"Unknown. Thankfully, they seem to be easily disposed of by regular means."@en . "Milky Way Galaxy"@en . "Scissormen"@en . . "All Scissormen come from Orqwith, a metafictional city created as a thought experiment."@en . "Sol"@en . . "Unknown, but implied to be infinite in number."@en . "Humanoid"@en . . . . "Scissormen"@en . "Orqwith's atmosphere is breathable, if not earth-like."@en . "Unknown, but implied to be beyond human comprehension."@en . . . . "Grant Morrison; Richard Case"@en . "They attack using the large scissors they have in place of hands which they use to literally cut people out of reality."@en . "4"^^ . "No Hair"@en . . "Black"@en . "Doom Patrol Vol 2 #19"@en . "Orqwith's gravity is earth-like."@en . "A clock-faced priest in white, and an identical-looking priest in black."@en . "Scissormen are a race of beings that come from the city of Orqwith. The authors of the book of Orqwith (and Grant Morrison, writer of the comic) based the Scissormen on the Tailor from The Tale of Little Suck-a-Thumb in the children's picture book Struwwelpeter. They function as Orqwith's answers to the Spanish Inquisition, attacking non-fictional entities in the \"real world\". The Scissormen are clothed in red and black, and have featureless faces apparently covered in the same material. They speak in a seemingly random series of words when they talk, resembling dada poetry, created by cutting up text and rearranging its constituent words in a random order. Morrison got these suggestions from his word processor's spell check feature. They are shaped like men but when struck hard enough they are defeated and seem to leave nothing but cloth. They were finally destroyed along with Orqwith when the story was destroyed by a contradiction revealed in a solution to a variation on a traditional riddle."@en . "Scissormen are a race of beings that come from the city of Orqwith. The authors of the book of Orqwith (and Grant Morrison, writer of the comic) based the Scissormen on the Tailor from The Tale of Little Suck-a-Thumb in the children's picture book Struwwelpeter. They function as Orqwith's answers to the Spanish Inquisition, attacking non-fictional entities in the \"real world\"."@en . "Individually, their strength is low. However, their endless numbers and the reality-warping, ever-expanding nature of Orqwith make the Scissormen as a group extremely dangerous to reality as a whole."@en . "Secret"@en . "Unknown, most likely a theocracy."@en . "Scissormen are a race of beings that come from the city of Orqwith.\n\nThe authors of the book of Orqwith based the Scissormen on the Tailor from The Tale of Little Suck-a-Thumb in the children's picture book Struwwelpeter. They function as Orqwith's answers to the Spanish Inquisition, attacking non-fictional entities in the \"real world\". \n\nThe Scissormen are clothed in red and black, and have featureless faces apparently covered in the same material. They speak in a seemingly random series of words when they talk, resembling dada poetry, created by cutting up text and rearranging its constituent words in a random order. Morrison got these suggestions from his word processor's spell check feature. They are shaped like men but when struck hard enough they are defeated and seem to leave nothing but cloth. They were finally destroyed along with Orqwith when the story was destroyed by a contradiction revealed in a solution to a variation on a traditional riddle."@en . . "Orqwith"@en . . "Red"@en . "New Earth"@en . "No"@en .