Just to some commenters babying Seth by still excusing his crap from his

JayJay (I'm back!) September 18, 2025 5:44 am

Just to some commenters babying Seth, or insisting he can't be judged "cause he's a god" (eye roll)... a friendly reminder.
Seth needs to atone (as he's been doing), and he was (and can still be) held accountable for his "crazy era", because:

1) Seth asked his followers to bring women and children to him to be sacrificed (some of them he even killed personally, in order to make himself a sword that was cursed and therefore would be effective against Osiris): in chapter 36, Seth and Osiris talk about how Seth killed women and children so he could make himself a sword with the "curse of the weak" to destroy Osiris. In chapter 39, Isis asks Seth if he had chased her in order to use her as another ingredient to make his cursed sword, just like he did with the human women. In chapter 60, Horus says that when he was a kid, women and children were sacrificed to the supreme god (Seth), and when he arrived where Seth was, as a kid, he was surrounded by dead children that he had killed. In chapter 93, Kuentamen says to Seth that they sacrificed their women to him, he reaped their souls. Then in chapter 95 the cursed souls call Seth a murderer, saying that he only killed the weak like a coward does, and that the reason he only killed women and children was because they were Seth's substitutes for wanting to kill Nephthys and Anubis. The souls tell Seth that they know he killed them and reaped their souls so that their misery would create his cursed sword, the only weapon effective against the undead Osiris. They accuse him of sacrificing their lives and afterlifes to make himself a weapon to protect himself from the undead Osiris. Seth admitted many times that he made the humans bring them women and children so he could kill them and feed their souls to his cursed sword, so that he would have an effective weapon against the undead Osiris.

2) The story says "gods" can be held accountable, and they are. Some of them even start cracking up and spontaneously start self-destructing when they stop self-denial and fully realize they've gone against their divine duty. Isis does in chapter 57 (her fingers start crumbling after she tries to flood the river to destroy Egypt) and Nephthys does in chapter 69 (when she willingly puts her own existence at risk by telling everyone how she ruined the peace with her infidelity, confessing like she told Horus she was willing to do in spite of the risk, and in the same chapter, once she starts her confession her headpiece starts cracking up) and we see Nephthys' headpiece cracking again in the flashback of chapter 162.

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