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:''Mortilus is a | {{factions|{{factions/icons|custom=Mortilus.png|cSize=35px|cLink=Mortilus|cPretty=Mortilus}}}} | ||
:''Mortilus is a [[Transformer]] from the [[Generation 1 continuity family|Generation 1]] [[continuity family]].'' | |||
'''Mortilus''' the | [[File:Censere nightbeat the not knowing.jpg|thumb|upright=1.6|"You... rang?"]] | ||
One of the [[Guiding Hand]], '''Mortilus''' was one of the first five Transformers born on [[Cybertron (planet)|Cybertron]], representing death in later mythologized accounts of the Guiding Hand. When [[Adaptus]] rebelled against his brothers, he unleashed his [[information creep|memory-erasing]] weapon on the others, erasing their memories of themselves. As a result, Mortilus adopted the new persona of '''Censere''' and dedicated himself to the recording of every Cybertronian death. | |||
"Censere" himself would be mythologized as a mute [[Neutral]] known as the '''Necrobot''', who travels the battlefields of the [[Great War (G1)|Great War]], administering posthumous rites to fallen Cybertronians. They say that he can determine the cause of death just by letting his shadow fall on the corpse and that he has devoted his life to recording the fate of every last Transformer. Whether there is any truth to these stories is unknown to most, but they persist. | |||
==Fiction== | ==Fiction== | ||
===IDW | ===2005 IDW continuity=== | ||
The | {{first|[[Chaos Theory Part 2|''The Transformers'' vol. 1 #23]] (invoked); [[Scavengers (Part 2): Who's Afraid of the DJD?|''More than Meets the Eye'' #8]]}} | ||
[[File:LL-23-GuidingHandWar.jpg|left|thumb|300px|''It’s tough to be a god!'']] | |||
Born at some point after [[Primus]], Mortilus joined him, [[Epistemus]], [[Solomus]], and [[Adaptus]] to form the [[Guiding Hand]], the first five Cybertronians, present for the ignition of the [[hot spot (phenomenon)|hot spot]]s across Cybertron which would propagate future generations of the species. {{Storylink|Crucible (Part 5): The Unremembering|The Unremembering}} In this era, the Guiding Hand were said to have overseen the development of the Cybertronian species, developing the planet's earliest civilizations and guiding them towards a more enlightened existence. {{storylink|Primus: You, Me, and Other Revelations|You, Me, and Other Revelations}} This utopian era would come to an end, however, when the ambitious [[Adaptus]], worried that their peaceful civilization would eventually grow stagnant, encouraged Cybertron to wage war against the galaxy; when the other members of the Guiding Hand refused, Adaptus instead made war against ''them'', and the four allies were forced to put down the rebellion in an event that would be known as the "[[God War]]." Adaptus escaped aboard [[Moonbase One|Luna 1]] and covered his escape by firing a powerful [[electromagnetic pulse]] on the planet to erase the memories of Cybertron's inhabitants, leaving them too confused and disoriented to pursue him. {{Storylink|Crucible (Part 5): The Unremembering|The Unremembering}} | |||
[[File:Mortilus.jpg|300px|thumb|right|I was Megatron before Mega was even a prefix!]] | |||
Eventually, Cybertronian religions were able to reconstruct bits and pieces of the past, giving rise to various interpretations of the Guiding Hand and the God War that had torn them apart. In these imperfect histories, Mortilus was depicted as a death-bringer and the necessary corollary to life; notably, in every known permutation of the legend, it was the innocent ''Mortilus'' who was cast as the traitorous god whose ambitions had sparked the God War, with Adaptus remembered as a faithful steward of Primus. {{Storylink|Crucible (Part 5): The Unremembering|The Unremembering}} {{storylink|Primus: You, Me, and Other Revelations|You, Me, and Other Revelations}} Other legends stated that Mortilus's rebellion had spawned monsters to lay waste to