egyptians in order to solidify their power, combining the traits of Hator and Aphrodite in Isis for the treatment of their queens. Hator still continued to be venerated in some places until the extinction of the Egyptian religion in the middle of the fourth century.
NUC Cards ® 2019
Reasoning and strategy.
An advanced game of underground strategy in generation.