Camp Halfblood - Tumblr Posts
why do i have trolls and hazbin hotel content in my feedđđi never open tumblr and i just started yesterday....how tf do i have these lmao WHERES MY DEMIGOD FELLAS đ đ
Shoutout to Marc Spector for taking the Percy Jackson approach with learning mythology: only learning about stuff when it tries to kill him, and letting his bookworm brother/girlfriend fill in the rest.
we never know about 2005 wonka's mother so I would say he is a demigod of hecate, so it makes sense because of how he's the only capable magical stuff person in a logical, non-fantasy world. and you can't tell me dr. wonka wasn't the one to summon hecate to move his entire house lmao.
the monsters simply avoid him because of how whimsy and unhinged he already looks. also the way he's probably the only one who knows such non-existent places like the loompa land (because that place is in his mother's domain) henceforth mere mortals don't acknowledge, so that's why it never exists in map. and he would run away from camp half blood out of spite after tasting nectar and ambrosia because he wants to make them himself.
okay pardon me I'm just a nerd who loves willy wonka and greek mythology...
hecate as 2005 wonka's mother is actually my roman empire now. let me fw own overactive imagination. oh and the way willy's eyes are purple? (not canon but famously known, drawn and written in the fandom) and the colour has always been associated with sorcery and witchcraft (kinda, idk)
I'm so convinced at this point after willy ran away from home he somehow gets to the camp halfblood and that's the origin of his god complex before he ran away (again) from the only home he has. 2005 willy wonka has never beaten the son of hecate allegation. (I'm sorry I yap too much)
percy, as he arrived at camp jupiter, in his amnesiac era: Hi! im percy. do i know you?
nico, professional gaslighter since the 1940's, sweating bullets: I've never met this man in my life.
[fic] Rewrite the Stars (18/?)
Link: AO3 Pairing: Jason Grace/Nico di Angelo Fandom: Percy Jackson & the Olympians Genre: Romance/Hurt/Comfort. Maybe some action. Summary: The month before Praetor Grace disappeared from Camp Jupiter was the happiest month of Nicoâs life.
Preview:
âWhy is it,â Nico begins, his voice shaking, âwhen anything bad happens in my life that youâre at the center of it?!â
Just finished it holy shit it's amazing I-I'm speechless it's so fucking good the amount of times I've cried and then just burst out laughing the next second it's amazing I literally cannot say anything else
[fic] Rewrite the Stars (18/?)
Link: AO3 Pairing: Jason Grace/Nico di Angelo Fandom: Percy Jackson & the Olympians Genre: Romance/Hurt/Comfort. Maybe some action. Summary: The month before Praetor Grace disappeared from Camp Jupiter was the happiest month of Nicoâs life.
Preview:
âWhy is it,â Nico begins, his voice shaking, âwhen anything bad happens in my life that youâre at the center of it?!â
Ok but counterpoint for Nico: he literally ran away from camp halfblood after bianca died. He bought macdonalds to summon the dead. Yes he knows the price of bread though he won't be able to give a lecture about it like Percy since he became a regular at camp halfblood after HOO series.
demigods who know how much an average loaf of bread from the store costs:
leo â he was between foster homes a lot and often ended up homeless. he knows the cost because he's spent many times counting out the spare change in his pockets and praying he has enough.
percy â he and sally went/still go on grocery trips, and he rants to annabeth if the price goes up. want to know how the economy's doing? ask percy about bread prices.
demigods who do not know how much an average loaf of bread from the store costs:
annabeth â maybe back when she was with luke and thalia, but she's been in camp half-blood for most of her life. bread just appears on a plate in front of her, who is she to question it.
frank â he's a nepo baby.
hazel â she's been dead for 70 years. seeing what the price has been inflated to now may kill her.
jason â he was raised by wolves. lupa does not have time to worry about the inflation rate of bread.
nico â he was cut off from modern society for 70 years.
piper â she's also a nepo baby. and she spent a lot of time shoplifting, so the illusion of cost doesn't apply to her.
See, this is why I always wanted a sequel or a series of what happened with Alabaster after that first story. Cuz it's so interesting to see his point of view on things and it would have been amazing to see him learn and grow and change. Also it would have been interesting to see how he would have been affected by the war with Gaia, even if it's indirectly. I will go on my knees to beg for a series like that.
The Battle of Manhattan didnât go the way the Fandom thinks it did; we need to address the âmassacreâ of the Titan Army!