Cybertron, birthing beasts such as the [[Titan (group)|Titan]] [[Trypticon (G1)|Trypticon]], {{storylink|The Illusion of Control}} which Mortilus had supposedly raised and commanded using his [[Void Scepter]], {{storylink|The Transformers: Salvation|Salvation}} and that the God War ended when Mortilus had tricked and trapped every member of the Guiding Hand into giving up their physical form before he himself was struck down by Primus; by killing death, the Cybertronian race could live forever. {{storylink|Primus: You, Me, and Other Revelations|You, Me, and Other Revelations}} At least one interpretation, put forth in the [[Keening Texts]], held that Mortilus had been forgiven by the Guiding Hand in the next life, and created the [[Transformer afterlife|Afterspark]] where the [[spark]]s of the departed could live forever. {{storylink|The Everlasting Voices (2): The God War|The God War}} | |||
In modern Cybertronian theology, the legend of Mortilus occupied an unique spot in the Cybertronian pantheon: some individuals chose to worship him, as they would with other gods and deities, {{storylink|Twenty Plus One}} while other individuals used his name as a curse; "spawn of Mortilus" was a popular term to denigrate others. Mortilus worship was often seen as a form of devil worship by some Cybertronians. {{storylink|World, Shut Your Mouth Part 1: Towards Peace|Towards Peace}} | |||
[[File:TheReturnOfTheKing Censere.jpg|thumb|left|upright=2.0|Death has a body like a model, the clothes of a poet and the smile of your best friend.]] | |||
The ''real'' Mortilus, meanwhile, still unaware of his origins, had remained on Cybertron and become '''Censere of the [[High-Ceilinged Manifold]],''' making his way into the world as a humble census office worker. {{storylink|The Not Knowing}} At some point after the God War, presumably during the reign of the [[Thirteen]] [[Prime (rank)|Prime]]s, he became friends with a co-worker named [[Tusk]]; when Tusk died, it went unreported, and Censere did not find out about it until years later. His friend's death moved Censere to begin a lifelong mission: chronicling the deaths of every Cybertronian. With the destruction of his hometown in the First Cybertronian Civil War, Censere relocated to a [[Necroworld|"scorched and forgotten" planet]] that Tusk had told him about, where he set up a base of operations filled with complex machinery that allowed him to keep track of spark signatures, and quantum technology that let him teleport all around the universe to record every fatality. He transformed the blasted world on which he dwelled into a beautiful garden, filled with holographic statues of every living Cybertronian, which he would switch off when the Cybertronian died. Around the bases of the statues, he planted [[Cybertronian remembrance flower|flowers]] crafted from the residual spark energy of whoever the statue's real-life counterpart was responsible for killing. When a Cybertronian went missing and he was unable to confirm their death, he recorded their name in a list of the "[[Disappeared]]." {{storylink|The Not Knowing}} He also kept a dedicated journal filled with all manner of things, including the original, unedited version of the [[Grand Cybertronian Taxonomy]]. {{storylink|The Dying of the Light Part 4: At Close of Day|At Close of Day}} | |||
Swearing an oath of non-interference, Censere eventually became a figure of myth and legend among Cybertronians, glimpsed on battlefields across the cosmos silently recording deaths. Dubbed the "Necrobot" by the religious and/or superstitious, he was also known as the "Gatekeeper", or the "Mute Neutral", and was believed to be an envoy of [[Primus]], charged with ferrying departed [[spark]]s into the [[Transformer afterlife|afterlife]]. {{storylink|The Not Knowing}} Conversely, skeptics like [[Ratchet (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Ratchet]] dismissed his existence as a fairytale, attributing supposed sightings of him and his "portable apothecary" to visual glitches caused by freshly-constructed Cybertronians' senses "trying to run before [they] can walk", like the [[Shimmer]] or seeing [[Primus]]'s face in a mushroom cloud. {{storylink|Twenty Plus One}} [[Trailbreaker (G1)|Trailbreaker]] shared his lack of belief, comparing stories of the Necrobot to [[Sparkeater (creature)|Sparkeaters]] and the [[Moonbase One|Seething Moon]]. {{storylink|Liars, A to D Part 3: The Chaos of Warm Things|The Chaos of Warm Things}} | |||
