rdfs:comment
| - Artimus Lucanus Devaneaux (born June 21, 2328, Castle Devaneaux, Reydovan Prime; died March 16, 2376, Castle Devaneaux, Reydovan Prime; spirit destroyed December 24, 2376, Artimopolis, Defileron) was a fictional character created by Joshua Underwood in the Star Trek universe. Artimus was Underwood's primary villain, and had been portrayed by Christopher Lambert since 2003; he was originally portrayed by artwork from Phantasy Star Online when he was created in 2002. He was known also as the Defiler of Worlds, the White Death and Evil Given Form, along with other unflattering titles such as "murderer", "warmonger", "traitor" and "usurper".
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abstract
| - Artimus Lucanus Devaneaux (born June 21, 2328, Castle Devaneaux, Reydovan Prime; died March 16, 2376, Castle Devaneaux, Reydovan Prime; spirit destroyed December 24, 2376, Artimopolis, Defileron) was a fictional character created by Joshua Underwood in the Star Trek universe. Artimus was Underwood's primary villain, and had been portrayed by Christopher Lambert since 2003; he was originally portrayed by artwork from Phantasy Star Online when he was created in 2002. He was known also as the Defiler of Worlds, the White Death and Evil Given Form, along with other unflattering titles such as "murderer", "warmonger", "traitor" and "usurper". Underwood credits Rich Terry, the founder and host of the Star Trek: Generations Ahead room on Warp1.net, for giving him some of the ideas that made Artimus a truly evil and powerful character. Though they have had a "falling out" due to Underwood being banned from that room due to conflicts with the moderation staff, and a misunderstood comment made by Underwood in the Center of the Universe room on the same server, the two "roleplaying masterminds" have had discussions of creating more levels of mayhem with their storylines. "Mayhem, chaos, war, that's what we did," Underwood says. "Rich and I usually didn't come up with anything without blowing something up or killing some character in some novel way." Note: The date and location in parentheses for Artimus' death symbolizes his physical and ethereal death.
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