The Battle of Manhattan is the most pivotal event of the first series. And we see the entire thing exclusively from Percyâs point of view. He takes us through the thickest of the fight from one end of Manhattan Island to the next, and shows us a desperate fight of good against evil.
But we have another point of view for the battle, one that comes from the demigods of the Titan army, and one that informs us of a far different, darker side to the conflict. One where an entire army of children is massacred by the victorious Olympians, without a thought or even a care. Itâs a shocking, confronting side of the struggle that most fans donât seem to be aware of.Â
But itâs also completely inaccurate.Â
Now I love Alabaster; heâs one of my favorite characters, and I want nothing but the best for him. But heâs a demonstrably unreliable narrator. I donât even mean that heâs intentionally dishonest; but heâs very badly misinformed about what actually happened. And that gives the fandom three major misconceptions that need to be cleared up.Â
Alabaster gets the casualty ratio for the battle wrong (the Olympians had more than he thinks).
The Titan army has far fewer demigods than most fans think (not much more than 50 at the most).
Alabaster does say that there was a âmassacreâ at the end of the battle, but most of the TA demigods had deserted before that!
Part 1) The Olympians Have High Casualties
âIt was a massacre. If I remember right, my mother told me that Camp Half-Blood and its allies had sixteen casualties total. We had hundreds.â (pg 219)
This is the only time we get a specific number for Olympian casualties, but it just doesnât match up with what actually happens in the books. Looking back at all the deaths we do see:
Charlie Beckendorf -1
one [Hellhound] got hold of an Apollo camper and dragged him away. I didnât see what happened to him next. I didnât want to know. (pg 182) -1
Michael Yew -1
A young dragon had appeared in Harlem, and a dozen wood nymphs died before the monster was finally defeated. (pg 203) -12
âWe lost twenty satyrs against some giants at Fort Washington,â [Grover] said, his voice trembling. (pg 203) -20 Giants smashed through trees, and naiads faded as their life sources were destroyed. (pg 243) -1< Enemy archers returned fire, and a Hunter fell from a high branch. (pg 244) -1Â Too many of our friends lay wounded in the streets. Too many were missing. (pg 257) -1< The flagpoles were hung with horrible trophies âhelmets and armor pieces from defeated campers. (pg 282) -1< The Drakon lashed out, swallowing three californian centaurs in one gulp before I could even get close. (pg 288) -3 Poison spewed everywhere, melting centaurs into dust along with quite a few monsters, (pg 288) -1< The Drakon snapped up one Ares camper in a gulp. (pg 291) -1
Silena Beauregard -1
Leneus -1
a body covered in the golden burial shroud of Apolloâs cabin. I didnât know who was underneath. I don't want to find out. (pg 303) -1
Oddly enough, we actually miss the moment that was probably the worst for the Olympians, the final push by Kronos that breaks through their line. After Clarisse slays the drakon and the monsters are driven back again, Percy and co. take the opportunity to go up to Olympus. Percy gives Pandoraâs Pithos to Hestia, and then contacts Poseidon via his throne. Itâs just as he finishes that Thalia comes up and tells them that Kronos is coming again, but they miss the fighting.
By the time we got to the street, it was too late. Campers and Hunters lay wounded on the ground. Clarisse must have lost a fight with a Hyperborean giant, because she and her chariot were frozen in a block of ice. The centaurs were nowhere to be seen. Either theyâd panicked and ran, or theyâd been disintegrated. (pg 312) -<500
And finally, Kronos does kill some people on Olympus itself.
A few minor gods and nature spirits had tried to stop Kronos. What remained of them was strewn about the road: shattered armor, ripped clothing, swords and spears broken in half. (pg 322) -1<
The specific deaths we have mentioned during the battle amount to 48 at the very least; and that is an extremely conservative estimate that only includes the deaths Percy has the time and presence of mind to witness in all the carnage. Considering how many others must have happened, factoring the sudden disappearance of the 500 centaurs in particular, it was likely in the hundreds. And most of the centaurs probably ran at the end, but even that would have involved heavy casualties.
Itâs true that actual demigods were a smaller fraction of Olympian forces, and so would have made up just a fraction of losses. The number 16 might actually make sense if it were just the number of campers lost, but thatâs not what Hecate said, she said total.