[[File:Scavengers2-Necrobot.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.34|"Arthur Dent? Arthur ''Philip'' Dent? You're a jerk, a complete arsehole."]] | |||
For a time, [[Roadbuster (G1)|Roadbuster]] thought Mortilus spoke to him, telling him to murder his cadets and sacrifice their remains to a pit for the Death-bringer to consume. This whole [[Roadbuster affair|affair]] was in fact part of a larger [[Tarantulas (BW)|web of deceit]]. {{Storylink|Sins of the Wreckers issue 4|Sins of the Wreckers #4}} | |||
While on the planet [[Clemency]], itself littered with the bodies of dead (and occasionally not-so-dead) Transformers, [[Misfire (G1)|Misfire]] would periodically catch sight of what he believed was the Necrobot. He would then "chase it" for a few seconds before "losing sight of it" again, as observed by [[Krok (G1)|Krok]] who was not himself a believer. {{storylink|Rules of Disengagement (issue)|Rules of Disengagement}} One and a half years later, however, the Necrobot did indeed arrive on Clemency to add [[Flywheels]] to his list of dead Cybertronians, which also included several members of the ''[[Lost Light]]'' crew. {{storylink|Scavengers (Part 2): Who's Afraid of the DJD?|Who's Afraid of the DJD?}} | |||
A selection of the crew of the ''[[Lost Light]]'' visited his planet of operations, the location of which was revealed by an info bullet from [[Dominus Ambus|Agent 113]]. Alarmed to see that multiple Transformers whose deaths he knew he had unambiguously recorded were alive and walking around in his garden, the Necrobot slammed the door to his complex shut, but when one such 'bot, [[Nightbeat (G1)|Nightbeat]], stood outside the door and refused to leave, Censere gave in to his curiosity and invited Nightbeat inside so he could explain his and the others' continued living (Nightbeat, he soon learned, had been revived by the properties of the [[Dead Universe]], while the others had never died—the deaths he had recorded were those of their quantum duplicates, created through a [[quantum generator]] accident). Censere went on to explain his true nature and how he carried out his work; though Nightbeat was dismayed by this revelation, having wanted to believe that the Necrobot was a mystic figure and proof that higher powers existed in the universe, Censere reminded him that his not being 'magic' did not mean the [[Transformer afterlife|Afterspark]] did not exist. Nightbeat criticized him for merely observing deaths and not attempting to help the dying. {{storylink|The Not Knowing}} | |||
[[File:DoNotGoGentle CenseresavesRoller.jpg|thumb|left|230px|Thank you for your cooperation. Good night.]] | |||
He would take Nightbeat's words to heart when he found one of [[Brainstorm (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Brainstorm]]'s time cases buried by Megatron. By linking it up to his teleport chamber, he was able to go back in time, recovering the Transformers on his list of the disappeared—therefore causing them to 'disappear' in the first place. The time traveling took its toll on the passengers, so he put them in artificially induced comas and disguised them as organics to keep them safe from other Cybertronians while they recovered. Occasionally, he would be glimpsed in these endeavors by others, spawning the legends of his portable apothecary. {{storylink|The Dying of the Light Part 6: Do Not Go Gentle|Do Not Go Gentle}} | |||
