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Alright after stewing on this for long enough I'm finally pulling the trigger on it: Quella the God of Dreams was (probably) the basis for Miquella of the Haligtree. The following post is fairly long but there's a lot of points I want to hit with this... read? Theory implies I think it actually proves something when I just think of it as interesting similarities.
I donât think itâs necessary to get into the details of Miquella: blond gnc twink who has hogged 75% of the discourse in the Elden Ring fandom (which I'm not really going to directly address here but donât worry Mohg is coming up in this post too alongside an unlikely connection); associated with gold, trees meant to protect people, sleep through the other half of his soul in Trina, butterflies, youth, a touch of mystery, and a Lord of BloodâŚ
Which is also mostly true of Quella from Dark Souls II. As a recap for those not read up on the named-only gods of Drangleic (pulling primarily from the descriptions for he Spirit Tree Shield and Grand Spirit Shield): his shields bear a golden tree on them, his âallegoryâ speaks of a frightened boy who found a âtalking tree of the dreamworldâ that transformed itself into a shield that can deflect spells, is explicitly referred to as âthe God of Dream(s)â, his Japanese name is given as âNeraâ, similar to a type of butterfly, has the mystery of who âQuellaâ really is (is it the boy in the âallegoryâ or is it the Spirit Tree?) and the âgodâ in charge of a rival covenant themed around Bloodâs Japanese name is a genus of moth (Doloma), but weâll come back to him in a bit.
Thereâs also the obvious highlight of Miquella having quite literally Quella in his name. Which I donât believe is a coincidence. With the amount of time between Dark Souls IIâs development and Elden Ringâs, the English translation for these named only characters would have no doubt been old hat in the FromSoft office. What is especially interesting is the trees in Quella and Miquellaâs story: depending on your read, both achieved godhood thanks to a special tree and both are heavily associated with a tree meant to protect and, moreover, ward against adverse things like Curses. The Gate of Divinity resembles more of a tree to me than anything else (I have frequently called it the âTree of Divinityâ), while Quella seems to only be associated with the spirit tree from the Dreamlands.
Of warding against curses, I would think it is easy to remind everyone that was the Haligtreeâs original intent: to ward against Outer Gods in the hope it would assist with Maleniaâs curse. Nowhere in Dark Souls II would you find Quella or the transforming spirit tree associated with this⌠itâs here we have to look to Dark Souls III where we fight a spirit tree; a Curse Rotted Greatwood. Pulling from its item description: âEver since its establishment, all manner of curses have managed to seep into the Undead Settlement. The worst of them were sealed away inside a spirit tree, but eventually the curses took their toll.âÂ
Now, some may rightfully point out that the term could be used without intent of drawing back to Dark Souls II and Quella. I would point out that that would be unlikely, because I donât think Miyazaki has ever been that blasĂŠ but moreover there are various things meant to pull out attention towards Dark Souls II in the area leading up to that fight, as well as in the rewards you can get from the Soul of the boss.
It is in this area that (if you explore enough) you can find Lucatielâs armor set, though her mask is missing. Yet if you were embered near the Dilapidated Bridge, you would have fought Holy Knight Hodrick. If you beat him, you get his covenantâs item (a vertebrae shackle and potentially the first one a player can receive), which you can trade with the crow in Firelink for Lucatielâs Mask. So these things are sharpening our mind to a character who spoke so candidly, so openly, so hauntingly, of the Undead Curse: Lucatiel of Mirrah from Dark Souls II. What do we get from the Soul of the Rotted Greatwood? The Hollowslayer Greatsword, most associated with the âproper Mirrah knightâ, Lucatiel.
All that to say is there is a lot around the Greatwood to make our mind think back to Dark Souls II, where the only reference to spirit trees is to the one in the âallegoryâ of Quella. While you can very easily make the read that the Curse-rotted Greatwood is Quella (especially if you read that the spirit tree was Quella), I prefer to think of it as Quella repaying the spirit treeâs kindness by planting more of them.
Unfortunately there isnât much else to say about Quella along these lines. There are a few subtextual connections that can be made between Lucatiel and Malenia: both losing everything to their Curses, for them being devoted so fully to their brothers they would do anything for them, etc. If Lucatiel is our path to Quella in Dark Souls III, and she gave her blade up into the Curse-rotted Greatwood as a final hail mary to remove her curse then itâs a fairly decent connection but unfortunately a bit too much of a jump without more context or confirmation she was in anyway fully connected to himâŚ
But it is so interesting that the spell symbol of the Haligtree is so markedly similar to the spirit tree depictions on the Spirit Tree Shield and Grand Spirit Tree Shield.