It might be significant that Hecate is the actual source of this misinformation. Would she have reason to lie to her own son, or might she herself be out of the loop. Right now, we just canât know.Â
And she might be underestimating Titan Army losses too. Considering how many times a wave of several hundred monsters tear into Manhattan, and get thrown back by the Olympians only to return later with no discernable drop in numbers, until the army is finally routed entirely, it wouldnât surprise me if the TA actually took a thousand or more casualties. But those would be overwhelmingly monsters, because:
Part 2) Less Than Fifty Demigods Were Even In The Titan Army
To prove that there could not possibly have been hundreds of TA demigods killed at Manhattan, we need look no farther than Alabaster's own account.
âThere was a war between the gods and titans last summer and most half-bloodsâdemigods like meâfought for the Olympians.â (pg 218)
So the TA could not have had more demigods than the Olympians; and they had about a hundred. There are forty campers to start with, who are quickly joined by the Hunters, who now have thirty members. Then, in the last hours of the fight, they are finally joined by the Ares cabin, which brings another thirty (jeez Ares, you animal!). So Olympus has an even hundred demigods. (The Hunters arenât necessarily all demigods by birth, but I donât think Alabaster would make a distinction based on that.)
So the TA has less than a hundred demigods, significantly less. I would argue they probably had no more than fifty because that lines up with the only solid numbers we ever get for them. And every time the TA is described, demigods are a clear minority. First, look at the foes Percy encounters when he infiltrates the Princess Andromeda:
I saw monsters patrolling the upper decks of the shipâdracaenae snake-women, hellhounds, giants, and the humanoid seal-demons known as telkhines . . . . . âI donât care what your nose says!â snarled a half-human half-dog voiceâa telkhine. âThe last time you smelled half-blood, it turned out to be a meatloaf sandwich!â âMeatloaf sandwiches are good!â a second voice snarled . . . . . a telkhine was hunched over a console . . . . . a half dozen telkhines were tromping down the stairs . . . . . past another telkhine . . . . . And in the fountain squatted a giant crab . . . . . a couple of dracaenae slithered across my path . . . . . As I was running up the stairwell, a kid charged down . . . . . Laistrygonian giants filed in on either side of the swimming pool . . . . . demigod archers appeared on the roof . . . . . two hellhounds leapt down . . . . . The crowed of monsters parted . . . . . Giants jeered. Dracaenae hissed with laughter . . . . . throwing monsters off their feet . . . . .I knew him, of course: Ethan Nakamura . . . . . two giants lumbered forward . . . . . Panicked monsters surged backward . . . . . one of the dracaenae hissed . . . . . I pushed through a crowd of monsters . . . . . Monsters yelled at me from above.
That was a quick summary of all the enemies Percy and Charlie encounter on the Princess Andromeda, Iâm not crazy enough to try and write the whole chapter. But itâs pretty clear there are only a few demigods amid dozens of monsters. We hear the same thing from Poseidon later, that âthere were only a few demigod warriors aboard that shipâ; we might question whether or not Poseidon is a trustworthy source, but the evidence does back him up.
When we finally get to the battle, the disparity of demigod numbers in the TA is again evident:
The bronze image showed Long Island Sound near La Guardia. A fleet of a dozen speed boats raced through the dark water toward Manhattan. Each boat was packed with demigods in full Greek armor. At the back of the lead boat, a purple banner emblazoned with a black scythe flapped in the night wind. Iâd never seen that design before, but it wasnât hard to figure out: the battle flag of Kronos. âScan the perimeter of the island,â I said. âQuick.â Annabeth shifted the scene south to the harbor. A Staten Island Ferry was plowing through the waves near Ellis Island. The deck was crowded with dracaenae and a whole pack of hellhounds. Swimming in front of the ship was a pod of marine mammals. At first I thought they were dolphins. Then I saw their doglike faces and swords strapped to their waists, and I realized they were telkhinesâsea demons. The scene shifted again: the Jersey shore, right at the entrance of the Lincoln Tunnel. A hundred assorted monsters were marching past the lanes of stopped traffic: giants with clubs, rogue Cyclopes, a few fire-spitting dragons, and just to rub it in, a World War II-era Sherman tank, pushing cars out of the way as it rumbled into the tunnel. (pg 167)
Here we see the first wave of the Titan Army as a three pronged attack (which Percy says on the next page collectively numbered at least 300) and only one of the units has demigods. Itâs the one that Kronos leads, so itâs probably meant to be a more elite unit, at least at first.Â
We donât know for sure how many there are. Speedboats are usually made to carry 4-6 people so a dozen would be possible 48 to 72. Considering Alabaster says there were significantly less demigods in the TA than the Olympians, I would guess itâs on the lower end; and that does match another number we see in a moment.
