Forest Fairy (2024)

Forest Fairy (1)

A Forest Fairy is a species of fairy and animo, a race of being native to the forests of Earth. As an animo, they are the Immaterial Counterpart of forest flowers and sometimes other forest flora.

Contents

  • 1 Characteristics
    • 1.1 Biology
    • 1.2 Belief Power
    • 1.3 Society and Culture
  • 2 History
    • 2.1 Part 1
    • 2.2 Return to Earth

Characteristics[]

Biology[]

Forest fairies all have a similar look. They have two sets of translucent wings on their back of varying colors and styles and have long, pointed elf ears, often causing some people to confuse them for elves. Fairies are often small in size, around the size of their flowers that they tend to and are the embodiment of. Usually, fairies are around 13-14 cm in size when adults, although there is a wide variation in their size. For instance, Pomu Rainpuff is only around 9 cm tall, and yet this isn't seen as too unusual or abnormal in the fairy world. Fairies usually have dainty bodies that include things like sensitive skin and a sensitive digestive system and stomach.

Forest fairies, as animos, are the living, humanoid embodiment of flowers. As such, their form is born from the flower that they are the conscious embodiment of. In other words, fairies are born from flowers, although they still have parents, usually considered to be the two flowers that were cross-pollinated to create the seed that would give rise to the flower that would then birth the animo. During mating, fairies cross-pollinate themselves in an act akin to human intercourse in order to produce the seed (akin to human birth) that would produce offspring. While flowers possess both male and female parts within the same plant, there is a male/female dichotomy within fairy biology which is an imposition of the circ*mstances of their creation.

Since fairies are the embodiment of flowers, in their natural state their bodies consist of 70% nectar, like how human bodies consist of 70% water. However, their bodies become fully human if they take on a human form. While fairies at first were incapable of shapeshifting, after spending time in Heaven and associating more with it, they were able to adopt the heavenly shapeshifting ability for themselves. Modern fairies are thus able to take on many forms, including larger human forms (and even human forms with wings capable of flight, if they lose bone density and increase muscles accordingly), and even have the ability to grow extra limbs or organs.

Fairies can outlive the death of the flower they are the embodiment of by inducing a rebirth and resurrection of the plant, but in the process this costs their own innermost life essence, the internal power at their very core. As such, fairies still have finite lifespans of around 80-100 years, although having more Belief Power can help them live longer, up to 120 years in some cases. When a fairy has outlived the deaths of n flower embodiments, they are said to be n flowers old, where flowers are a common unit (along with petals) to measure fairy lifespan.

Belief Power[]

Fairies have many unique powers, which are tied to a special property of fairies known as Belief Power. Belief Power is a special function that relates the amount of Internal Power, and thus accessible magic power, of a fairy with how much humans believe in fairies. When a human believes in a fairy, a portion of their essence becomes shared with fairykind, with their Immaterial Essence becoming cross-entangled with their own matter and that of a fairy's thanks to the intervening Earth. The Earth itself was manipulated to give rise to this mediation property by the Ethyrium, but fairies are unique in this regard among animos, and most animos have constant powers regardless of whether a human believes in their existence or not.

Belief Power holds much significance in fairy life given that fairies must act to ensure that some people still believe in them, or else their magic powers will fade away. The magic powers of a fairy include their ability to shapeshift as covered, but also their plant tending powers, which involve speeding up the growth of plants as well as curing plants of illness. These are crucial since without a healthy ecosystem to survive within, the flowers that the fairies embody may shrivel up, which could kill the fairies embodying them in the process. In addition, some fairies have unique magic abilities they would lose if not for Belief Power.

Society and Culture[]

Fairies are a mostly peaceful species, but unlike the Disney versions and more like the fairies of folklore instead, they can be quite vicious and even will not deny allegations that they used to feed on children or humans. Fortunately, in the modern age, no fairy would do such a thing without it being a crime. Still, fairies, when threatened or when passionate about something, will generally fight tooth and nail for that thing. If someone is threatening fairykind, they will be quick to bear arms and fight that threatening force.

Fairies can also be mischievous and vengeful. A common fairy youth pastime is coming up with terrifying stories in order to scare their peers, and doing other similar things to play nasty tricks on them. Even adult fairies still partake in mischief, especially if it will get them ahead in some regard within fairy society. While pulling pranks like this is seen as a natural part of fairy culture and even a celebration of it, if a prank does go too far, which inevitably they sometimes do, the fairy responsible will face the consequences accordingly.

Fairies generally wear what is considered to be a traditional fairy garb. This includes clothing that look like they are from the medieval period, given that fairies were created around that time, adopted that style, and never got over it. Fairy women wear dresses of bright, forest themed colors, while the men wear fancy scarves featuring these colors along with their gentlemanly outfits. Fairies are also commonly seen with headdresses and other accessories usually involving forest themes, such as butterfly and flower themed ornaments.