Among those 'bots he rescued were [[Roller (IDW)|Roller]], [[Wavelength (G1)|Wavelength]], [[Syphon]], {{storylink|The Dying of the Light Part 6: Do Not Go Gentle|Do Not Go Gentle}} [[Anode]], [[Fangry (G1)|Fangry]], and [[Rapidfire (G1)|Rapidfire]]. {{storylink|Dissolution Part 1: Some Other Cybertron|Some Other Cybertron}} He was halfway down the list when the [[Decepticon Justice Division]] showed up, and he guessed that several of the 'bots he rescued were on [[The List|their own list]]. {{storylink|The Dying of the Light Part 6: Do Not Go Gentle|Do Not Go Gentle}} | |||
[[File:HowBrightTheirFrailDeeds CensereDead.jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|]] | |||
The DJD somehow learned of the ''Lost Light''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s previous visit to Necroworld and decided to use a fabricated distress signal to lure the group back in order to maroon them, Tarn reasoning the Necrobot was the perfect bait. {{storylink|The Dying of the Light Part 2: The Sun in Flight|The Sun in Flight}} However, Censere altered the signal minutes after it was sent, turning it into a psychic bombardment of the intended recipients' worst fears in an attempt to warn them off. The DJD then butchered Censere and left his body with flowers stuffed in exit wounds for the Autobots to find. {{storylink|The Dying of the Light: (1) How Bright Their Frail Deeds|How Bright Their Frail Deeds}} While the Autobots were distracted with the ongoing siege, Censere, due to his great age, dissolved into ''[[Living metal#2005 IDW continuity|sentio metallico]]''. | |||
Left behind was the key to his stasis pod room. After the Autobots discovered it, they were unable to use Censere's teleport chamber to escape for fear of leaving the "organics" to die. {{storylink|The Dying of the Light Part 2: The Sun in Flight|The Sun in Flight}} Several hours later, Rewind, having read through Censere's journal, discovered what he'd done with Brainstorm's time machine. {{storylink|The Dying of the Light Part 6: Do Not Go Gentle|Do Not Go Gentle}} | |||
After Necroworld was taken over by Decepticons, [[Rapidfire (G1)|Rapidfire]] took to wearing Censere's discarded cape. When the Autobots arrived and after [[Red Alert (G1)|Red Alert]] killed Rapidfire in the ensuing battle, he couldn't help but try the Necrobot's cape on himself. {{storylink|Sardines}} | |||
When [[Team Rodimus (G1)|Team Rodimus]] finally confronted the Grand Architect, they discovered he was [[Adaptus]] and that the ''Lost Light'' crew had managed to locate all five members of the [[Guiding Hand]], being told that Censere was an alias adopted by Mortilus. {{storylink|Crucible (Part 4): The Return of the King|The Return of the King}} | |||
====The Functionist Universe==== | |||
After the [[Functionist Council]] worked out that [[Rung (G1)#The Functionist Universe|Rung]] was designed to produce [[photonic crystal]]s, {{storylink|Elegant Chaos Part 3: Predestination: An Expert's Guide|An Expert's Guide}} they first thought him the spawn of Mortilus sent to frustrate Primus's will before they <s>decided</s> realized that Rung was proof of Primus endorsing cold construction. {{storylink|Dissolution Part 5: Modes of Production|Modes of Production}} | |||
{{-}} | |||
===Ask Vector Prime=== | |||
[[Vector Prime]] speculated that the [[Dark Spark]] could have been a fragment of Mortilus, among other explanations. {{storylink|Ask Vector Prime#Facebook|Ask Vector Prime, 2015/05/18}} He also noted that [[Zarak (G1)|Mortilus Zarak]] sharing a name with a member of the Guiding Hand could be simple coincidence, or something far more sinister. {{storylink|Ask Vector Prime#Facebook|Ask Vector Prime, 2015/08/04}} | |||