This fleet never reaches Manhattan, since Percy bribes the East River to swamp their boats. Those who say many TA demigods were killed in the battle might point to this as Percy causing a bunch of kids to drown; but Alabaster never mentions a mass drowning in his narrative of the battle, and he would have been on one of those boats, so itâs safe to say they just went for a swim.
(And Kronos was with them, which means that a very angry titan lord was suddenly pitched into the river and had to swim with the rest of them. Thatâs not really relevant, I just want everyone to know that.)
Percy is then immediately told that âAnother army is marching over the Williamsburg bridge.â This fourth prong of the attack, led by the Minotaur, also has no demigods in it.
An entire phalanx of dracaenae marched in the lead . . . About a hundred more monsters marched behind them. (pg 182) More monsters surged forward âsnakes and giants and telkinesâbut the Minotaur roared at them, and they backed off. (pg 186)
But more monsters keep advancing because by the time Percy kills the minotaur and the demigods charge and rout the whole group, it had grown to 200
Finally, the monsters turned and fledâabout twenty left alive out of two hundred. (pg 188)
So the grand total for the first TA attack was 500 soldiers or more, with only 40-70 of them demigods. And after the monsters on the Williamsburg bridge retreat, those demigods show back up.
Then I saw the crowd at the base of the bridge. The retreating monsters were running straight toward their reinforcements. It was a small group, maybe thirty or forty demigods in battle armor, mounted on skeletal horses. One of them held a purple banner with the black scythe design. The lead horseman trotted forward. He took off his helm, and I recognized Kronos himself, his eyes like molten gold. (pg1 188)
This is the only time we get anywhere close to a specific number when TA demigods are concerned. It would have been the same group that was sunk in the East River, who then had to swim for Brooklynn; which is where they are now trying to take the Williamsburg bridge. This reinforces the idea that the number of demigods in the boats was only a little more than forty, since they would not have suffered more than a few injuries in the sinkings.
Iâm going to come back to this moment later to demonstrate how Percy refrains from killing other demigods, even in his Achilles state, but the other important thing to note is that this is the last time Kronos organizes his demigods into a unit that he leads personally. After they fail to break through here, Kronos just has them take on a secondary role, and puts his faith in bigger and bigger monsters to lead the charge instead.
The Titan Army units on Long Island then spend the evening marching the long way around Manhattan (for some reason) because they make camp for the night in New Jersey, at Medusaâs old lair. Percy again describes demigods as the small minority.
Hundreds of tents and fires surrounded the property. Mostly I saw monsters, but there were some human mercenaries in combat fatigues and demigods in armor too. A purple-and-black banner hung outside the emporium, guarded by two huge blue Hyperboreans.
And this is only part of the Titan army, because there are more troops north of Manhattan.Â
âTell my brother Hyperion to move our main force south into Central Park. The halfbloods will be in such disarray they will not be able to defend themselves.â (pg 237)
The army that marches into central park is bigger than the one camped in New Jersey. And it is made up exclusively of monsters.Â
At the north end of the reservoir, the enemy vanguard broke through the woodsâa warrior in golden armor leading a battalion of Laistrygonian giants with huge bronze axes. Hundreds of other monsters poured out behind them. (pg 243)
There is not a single mention of a demigod. However theyâre already joining the fight in other places.Â
When it flew above the rooftops, I could see fires here and there around the city. It looked like my friends were having a rough time. Kronos was attacking on several fronts. (pg 251)Â Â
After Percy kills the Clazmonian Sow, the momentum of the battle shifts. With his main force failing to deliver a knockout punch, Kronos has his remaining armies spread out to put equal pressure on the entire defensive line, and catch it in a massive envelopment.