(thank you to Eldenpedia & Modeler's Resource for the images above. From left to right: the spell sigil of Miquella's Haligtree, the Spirit Tree Shield, and the Grand Spirit Tree Shield.)
Also just briefly: Quella is a full god of dreams and presumably also sleep, while Miquella has a connection to dreams and sleep through his other half, Trina. We don't entirely know where else to highlight that and how much further that can go because there isn't enough information about Quella's association with dreams, only that the spirit tree he's associated with was a 'talking tree from the dreamworld'. Could draw the comparison that when we find St. Trina she is an almost dream-like whisp in the shape of a flower? Bit of a stretch but it was worth mentioning here.
There is one more major connection to draw that I'd like to put forward as a reason to explicitly link Quella and Miquella: the people cast in contrast with them. Lords of Blood seem drawn to the youthful beauty of both Miquella and Quella. Of course Mohg, much like Miquella himself, does not need much of an introduction. While we canât speak for any connection to moths and Mohg, both he and the patron âgodâ of the Brotherhood of Blood (Nahr Alma or Doloma, depending on how you feel) stand as contrasts to Miquella and Quella respectfully. Indeed, Titchy Gren explicitly says the Brotherhood is feuding with Quellaâs covenant, the Blue Sentinels. (âHave you heard of the Blue Sentinels? They're are a thorn in our sides, to say the least. Their men are obsessed with hunting down blood servants. Ah, who cares? It's just another chance to spill more blood. Doesn't that excite you! Heh heh hehâŚâ) No doubt many of Miquella's followers and Mohg's supporters have a similar feud since he kidnapped the Empyrean.
Also The Brotherhood of Blood's symbol is a three pronged trident. Hmm. Wonder if that comes up in Elden Ring.
Oh wow would you look at that. (The Blood Oath Incantations and the Crest of Blood ring from Dark Souls II. Sorry for the potato quality it's the only image I could find.)
Beyond their comparable symbolism, there is another little quirk here: the question of authenticity, so to speak.
In the fullness of the story, Mohgâs intentions and authenticity of what we are shown in game are easily called into question. How much of what was done was his and how much was Miquellaâs? (Not touching the land mine, just pointing it out). How much was the Formless Mother's influence? He was never intended to be Miquellaâs consort either, so his lordship is similarly questionable. The kicker being: Nahr Almaâs divinity is similarly questionable. His only explicit worshipper in Dark Souls II, Titchy, uses a chime associated with a completely different goddess and, moreover: the Crest of Blood (a ring given to people who join the Brotherhood of Blood) is explicitly said to be ânothing specialâ, but does boosts bleed build up by 50 points. To quote verbatim from the item description: âThis ring is nothing special. Perhaps, in the end, an oath is but a window into the ambitions of the oath taker. If you have taken this oath(joined the covenant, presumably), then you know what you want. To be soaked in the blood of your kind.â
Should note I donât think Mohg is evil on the same level as Nahr Alma. Mohg has reasons and motivations, while Nahr Alma (if he even exists) seems to be simply to bathe in blood.
One final major connection between Nahr Alma and Mohg(that isnât really a connection per say, just an interesting detail): Titchy Gren is voiced by one Con OâNeill. Mr. OâNeill would go on to voice in Elden Ring: as Mohg, Lord of Blood. Just the fun little details.
To conclude: Elden Ring is just Dark Souls II-2 and Miquella is called that because Miayzaki saw Quella and said âMy Quella nowâ and didnât change anything about him. /joking
Also this is why Miquella is cursed, btw.
Thank you for reading my insane ramblings. Iâve been noticing these for a while now and decided to put them together and show the world I am So Normal⢠about a named only character from Dark Souls II. Thereâs probably more connections that can be made explicitly and also subtextually between Quella and Miquella, but these were the main ones I was able to find and feel confident in bringing forward to highlight. I donât believe this proves that the two games are literally connected (though I enjoy playing around with that idea as an idea), but rather thereâs a lot of ideas drawn forward into Elden Ring from many sources.
This is also a Quella propaganda post. Quella is a cool ass character and more people should give him attention (he has like four items dedicated to him and is 95% a blank slate). More insanity to come later.
Oh in case you are curious: Quella's Japanese name refers to the hesperocharis nera butterfly, also known as the Nera white. Nahr Alma's Japanese name refers to the doloma leucocephala moth.
Me: Man, it sure is cool how much Elden Ring references dark souls 2, though i hope thereâs nothing in it that may be extremely indicative of what the DLC is gonna be ab-
La prima persona a cui pensi quando ti succede qualcosa di bello. O di brutto.
La persona che cerchi nel dormiveglia.
La persona per cui anche poco è infinitamente meglio di niente.
Quella.
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