The game Black Myth Wukong just came out, selling a record 10 million copies in a few days, up to 2.4 million concurrent users on Steam, and 3 million concurrent users on all platforms. Sweet Baby Inc. and all game journalist websites worked extra-hard the whole year to try to destroy the game for not bending to DEI/LGBTQ propaganda, and this gave a very severe blow to their whole agenda.

“Meh, it’s just a game, what’s the big deal?” Having millions of people bring attention into my field has increased my power over the physical reality by about 3x. The demons have lost tremendous territory. This stirred the pot with a frontal collision on one side against the DEI/LGBTQ Baphomet movement, and it also stirred the pot at the Chinese Heaven Palace, with Chaos and Thoth behind them. “This game is quite a stir” would be an understatement.

The Trump failed assassination completely changed the energetic landscape; and Wukong release completely changed the landscape once again. We’re definitely making progress.

It’s interesting that Su Wukong was the #1 story in China, kind of the equivalent of the Bible, yet it remained totally unknown in the West. Up until now. Chinese players are jumping around in excitement seeing their favorite stories come to life, with all family members being able to name every single character; while Western players are looking at Journey to the West manuscripts to try to figure out what it’s all about.

Just in the game intro, you see Buddha that looks like Chaos, a hellhound (btw my hellhound dog is doing great, vibration above/below ground at 13K/11K), Heaven armies under Chaos control, and Heaven rules that are… cumbersome.

The most hilarious game reviews state “fictional characters”.

This game does a few things. First, it massively increases my influence by having millions of people tune into my field and frequency instead of being at the demonic, matrix and false light frequencies.

Second, it introduces people into a whole new paradigm of Immortals, spirits and demons. A paradigm that most in the West have never ever been exposed to.

Third, it’s the first AAA game coming out of China; they’ll release more. Perhaps Nuwa’s story.

What I find funny is that Western player believe it to be just a fiction novel, similar to Spiderman and Harry Potter. They have no idea how serious this is for Chinese people. As someone put it, for them, it’s like the equivalent of Jesus kung-fuing his way into Heaven, to then realize he’s the son of God. Which would be a cool plot btw.

I came to realize that most people don’t see any connection between Su Wukong and Hanuman, even though Su Wukong abilities and Hanuman abilities are extremely similar. There’s no other deity with a similar profile. Su Wukong is a specific incarnation, whereas Hanuman is his Immortal self, much older. For the most part, Chinese people are just not aware of Hanuman stories, and Indian people are simply not aware of Su Wukong stories.

When people compare this to Spiderman, they don’t realize that there are thousands of statues and temples of the Monkey God across India, China, Thailand, Myanmar and other countries. That’s a heck of a fiction novel.

I believe the Journey to the West story happened ~800 years ago, but here is a stone carving of Hanuman that dates back 1500 years. This is very interesting. You do have to keep in mind that, according to the story, when Su Wukong destroyed the Heaven Palace, he was trapped under a mountain by Buddha for 500 years, which means that the monkey would have been trapped 1300 years ago, according to the story.

A question I’m still wondering up to this day is: what REALLY happened back then? A half-monkey, half-big and half-sandman creatures?

What we know: the story is a combination of events that happened in the physical plane and the astral dimensions. The Heaven Palace is a real astral location, and the Immortals are real but non-physical. It’s really hard for a game or movie to accurately portray the relationship between the physical and astral realities, and transition between both. In the Wukong game intro, the confrontation with the Heaven army is in the astral dimensions, and the axe passes through the veil to hit the physical mountain. Very well done!

We also know that the monk Tang Sanzang lived during the Tang dynasty, and that’s when the story happened.

We also know that the area was infested with demons; spiritual warfare is a very real thing. Demons are non-physical, but there are definitely witches and demonic vessels and servants all around. So far so good.

Furthermore, in ancient Chinese stories, people would teleport around regularly. The veil separating the physical from the astral was a lot thinner back then. For Journey to the West, however, the monkey was unable to teleport to the destination, and he tried. The reason is that the pathway was filled with demonic interference, and the path had to be physically cleared to be able to reach the frequency of the destination. It was thus a spiritual journey to reach a higher frequency.

The monkey staff, Ruyi Jingu Bang, I recovered it, at least its astral form.  I do not know whether it was a physical or astral back then. Perhaps a conjured weapon that could appear and disappear from its astral form? I do not know. It remains a very potent weapon in its astral form. Very surprisingly, in the past years, I lost it for a few years, and the big demons tried to infiltrate and corrupt it but failed. What is it really to withstand all that?? In fact it feels stronger than ever. Big question mark.

Then you have a half-monkey creature, and a half-pig creature. What’s the deal here? One possibility is that the half-pig was a representation of his personality and astral form, but they were in fact humans. Su Wukong would then be a hairy human form of the Monkey God. That would make a lot of sense.

But Su Wukong was known for living in the mountain with other monkeys, so that doesn’t fit  100%. Another big question mark.

Overall, the story is definitely based on reality, but the novel was channelled and written about 300 years after the facts with some distortion, and some aspects could have been romanticized or mistranslated.

What’s the accuracy of Journey to the West novel? I’m measuring around 75%, but there’s some distortion so it’s hard to get a clear reading.

Accuracy check of this article: 95.9%, distortion below 2% (measure it yourself).

Here’s something else interesting. Our timeline is fake, even our recent history. The Tartarian Kingdom was wiped off the face of the Earth just 200 years ago with a massive mud-flood. If we can’t even trust recent history, how can we trust older history?

It seems that there’s 1000 years of fabricated/inserted history between year 500 and 1500. I saw some video about it from a flat-earther a while ago; if you know of some solid video exploring this theme without going into the flat-earth non-sense, do send me the links.

This means that the Jesus story happened 1000 years ago, and not 2000 years ago. Some entities have gone through great lengths to make Jesus appear as distant history, and that we’ve been at war against each other for those 2000 years. When the truth is that it happened 1000 years ago, and the Tartarian kingdom was an era of great peace.

There are also rumors that Jesus went East to China. I got the message that he had 2 kids in China, and they were the founders of the Tartarian Kingdom. Plus a  3rd kid in the West.

This means that Jesus’ Journey to the East happened around 200 years before Su Wukong’ Journey to the West.

There is still a lot we don’t know about our history!

This part after the previous accuracy check, I’m measuring 75-83% accuracy with 12% distortion and possibly more. Hidden history is extremely hard to measure due to very deeply-rooted distortions. It’s possible that the accuracy gets higher as we peel off the distortion layers. Even 80% accuracy on such impactful statements is pretty damn high!

There’s also the question of how the Tartarian Kingdom and colonization of America fit with each other. Even if a lot of history is fake, a lot of the colonization is well-documents, with forts laying all around.

Finally, it’s really hard to translate Chinese years into Western years. They count it as dynasties such as Tang and Ming, which don’t directly translate into our years. Combined with the fact that our Western years are falsified. Trying to investigate historical dates between China and the West could bring very interesting findings.

There is still a lot of work to be done to properly reconstruct history.


Etienne Charland, Soul Foundation Architect
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