Midtown was a war zone. We flew over little skirmishes everywhere. A giant was ripping up trees in Bryant Park while dryads pelted him with nuts. Outside the Waldorf Astoria, a bronze statue of Benjamin Franklin was whacking a hellhound with a rolled-up newspaper. A trio of Hephaestus campers fought a squad of dracaenae in the middle of Rockefeller Center . . . . . The hunters had set up a defensive line on 37th, just three blocks north of Olympus. To the east on Park Avenue, Jake Mason and some other Hephaestus campers were leading an army of statues against the enemy. To the west, the Demeter cabin and Groverâs nature spirits had turned Sixth Avenue into a jungle that was hampering a squadron of Kronosâs demigods . . . . . I spotted a familiar silver owl banner in the southeast corner of the fight, 33rd at the Park Avenue tunnel. Annabeth and two of her siblings were holding back a Hyperborean giant . . . . . The next hour was a blur. I fought like Iâd never fought beforeâwading into legions of dracaenae, taking out dozens of telkines with every strike, destroying empousai and knocking out enemy demigods . . . . . At one point Grover was next to me, bonking snake women over the head with his cudgel. Then he disappeared in the crowd, and it was Thalia at my side, driving monsters back with the power of her magic shield. Mrs. OâLeary bounded out of nowhere, picked up a Laistrygonian giant in her mouth and flung him like a Frisbee. Annabeth used her invisibility cap to sneak behind enemy lines. Whenever a monster disintegrated for no apparent reason with a surprised look on his face, I knew Annabeth had been there . . . . . Kronos was riding towards us on a golden chariot. A dozen Laistrygonian giants bore torches before him. Two Hyperboreans carried his black-and-purple banners . . .
âTHEN THE WINGED HUSSAARSSS AARRRIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIVVVVVVEDâ SABATON BLASTS ON ELECTRIC GUITAR
 Sorry, sorry, I mean then Chiron and the 500 centaurs arrived!
Kronosâs forces looked as confused as we were. Giants lowered their clubs. Dracaenae hissed. Even Kronosâs honor guard looked uneasy. Then, to our left, a hundred monsters cried out at once. Kronosâs entire northern flank surged forward. I thought we were doomed, but they didnât attack. They ran straight past us and crashed into their southern allies . . . a shower of arrows arced over our heads and slammed into the enemy, vaporizing hundreds of demons. (pg 258)
This is how the second phase of the battle ends. And during the entire night, out of a sea of monsters (hehe) we only see one unit of TA demigods. And itâs the last time we get any reference to them participating in the battle.
After being driven south, the TA apparently did another long march, because they make camp northeast of Manhattan.
The Titan army had set up camp all around the U.N. complex. The flagpoles were hung with horrible trophiesâhelmets and armor from defeated campers. All along First Avenue, giants sharpened their axes. Telkines repaired armor at makeshift forges. (pg 282)
Ethan is the only demigod mentioned this time. And he doesnât appear to take part in the next attack, aside from releasing the drakon. We get less of a description of the enemy army this time, but itâs all monsters.
The rest of the battle wasnât going well. The centaurs had panicked under the onslaught of giants and demons. An occasional orange camp T-shirt appeared in the sea of fighting, but quickly disappeared. (pg 289)
Of course the Ares cabin arrives, the drakon kills Silena, and Clarisse kills it. Itâs another rout for the TA.
The monsters retreated toward 35th Street. (pg 298) There was no answer from the enemy. Slowly, they began to fall back behind a dracaenae shield wall, while Clarisse drove in circles around Fifth Avenue, daring anyone to cross her path. (pg 299)
After that we have the final phase of the battle, when the Titan Army finally breaks through the Olympian lines. But once again, we have no reference to demigods other than Ethan.
The Titan Army ringed the building, standing maybe twenty feet from the doors. Kronosâs vanguard was in the lead: Ethan Nakamura, the dracaenae queen in her green armor, and two Hyperboreans. I didnât see Prometheus. (pg 312) âROWWF!â Mrs. OâLeary bounded toward me, ignoring the growling monsters on either side. (pg 315) There were thousands of [skeletan soldiers], and as they emerged, the titanâs monsters got jumpy and started to back up. (pg 315)Â Â Â Â The armies of the dead clashed with the Titanâs monsters. Fifth Avenue exploded into absolute chaos. Mortals screamed and ran for cover. Demeter waved her hand and an entire column of giants turned into a wheat field. Persephone changed the dracaenae spears into sunflowers. Nico slashed and hacked his way through the enemy, trying to protect pedestrians as best as he could. My parents ran toward me , dodging monsters and zombies, but there was nothing I could do to help them. (pg 318).
The fight continues like this, until Typhon is destroyed, and the defenders are joined by the gods, and Poseidonâs army of cyclopes. Itâs then that the Titan army is âmassacred.â Most of the fandom thinks that the demigods were killed too, but thatâs not the case.
PART 3: The TA Demigods Deserted Before The Final Battle
As Alabaster remembers it:
the war didnât go our way. I fought on the battlefield against the enemy, but most of our allies ran. Kronos himself marched on Olympus, only to be killed by a son of Poseidon. After Kronosâs death, the Olympian gods smashed any remaining resistance. It was a massacre. âWe werenât all destroyed,â Alabaster said. âMost of the remaining half-bloods fled or were captured. They were so demoralized they joined the enemy. (pg 219)
When you look at this narrative, and compare it to The Last Olympian, itâs actually more complicated than the TA demigods simply getting massacred.
