rdfs:comment
| - Arcane great staff fabled to grant omniscience.
- The Caduceus (カドウケス) is a weapon in the series.
- The Caduceus is the weapon of Hermes.
- The caduceus (originally known as the kerykeion) is a staff carried by Hermes, along with his symbol of power. George and Martha are entwined in it with wings on its top. It is the symbol of Hermes and Hermes' cabin.
- The Caduceus is the trademark symbol and weapon of the messenger god Hermes. It was originally crafted by Apollo, but exchanged with Hermes for the lyre. It is a symbol of commerce (reflecting Hermes' patronage of commerce) and often confused with the Rod of Asclepius, a symbol of medicine.
- The Caduceus was a Zion hovercraft. After the Crisis Meeting, Ballard offered to help Morpheus and remain behind and wait for contact from the Oracle. While receiving her message, the crew member Bane was attacked by Smith, who overwrote his mind. During the defense of Zion, Bane/Smith killed the entire crew and used the ship's EMP to disable at least five ships (including itself, the Icarus, the Gnosis, and the Novalis). Bane was the only survivor and was saved by the Mjolnir.
- Caduceus was first described by Bill Taylor in 2011 on his blog "Trabsact Sagme Diaries", which is devoted to new or obscure abstract strategy games. Caduceus, which was inspired by the light motorcyles from the TRON movies has a mancala-like "leave-a-trail" move mechanic akin to sowing.
- The Caduceus is an Elite Scepter found in Diablo II.
- 1-2 Caduceus can be received by a surgeon who gets a common prize from doing surgeries.
- Caduceus is a recurring ability in the franchise. It heals a party member for relatively low MP cost.
- Caduceus (greek Kerykeion) was the staff of Apollo, Greek god of sunlight, music, medicine and poetry. It was renowned for its power to reconcile any two opposing forces in nature. In the story of Hermes, the Greek god who was charged with the task of messenger of the Gods, Hermes, during his infancy, set out to venture into the world. He came across a turtle, killed it, and hollowed out the shell. He made a lyre by stringing several cattle sinews hide through it. Apollo then came to Hermes, demanding compensation for a herd of cattle he stole from him a day earlier, not to mention two he had slaughtered and eaten. Hermes, fearing the gods' judgment, took Apollo to where he had hidden his cattle. After the matter was resolved, he took his lyre and started to play it. Apollo, though God of
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