Fairy social structure is centered around clans, long bloodlines that are the family unit of fairy society. Marriage cannot happen within a clan (for obvious reasons), so instead the children of the marriage usually adopts the clan of the mother except in situations where the clans mutually decide for this process to happen the other way. Of course, this decision is usually the instigator of the vast majority of inter-clan conflict. While most clans encompass fairies from all walks of life owing to a high social mobility, the clans at the top are known as the Royal Clans, of which the Fairy Queen is a member of one.

Fairy language is called "Fairy-go" and usually consists of forest sounds to connote meaning. In other words, it is a language entirely based on onomatopoeia. For instance, the sound of rustling leaves could symbolize change, the sound of a woodpecker could symbolize the act of working, and the sound of crunching worms could symbolize the act of eating. While there are only so many sounds a forest could make, each one sort of acts like its own letter rather than outright word. As such, words are usually strings of these sounds that connote the meaning of the concept behind that word using these essential letter component concepts to the best of fairy culture and history's ability.

History[]

Part 1[]

Forest Fairies were created as a race in 1020 when the Ethyrium was used by Reimu (and by extension the Heart's Melody) to create all of the animos. However, unlike the rest of the animos, the fairies were singled out to receive the property of Belief Power, meaning their power is tied to humanity's belief in them. This is later explained as being due to Reimu intentionally wanting to create fairies with the rest of the animos (given she always was fond of fairy tales and wanted fairies to be real), and that she recalled belief being a requirement for fairies to exist was a major theme in the fairy tales she read as a child, and so this mental association was brought to life with the fairies themselves.

Fairies were first created in Fairy Forest, a forest nearby the Magus Kingdom. There, they were generated fully operational and with a complete societal order, as if they had an entire history behind them at the time of their spontaneous generation. The current Fairy Queen at the moment of generation was Pomu, who established the long running Rainpuff Clan of fairies. During this period, the fairies often ran into trouble with loggers trying to promote deforestation to gather resources as well as to spite and even attack the fairies, but thanks to the members of the Ethyria Project, an agreement was settled upon.

Due to instability in the Ethyrium, the fairies were soon pitted against other animos in the Ethyrian War. In an effort to stop this, Pomu searched for a way to restore balance to the mysterious orb. In the end, Pomu was replaced as Queen after her sacrifice to stop the Ethyrium, and even though she actually survived, she was corrupted in the process and her former allies had to help the Ethyria Project put a stop to her Pomufication.

When some humans began to turn against magical creatures, fairies became wary of Earth and the troubles that lied within, and decided to flee en masse in a sort of Fairy exodus. They decided to settle in Neverland, the newly created realm of Heaven where animo souls go when they die, and were helped there thanks to a combined effort from Atlantis and Solar Sky Dragons like Elira. While they were still living beings who coexisted among the non-living souls, the fairies, over centuries, started to become more ethereal as they adopted more and more of the heavenly energies. This granted them all sorts of new powers, including most especially their shapeshifting abilities.

While fairies were gone from Earth during the establishment of the Veil, the Veil sealed the memories of humans interacting with fairies in the Fairy Forest into the human collective unconscious. This later led to the prevalence of Fairy Tales based on these collective memories beginning in the 1700s and even culminating in the fairy tales told by the Brothers Grimm.

Return to Earth[]

In the 1990s, the fairies returned to Earth, to their ancestral Fairy Forest with patches now existing all across Earth, when God decided to repurpose Neverland to accommodate more humans souls. This decision was made when the fairies, still tied to belief by Belief Power, started to rapidly lose power as modern people, due to a combination of the Veil separating the human and magical worlds and also advances in science, began to believe less and less in fairies. Now the fairies were only subsisting on the power granted by a few young children, such as those who actually still believed in things like the tooth fairy.

After settling back down on Earth, fairies used their shapeshifting abilities to blend in as humans, given the Veil was in effect at this time. Fairies were dispersed in forests across the world given the Fairy Forest had patches all across the world at this point due to uprooting and replanting throughout the centuries. As a result, fairies needed a way to all communicate with one another and maintain their tight-knit community. To this end, fairies became early adopters of the internet and created a subsection of the internet just for fairies, and out of reach of humans, known as Virtual Neverland.

As time went on, Virtual Neverland improved in quality from just lines of text and code to an entire VR environment as of 2021. In this time, fairies were always on the lookout for ways in which they could reclaim their power and potentially Neverland with it, but found it difficult due to the Veil separating the human and magical worlds. The reincarnation of Pomu herself tried a few times at the urging of the darkness within her, but her attempts mostly ended up failing, and most of the fairies soon stopped following her. Fairies were eventually able to find something of a home in Purgatory, but they'd have to share with human souls. A permanent home was made for them and all of animo kind when Hell was destroyed and frozen over, becoming PAW (Petra's Animo Wonderland).