Al says that while he was fighting, most of his allies ran. Thatâs odd, because we donât see the relative numbers of monsters go down at any point. What we do see, is the number of demigods go down.
As I illustrated in Part 2, the Battle of Manhattan has four distinct phases. Phase one, that ends when the Williamsburg Bridge is destroyed. The second phase, that starts when Hyperion attacks Central Park, and ends when the Party Ponies arrive. The third phase, which is all about the attack of the drakon. And the final phase, when Kronos breaks through.
We only see TA demigods in the first two phases; they attack the Williamsburg Bridge in the first phase as part of the Kronosâs main force, then in the second phase theyâre relegated to a supporting role by hitting the defenders western flank. And thatâs the last we see of them. After that, Etahn is the only demigod left standing in the TA. Alabaster must be somewhere in the background, as a retcon, but thereâs no one beyond the two of them.
You might think that theyâve just already been killed by this point. After all, Percy blows up the Princess Andromeda, then goes into an Achilles Curse fueled berserker mode several times in the first two phases of the battle. Surely he must have killed hundreds of kids, right?
No, not even close.
Maybe not any at all.
On the Princess Andromeda Percy finds lots of monsters, but the number of demigods he finds could be counted on one hand. And the first one he meets; Percy spares him and tells him to get his friends and evacuate. We canât prove whether or not any demigods were killed in the blast; we just know that the two we can confirm were still on board, Ethan and Alabaster, both survived. And when Alabaster recounts it, he doesnât mention any bad losses at this point.
As for the Curse of Achilles, it doesnât send Percy into anything like the berserker state some people think of it as. It might seem like that when Percy lets loose on the Williamsburg Bridge:
Youâre going to ask how the whole âinvincibleâ thing worked: if I magically dodged every weapon, or if the weapon hit me and just didnât harm me. Honestly, I donât remember. All I knew was that I wasnât going to let these monsters invade my hometown. I sliced through armor like it was made of paper. Snake women exploded. Hellhounds melted to shadow. I slashed and stabbed and whirled, and I might have even laughed once or twiceâa crazy laugh that scared me as much as it did my enemies. (pg 188)
But when push comes to shove, Percy can control the Curse, and what he does during it. That last moment was when he was fighting nothing but monsters. But when the TA demigods arrived, Percy pulled his punches like he always does.
I tried to wound his men, not kill. That slowed me down, but these werenât monsters. They were demigods whoâd fallen under Kronosâs spell. I couldnât see faces under their helmets, but some of them had probably been my friends. I slashed the legs off their horses and made the skeletal mounts disintegrate. After the first few demigods took a spill, the rest figured out theyâd better dismount and fight me on foot. (pg 189)
Percy is still in complete control of what heâs doing; even when the worst happens.
âAnnabeth!â I turned in time to see her fall, clutching her arm. A demigod with a bloody knife stood over her . . . . . I locked eyes with the enemy demigod. He wore an eye patch under his helmet: Ethan Nakamura, the son of Nemesis. Somehow heâd survived the explosion on the Princess Andromeda. I slammed him in the face with my sword hilt so hard I dented his helm. (pg 190)
Percy really has all the reason to hate Ethan at this point; after Percy spared his life in Antaeusâ arena, Ethan still joined the side that had been ready to write off his death, and deliberately helped Kronos achieve his physical resurrection. Because of that Percyâs friends and even-Riordan-doesnât-know how many mortals are going to die in the next few days; and on top of all that, Ethan just stabbed the love of his life.
And all Percy does is knock him out, maybe a little harder than necessary. He makes no effort to kill him. Those arenât the actions of a berserker with no control.
In fact, the knife turns out to be poisonsed. And Ethan now has an idea where Percyâs Achilles Spot is, and might tell Kronos. And even after all of that, Percy doesnât seriously think about killing him as an option.
âIâll bonk him on the head harder next time.â (pg 241)
But more on topic, there is no reason to think the TA demigods have particularly high casualties in this phase of the battle, though they have a few:
Our archers shot a volley, bringing down several of the enemy, but they just kept riding. (pg 189)
Though itâs vague if they are hitting the riders or the horses. In fact, it might actually be Kronos whoâs responsible for more of their losses.