Following the splintering of the [[Thirteen|Thirteen original Transformers]] into infinite alternate selves across the multiverse, Mortilus was known to be a member of the group in some universal streams. During the group's time in ancient Greece, the holomatter avatar he employed inspired the myth of Hades, uncle of [[Vector Prime|Hermes]]. He stayed in the Thirteen's ship parked underneath Earth's surface with his vassal, a {{w|Cerberus|three-headed dog}} named [[Bruticus (RID)|Bruticus]]. {{storylink|Ask Vector Prime#Facebook|Ask Vector Prime, 2015/08/08}} | |||
===''Beast Wars: Uprising''=== | |||
Mortilus was a deity in Transformer religion, notable for his spiked carapace. His name was frequently used as a curse word. {{storylink|Derailment}} | |||
===2019 IDW continuity=== | |||
During a raid on the [[Senate]] building to rescue the Senators held prisoner, [[Groove (G1)|Groove]] recited a prayer to Mortilus to help him focus. The lapse in concentration instead allowed [[Blitzwing (G1)|Blitzwing]] to get the drop on his squad. {{storylink|War World: Prime|Prime}} | |||
After [[Thunder Clash|Thunderclash]] had publicly announced the [[Wreckers]]' arrival on [[Velocitron]], [[Aileron]] wondered if, among theories, Mortilus was punishing her. {{storylink|Tread & Circuits Part 1}} | |||
===''King Grimlock''=== | |||
The Dinobots worshipped the Necrobot as their patron deity, hoping to please him by the manner of their deaths and by leaving him a string of enemy soldiers so long that his list ran out of data storage. {{storylink|Grimlock the Defender}} | |||
==Games== | |||
===''Transformers Roleplaying Game''=== | |||
Although many historical accounts cast Mortilus as a villainous, deathly figure responsible for instigating the [[God War]], some felt that he may have been more sympathetic than these myths and legends suggest. Various cultures remembered him as the Necrobot, {{w|Hades}}, {{w|Pluto (mythology)|Pluto}}, and [[Zarak Maximus]]. He wielded the [[Dark Spark]] and the [[Void Scepter]], dark artifacts capable of raising the dead and warping minds. {{storylink|Transformers One Sourcebook}} | |||
==Notes== | |||
[[File:GuidoMortilus.png|thumb|150px|]] | |||
*''Cēnsēre'' is a [[Latin language|Latin]] verb that means "to assess", also being the root of the English word "census". [[James Roberts]] gives the Transformer name's pronunciation like the words "centre" and "hair".<ref>{{citesocial|quote=.It's spelt Censere (one 'r') and pronounced Sen-Sair (rhymes with 'hair')|link=https://twitter.com/jroberts332/status/639374134355619840|name=James Roberts|site=Twitter|year=2015|month=09|day=03|(defunct=)}}</ref> | |||
*''Mortillus'' combines the [[Latin language|Latin]] noun ''mors'', which means "death", and the suffix -''illus'', which turns the noun into the diminutive. "Mortilus" lacks one "l", but otherwise should mean "little death" or "deathlet". | |||
===Foreign names=== | |||
*''Japanese:'' '''Mortilus''' (モーティラス ''Mōtirasu''), '''Necrobot''' (ネクロボット ''Nekurobotto'') | |||
==References== | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
{{Guiding Hand}} | |||
{{Thirteen}} | |||
[[Category:Beast Wars: Uprising Transformer culture]] | |||
[[Category:Beast Wars: Uprising Transformers]] | |||
[[Category:Deep lore characters]] | |||
[[Category:Fiction-only Transformers]] | |||
[[Category:Generation 1 gods]] | [[Category:Generation 1 gods]] | ||
[[Category:IDW (2005) legends]] | |||
[[Category:Neutrals]] | |||
[[Category:Thirteen]] | |||
[[Category:Transformers Roleplaying Game Transformers]] | |||
Latest revision as of 14:23, 27 January 2026
- Mortilus is a Transformer from the Generation 1 continuity family.

One of the Guiding Hand, Mortilus was one of the first five Transformers born on Cybertron, representing death in later mythologized accounts of the Guiding Hand. When Adaptus rebelled against his brothers, he unleashed his memory-erasing weapon on the others, erasing their memories of themselves. As a result, Mortilus adopted the new persona of Censere and dedicated himself to the recording of every Cybertronian death.