Forest Fairy (2024)

FAQs

What is a male fairy called? ›

“Fairy” is a non-gendered word, unless an individual fantasy author makes it different for their story. “Nymph,” on the other hand, is feminine. The original meaning of the word was “bride.” And “satyr” is male, though late in antiquity artists made up “satyresses.”

What does the forest symbolize in fairy tales? ›

It is a place of freedom and wildness, where normal rules no longer apply. Strange events can take place in the forest, and it can be a place of transformation, where the hero overcomes various difficulties and finds his or her way home.

What is a forest fairy called? ›

Woodland faeries are a race of fairies that live in the woods of the world, often within the Old Woods. This race appears to go by several names, including 'fairy', 'faery', Fairie, among others.

What fairy tales happen in the woods? ›

It is perhaps unsurprising, then, that enchanted forests serve as the backdrop for the majority of the folk tales popularized in this classic collection, from Snow White to Little Red Riding Hood, Hansel and Gretel to Sleeping Beauty.

What gender is Tinkerbell? ›

Tinker Bell (Disney character)
Tinker Bell
GenderFemale
OccupationTinker Fairy
AlignmentGood
FamilyPeriwinkle (twin sister)
10 more rows

Is A fairy a guy or a girl? ›

In Old French romance, a faie or fee was a woman skilled in magic, and who knew the power and virtue of words, of stones, and of herbs. Fairy was used to represent: an illusion or enchantment; the land of the Faes; collectively the inhabitants thereof; an individual such as a fairy knight.

What is in a fairy forest? ›

This forest is located somewhere in Britain. It is home to a wide variety of magical creatures, including fairies and centaurs, as well as the residence of at least one witch, Winifred Whittle, who lives in a cottage within the forest.

Are fairies woodland creatures? ›

According to folklore, fairies, which are derived from the Latin word “fatum,” are tiny mythical and immortal beings with magical powers. A Woodland Fairy is a species of Fairy that is often found in the woods, specifically, older woods.

What does a dark forest symbolize? ›

In An Illustrated Encyclopaedia Of Traditional Symbols, JC Cooper writes 'Entering the Dark Forest or the Enchanted Forest is a threshold symbol: the soul entering the perils of the unknown; the realm of death; the secrets of nature, or the spiritual world which man must penetrate to find the meaning.

What is a forest pixie? ›

Pixies are "in-between", not cursed by God or especially blessed. They do the unexpected, they bless the land, and are forest creatures whom other wild creatures find alluring and non-threatening. They love humans, taking some for mates, and are nearly ageless. They are winged, flitting from place to place.

What is a dark fairy called? ›

The Unseelie Court describes the darkly-inclined fairies. Unlike the Seelie Court, no offense was deemed necessary to bring down their assaults. In Scotland, they were seen as closely allied with witches.

Are fairies human-sized? ›

Fairies are said to be of human size or smaller, down to a height of 3 inches (7.5 cm) or less. Female fairies may tell fortunes, particularly prophesying at births and foretelling deaths.

What are the 5 fairy tales of Into the Woods? ›

Into the Woods contains adaptations of several popular fairy tales, including Cinderella, Rapunzel, Jack and the Beanstalk, and Little Red Riding Hood. Fairy Tales are popular stories that exist in many different versions, cultures, and languages.

What are the four fairy tales in Into the Woods? ›

This tale brings together 4 fairy tales: Jack the giant slayer, Cinderella, Rapunzel and Little Red Riding hood.

Is the thing in the forest a fairy tale? ›

A fairy tale story is a folklore that takes the form of a short story. "The thing in the forest" is a fairy tale because it has traditional character. Also, the forest is a typical fairy tale setting. The "Loathly Worm" paragraph 44 is imaginary.

Is a male fairy an elf? ›

From around the Late Middle Ages, the word elf began to be used in English as a term loosely synonymous with the French loan-word fairy; in elite art and literature, at least, it also became associated with diminutive supernatural beings like Puck, hobgoblins, Robin Goodfellow, the English and Scots brownie, and the ...

What is a king fairy called? ›

Oberon (/ˈoʊbərɒn/) is a king of the fairies in medieval and Renaissance literature. He is best known as a character in William Shakespeare's play A Midsummer Night's Dream, in which he is King of the Fairies and spouse of Titania, Queen of the Fairies.

What are male fairies called in Tinkerbell? ›

The males are sometimes referred to as "sparrow men," though the term "fairies" is used to refer to both female and male fairy characters.

Are there male fairies in mythology? ›

Yes, in Irish folklore, there are both male and female fairies, known as the Daoine Sidhe or Aos Sí. The Aos Sí are a supernatural race of beings that are believed to inhabit the fairy mounds or sidhe (pronounced "shee") that dot the Irish landscape.

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