[Kronos] struck the bridge with the butt of his scythe, and a wave of pure force blasted me backward. Cars went careening. Demigodsâeven Lukeâs own menâwere blown off the edge of the bridge. (pg 192)
I will die on the hill that between this, Ethan, and other implied moments, Kronos killed more of his own demigods than Percy did.
In the second phase of the battle, when we see the TA demigods attack again, theyâre in a very different situation.
To the west, the Demeter cabin and Groverâs nature spirits had turned Sixth Avenue into a jungle that was hampering a squadron of Kronosâs demigods. (pg 255)
This is the only thing we see the TA demigods do as a group in this phase; and theyâre fighting people who are using very defensive tactics, more hampering than harmful. Theyâre not likely to lose many fighters. A few of them do cross Percyâs path in the chaos, but even at his most Achilles fueled chaos he never loses control.
The next hour was a blur. I fought like Iâd never fought beforeâwading into legions of dracaenae, taking out dozens of telkines with every strike, destroying empousai and knocking out enemy demigods. (pg 257)
He talks about killing monsters, but always âknocking outâ demigods. Finally, that phase of the battle ends when the centaurs show up. Did the centaurs kill any demigods? After all, Percy said they âtrampled everything in their path.â
Well the only report we get on the TA demigods puts them to the west. When the centaurs attack, they come out of the north east and drive the enemy south, and start off a wave of panic that ripples down the enemy lines ahead of them. The demigods were probably running before any centaur reached them, and might have had better chances of being trampled by their own monsters.
So if the TA demigods arenât taking many losses, where do they all go in the third and fourth phases, when we donât see any except Ethan?
They desert.Â
Alabaster: âI fought on the battlefield against the enemy, but most of our allies ran.â
I think the demigods of the TA signed up with no real idea of what would happen when they fought the Olympians. They thought they were going to have a sure victory.Â
Chris Rodriguez said it in SOM:
âI hear they got two more [drakon] coming,â [Chris] said. âThey keep arriving at this rate, oh, manâno contest!â (pg 122)
Alabaster C. Torrington said it in SOM:
âKronos wasnât supposed to lose! You said the odds of winning were in the Titanâs favor! You told me Camp Half-Blood would be destroyed!â (pg 196)
And they probably werenât well prepared for the war either. At one point Luke says they will fight well because he has been training the army. But most of them join because they are the children of minor gods who swear for Kronos, and that doesnât happen until the end of BOTL, after Luke has been possessed. Most of the TA demigods never got training from him; including their two highest ranking members, Ethan and Alabaster. Itâs no wonder most of them werenât prepared.
As I was running up the stairwell, a kid charged down. He looked like he had just woken up from a nap. His armor was half on. He drew his sword and yelled, âKronos!â but he sounded more scared than angry . . . . No way was I going to hurt him. I didnât need a weapon for this. I stepped inside his strike and grabbed his wrist, slamming it against the wall. His sword clattered out of his hand. (pg 18)
And the demigods might not hold much loyalty to Kronos, a violent and temperamental eldritch horror!
Ethan moistened his lips. âHeâs still fighting you, isnât he? Lukeââ âNonesense,â Kronos spat. âRepeat that lie, and I will cut out your tongue. The boyâs soul has been crushed.â (pg 236) âBut, my lord,â Ethan said. âYour regeneration.â Kronos pointed at Ethan, and the demigod froze. âDoes it seem,â Kronos hissed. âthat I need to regenerate?â Ethan didnât respond. Kind of hard to do when youâre immobilized in time. Kronos snapped his fingers and Ethan collapsed. (pg 284)
And the demigods might have witnessed a darker side to his army that we didnât.
Back on my first visit to the Princess Andromeda, my old enemy Luke had kept dazed tourists on board for show, shrouded in Mist so they didnât realize they were on a monster infested ship. Now i didnât see any sign of tourists. I hated to think what had happened to them, but I kind of doubted theyâd been allowed to go home with their bingo winnings. (pg 15)
So, the demigods deserted. After the second phase of the battle we donât see any at the Titan camp at the U.N., or taking any part in the last phases of the battle. They had been fed false promises, were treated badly, and were being sent against enemies out of their league.
âMost of the remaining half-bloods fled or were captured. They were so demoralized they joined the enemy.â
All except two, Alabaster and Ethan. The son of Nemesis, who has already given so much and is so desperate to see something good and fair come out of it; and the son of Hecate, who was promised victory, and is desperate to avenge the death of his siblings. Ironically, the two demigods who stayed loyal to Kronos the longest, did so because they had faith in their godly parents.