"Censere" himself would be mythologized as a mute Neutral known as the Necrobot, who travels the battlefields of the Great War, administering posthumous rites to fallen Cybertronians. They say that he can determine the cause of death just by letting his shadow fall on the corpse and that he has devoted his life to recording the fate of every last Transformer. Whether there is any truth to these stories is unknown to most, but they persist.
Fiction
[edit]2005 IDW continuity
[edit]- First appearance: The Transformers vol. 1 #23 (invoked); More than Meets the Eye #8

Born at some point after Primus, Mortilus joined him, Epistemus, Solomus, and Adaptus to form the Guiding Hand, the first five Cybertronians, present for the ignition of the hot spots across Cybertron which would propagate future generations of the species. The Unremembering In this era, the Guiding Hand were said to have overseen the development of the Cybertronian species, developing the planet's earliest civilizations and guiding them towards a more enlightened existence. You, Me, and Other Revelations This utopian era would come to an end, however, when the ambitious Adaptus, worried that their peaceful civilization would eventually grow stagnant, encouraged Cybertron to wage war against the galaxy; when the other members of the Guiding Hand refused, Adaptus instead made war against them, and the four allies were forced to put down the rebellion in an event that would be known as the "God War." Adaptus escaped aboard Luna 1 and covered his escape by firing a powerful electromagnetic pulse on the planet to erase the memories of Cybertron's inhabitants, leaving them too confused and disoriented to pursue him. The Unremembering

Eventually, Cybertronian religions were able to reconstruct bits and pieces of the past, giving rise to various interpretations of the Guiding Hand and the God War that had torn them apart. In these imperfect histories, Mortilus was depicted as a death-bringer and the necessary corollary to life; notably, in every known permutation of the legend, it was the innocent Mortilus who was cast as the traitorous god whose ambitions had sparked the God War, with Adaptus remembered as a faithful steward of Primus. The Unremembering You, Me, and Other Revelations Other legends stated that Mortilus's rebellion had spawned monsters to lay waste to Cybertron, birthing beasts such as the Titan Trypticon, The Illusion of Control which Mortilus had supposedly raised and commanded using his Void Scepter, Salvation and that the God War ended when Mortilus had tricked and trapped every member of the Guiding Hand into giving up their physical form before he himself was struck down by Primus; by killing death, the Cybertronian race could live forever. You, Me, and Other Revelations At least one interpretation, put forth in the Keening Texts, held that Mortilus had been forgiven by the Guiding Hand in the next life, and created the Afterspark where the sparks of the departed could live forever. The God War
In modern Cybertronian theology, the legend of Mortilus occupied an unique spot in the Cybertronian pantheon: some individuals chose to worship him, as they would with other gods and deities, Twenty Plus One while other individuals used his name as a curse; "spawn of Mortilus" was a popular term to denigrate others. Mortilus worship was often seen as a form of devil worship by some Cybertronians. Towards Peace

The real Mortilus, meanwhile, still unaware of his origins, had remained on Cybertron and become Censere of the High-Ceilinged Manifold, making his way into the world as a humble census office worker. The Not Knowing At some point after the God War, presumably during the reign of the Thirteen Primes, he became friends with a co-worker named Tusk; when Tusk died, it went unreported, and Censere did not find out about it until years later. His friend's death moved Censere to begin a lifelong mission: chronicling the deaths of every Cybertronian. With the destruction of his hometown in the First Cybertronian Civil War, Censere relocated to a "scorched and forgotten" planet that Tusk had told him about, where he set up a base of operations filled with complex machinery that allowed him to keep track of spark signatures, and quantum technology that let him teleport all around the universe to record every fatality. He transformed the blasted world on which he dwelled into a beautiful garden, filled with holographic statues of every living Cybertronian, which he would switch off when the Cybertronian died. Around the bases of the statues, he planted flowers crafted from the residual spark energy of whoever the statue's real-life counterpart was responsible for killing. When a Cybertronian went missing and he was unable to confirm their death, he recorded their name in a list of the "Disappeared." The Not Knowing He also kept a dedicated journal filled with all manner of things, including the original, unedited version of the Grand Cybertronian Taxonomy. At Close of Day
