Newona- Ritual Offering To The Depraved God Fre... [repack] -

The air in the Hollow of Newona did not move; it stagnated, thick with the scent of rusted iron and bitter myrrh. At the center of the jagged stone circle stood the effigy of

, the Depraved God. It was a twisting mass of obsidian and bone, carved with too many limbs and eyes that seemed to weep a slow, viscous oil.

The cultists knelt in the grey silt, their voices a low, discordant thrum that vibrated through the soles of their feet. They did not pray for mercy. One does not ask mercy from a god who feeds on the marrow of the world. They prayed only for sustenance

—that by sating his hunger today, they might be spared until the next moon. The ritual began with the shattering of the Soul-Glass Newona- Ritual Offering to The Depraved God Fre...

. As the shards hit the altar, a pale, violet light bled from the cracks, illuminating the High Priest’s trembling hands. He raised the silver kris, the blade etched with the forbidden runes of the Deepened Coast.

"Great Fre," the Priest croaked, his voice cracking like dry parchment. "Accept this essence of the unblemished. Drink from the well of our devotion, and turn your lidless gaze toward the stars, rather than our gates."

As the offering was made, the shadows of the valley began to detach themselves from the rocks. They crawled toward the altar, drawn by the scent of the Depraved God’s awakening. The ground groaned, a deep, subterranean sound of shifting teeth. The air in the Hollow of Newona did

Fre was listening. And in the cold, hollow silence that followed, Newona knew that the price of their survival had just become everything or focus on the fate of the High Priest

Given that this specific phrase does not correspond to any known major mythology, published game, or historical text (as of my last knowledge update), I have interpreted this as a request for a creative world-building piece — a fictional anthropological or occult study written in the style of a grimdark or Lovecraftian lore article.

Below is a long-form article detailing the forbidden ritual of Newona, as practiced by the heretical cult of the Depraved God, Frellog. Signs of a Completed Newona Those who have


Signs of a Completed Newona

Those who have fully performed the Newona Offering and survived (few are called “survivors”; most become hollow fanatics) exhibit specific markers:

  • The Silver Tongue of Rot – They can speak cruelties that sound like kindnesses, convincing others to commit small evils willingly.
  • Depraved Resilience – Physical wounds heal faster, but emotional pain vanishes entirely, leading to increasingly sociopathic behavior.
  • The Grin Echo – In reflections or shadows, witnesses sometimes see the offerer’s mouth stretched into the god’s own too-wide smile.

Is Newona Real? (Fiction vs. Folk Horror)

To be clear: there is no historical or anthropological evidence for a “Depraved God” or “Newona” ritual in any real-world culture. The name appears nowhere in academic texts on comparative religion, demonology, or anthropology.

However, the concept has gained traction in modern digital folklore, creepypasta, and indie horror gaming. The earliest known reference is from a 2009 forum post on a now-defunct horror writing site titled “The Newona Testament” — a short story presented as a recovered grimoire. From there, it spread into LARP (live-action role-playing) communities and homebrew TTRPG campaigns as a fictional cursed rite.

The Origins of Newona

Newona's history is a labyrinth of myth and madness, a tale spun from the darkest corners of human imagination. It is said that this cursed land was born from the tears of the earth, shed for the loss of its most treasured innocence. Over centuries, Newona has become a beacon for those who seek power beyond the mortal coil, a power that comes at a terrible cost.

Newona — Ritual Offering to the Depraved God Fre...

Newona is a dark ritual centered on the worship of the fallen deity Fre..., a once-revered god whose influence has warped into corruption and appetite for transgression. Practitioners of Newona pursue forbidden communion through elaborate offerings, secrecy, and symbolic inversion of traditional rites.

Archaeology and Evidence

  • Material remnants: Fragments of black thread, ash bowls, and inscribed shards bearing partial names of Fre... have been found at marginal sites, suggesting localized practice rather than mainstream cult.
  • Historiography: Records are sparse and often censored; surviving accounts come from outsiders, court trials, and confiscated ritual manuals.