Swearing an oath of non-interference, Censere eventually became a figure of myth and legend among Cybertronians, glimpsed on battlefields across the cosmos silently recording deaths. Dubbed the "Necrobot" by the religious and/or superstitious, he was also known as the "Gatekeeper", or the "Mute Neutral", and was believed to be an envoy of Primus, charged with ferrying departed sparks into the afterlife. The Not Knowing Conversely, skeptics like Ratchet dismissed his existence as a fairytale, attributing supposed sightings of him and his "portable apothecary" to visual glitches caused by freshly-constructed Cybertronians' senses "trying to run before [they] can walk", like the Shimmer or seeing Primus's face in a mushroom cloud. Twenty Plus One Trailbreaker shared his lack of belief, comparing stories of the Necrobot to Sparkeaters and the Seething Moon. The Chaos of Warm Things

For a time, Roadbuster thought Mortilus spoke to him, telling him to murder his cadets and sacrifice their remains to a pit for the Death-bringer to consume. This whole affair was in fact part of a larger web of deceit. Sins of the Wreckers #4
While on the planet Clemency, itself littered with the bodies of dead (and occasionally not-so-dead) Transformers, Misfire would periodically catch sight of what he believed was the Necrobot. He would then "chase it" for a few seconds before "losing sight of it" again, as observed by Krok who was not himself a believer. Rules of Disengagement One and a half years later, however, the Necrobot did indeed arrive on Clemency to add Flywheels to his list of dead Cybertronians, which also included several members of the Lost Light crew. Who's Afraid of the DJD?
A selection of the crew of the Lost Light visited his planet of operations, the location of which was revealed by an info bullet from Agent 113. Alarmed to see that multiple Transformers whose deaths he knew he had unambiguously recorded were alive and walking around in his garden, the Necrobot slammed the door to his complex shut, but when one such 'bot, Nightbeat, stood outside the door and refused to leave, Censere gave in to his curiosity and invited Nightbeat inside so he could explain his and the others' continued living (Nightbeat, he soon learned, had been revived by the properties of the Dead Universe, while the others had never died—the deaths he had recorded were those of their quantum duplicates, created through a quantum generator accident). Censere went on to explain his true nature and how he carried out his work; though Nightbeat was dismayed by this revelation, having wanted to believe that the Necrobot was a mystic figure and proof that higher powers existed in the universe, Censere reminded him that his not being 'magic' did not mean the Afterspark did not exist. Nightbeat criticized him for merely observing deaths and not attempting to help the dying. The Not Knowing

He would take Nightbeat's words to heart when he found one of Brainstorm's time cases buried by Megatron. By linking it up to his teleport chamber, he was able to go back in time, recovering the Transformers on his list of the disappeared—therefore causing them to 'disappear' in the first place. The time traveling took its toll on the passengers, so he put them in artificially induced comas and disguised them as organics to keep them safe from other Cybertronians while they recovered. Occasionally, he would be glimpsed in these endeavors by others, spawning the legends of his portable apothecary. Do Not Go Gentle
Among those 'bots he rescued were Roller, Wavelength, Syphon, Do Not Go Gentle Anode, Fangry, and Rapidfire. Some Other Cybertron He was halfway down the list when the Decepticon Justice Division showed up, and he guessed that several of the 'bots he rescued were on their own list. Do Not Go Gentle

The DJD somehow learned of the Lost Light's previous visit to Necroworld and decided to use a fabricated distress signal to lure the group back in order to maroon them, Tarn reasoning the Necrobot was the perfect bait. The Sun in Flight However, Censere altered the signal minutes after it was sent, turning it into a psychic bombardment of the intended recipients' worst fears in an attempt to warn them off. The DJD then butchered Censere and left his body with flowers stuffed in exit wounds for the Autobots to find. How Bright Their Frail Deeds While the Autobots were distracted with the ongoing siege, Censere, due to his great age, dissolved into sentio metallico.
Left behind was the key to his stasis pod room. After the Autobots discovered it, they were unable to use Censere's teleport chamber to escape for fear of leaving the "organics" to die. The Sun in Flight Several hours later, Rewind, having read through Censere's journal, discovered what he'd done with Brainstorm's time machine. Do Not Go Gentle
After Necroworld was taken over by Decepticons, Rapidfire took to wearing Censere's discarded cape. When the Autobots arrived and after Red Alert killed Rapidfire in the ensuing battle, he couldn't help but try the Necrobot's cape on himself. Sardines
When Team Rodimus finally confronted the Grand Architect, they discovered he was Adaptus and that the Lost Light crew had managed to locate all five members of the Guiding Hand, being told that Censere was an alias adopted by Mortilus. The Return of the King
The Functionist Universe
[edit]After the Functionist Council worked out that Rung was designed to produce photonic crystals, An Expert's Guide they first thought him the spawn of Mortilus sent to frustrate Primus's will before they decided realized that Rung was proof of Primus endorsing cold construction. Modes of Production
Ask Vector Prime
[edit]Vector Prime speculated that the Dark Spark could have been a fragment of Mortilus, among other explanations. Ask Vector Prime, 2015/05/18 He also noted that Mortilus Zarak sharing a name with a member of the Guiding Hand could be simple coincidence, or something far more sinister. Ask Vector Prime, 2015/08/04
Following the splintering of the Thirteen original Transformers into infinite alternate selves across the multiverse, Mortilus was known to be a member of the group in some universal streams. During the group's time in ancient Greece, the holomatter avatar he employed inspired the myth of Hades, uncle of Hermes. He stayed in the Thirteen's ship parked underneath Earth's surface with his vassal, a three-headed dog named Bruticus. Ask Vector Prime, 2015/08/08
Beast Wars: Uprising
[edit]Mortilus was a deity in Transformer religion, notable for his spiked carapace. His name was frequently used as a curse word. Derailment
2019 IDW continuity
[edit]During a raid on the Senate building to rescue the Senators held prisoner, Groove recited a prayer to Mortilus to help him focus. The lapse in concentration instead allowed Blitzwing to get the drop on his squad. Prime
After Thunderclash had publicly announced the Wreckers' arrival on Velocitron, Aileron wondered if, among theories, Mortilus was punishing her. Tread & Circuits Part 1
King Grimlock
[edit]The Dinobots worshipped the Necrobot as their patron deity, hoping to please him by the manner of their deaths and by leaving him a string of enemy soldiers so long that his list ran out of data storage. Grimlock the Defender
Games
[edit]Transformers Roleplaying Game
[edit]Although many historical accounts cast Mortilus as a villainous, deathly figure responsible for instigating the God War, some felt that he may have been more sympathetic than these myths and legends suggest. Various cultures remembered him as the Necrobot, Hades, Pluto, and Zarak Maximus. He wielded the Dark Spark and the Void Scepter, dark artifacts capable of raising the dead and warping minds. Transformers One Sourcebook
Notes
[edit]
- Cēnsēre is a Latin verb that means "to assess", also being the root of the English word "census". James Roberts gives the Transformer name's pronunciation like the words "centre" and "hair".[1]
- Mortillus combines the Latin noun mors, which means "death", and the suffix -illus, which turns the noun into the diminutive. "Mortilus" lacks one "l", but otherwise should mean "little death" or "deathlet".
Foreign names
[edit]- Japanese: Mortilus (モーティラス Mōtirasu), Necrobot (ネクロボット Nekurobotto)
References
[edit]- ↑ ".It's spelt Censere (one 'r') and pronounced Sen-Sair (rhymes with 'hair')"—James Roberts, Twitter, 2015/09/03
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