So if there was no âmassacreâ of TA demigods at the end of the Battle of Manhattan, why is Alabaster so insistent that there was one?Â
âYes,â Alabaster said bitterly. âCamp Half-Blood decided that they would accept any children of the minor gods. They would build us cabins at camp and pretend that they didnât just blindly massacre us for resisting. (pg 220) âBut Iâll never bow to the Olympian gods after the atrocities they committed. Their followers are blind. Iâd never set foot in their camp, and if I did, it would only be to give that son of Poseidon what he deserves.â (pg 221)
Well, itâs because the children of Hecate suffered the most in the war. She didnât have as many children as other gods, and Alabaster was the only one to fight in it and survive. He claims he convinced âmostâ of his siblings to join; but if Hecate does not have many children, and he is the only survivor of the battle, how are there still enough of his siblings to decently fill a cabin, itâs likely âmostâ was only slightly more than half. The sad irony is that the fact that the smaller group of demigods had more casualties than the larger ones (and it sounds like not just more proportionately, but more in actual numbers), also kind of disproves that there could have been a large massacre that affected them all.
Alabaster was a scared, frustrated, exhausted kid; who convinced his siblings to fight in a destructive war, and was the only one of them to survive. To him, that is probably always going to feel like a brutal massacre.
Seriously whose idea was it or camp half-bloodâs colour to be orange. The reason orange is used in marketing or uniforms is for them to stand out and catch your eye, which in a quest is not ideal especially if you're trying to hide from both monsters and mortals who may question why these beat-up-looking kids are wearing matching bright camp shirts without an adult present. Does no one here know colour theory.
Does anyone have any song reccs for CHB capture the flag games?
One of the few songs i have is
Burn the house down AJR
16 shots
Him and I
Sucker for you Jonas Brothers etc
You guys have any reccs?

All was golden when the day met the night
When the Day Met the Night, Panic! at the Disco
Happy Lightning Thief Day!!! Percy Jackson show is finally here!!! Hereâs a doodle of Camp Half Blood and a link to a Percy Jackson Zine I was in this summer to celebrate!!!
Percy: So, who are your guys godly parents? Horus? Isis?
Carter: Oh, no, we're not actually demigods!
Sadie: Just magicians!
*Suddenly, all of the campers pop out of nowhere, dressed in Hogwarts uniforms and screaming random quotes*
Percy: TEN POINTS FOR GRYFFINDOR!!!
Annabeth: YOU'RE A WIZARD, SADIE!!!
Carter: WHAT THE UNDERWORLD?!?
Sadie: Jesus CHrist, you guys!...My father shall hear about this! HAHAHAHA!!!!
*They all laugh while Carter looks confused*
How Percy Jackson Should Have Ended:
Percy: OKAY, everyone! We have to prepare to fight Kronos using our strength, swords, and ancient Greek-themed weaponry!
Campers: YEAH!!!
Annabeth: Wait, why don't we just use the celestial bronze bullets we used at Mount Othrys?
Percy: That...that would actually make a lot of sense.
*An hour later, the campers quickly plow down the forces of Kronos using the celestial bronze bullets*
*At the Superhero Cafe*
Percy: And so, we took down Kronos before he could put himself in Luke's body, sent Luke to be imprisoned at Mt Olympus, and everything went great!
Superman: Well, that was totally easy.
Batman: Yeah, but don't you think by easily defeating these guys, you, in a way, inadvertently prevented some actually good things from happening.
Superman: Like maybe, meeting some other demigods, guys from other pantheons?
Percy: Who knows, dude? I mean, everything went perfectly!
Silena: Yeah, some of us could have died!
It's Back!
Walt: Osiris is the best ruler of the Underworld.
Alex: Nah, I think Hel is the best one.
*Nico & Hazel pop out of nowhere*
Nico & Hazel: VIVA LA PLUTO!!! FUCK YOU!!!
The world of Tumblr wasnât always the most peaceful of places. Ship wars destroyed much of the land and the random hearts and double-arrows popping up in the sky could get a bit distracting. But most of the fandoms were able to get along peacefully, most staying in their respective districts/ factions /camps.
Wizards & half-bloods patrolled the districts under the leadership of Admiral Holmes, making sure everything was going well and making sure that the demons, cannibalistic doctors, & makeup-wearing aristocrats stay in place.
 Each day, grand ceremonies were held by the people of the blogs in prayer to the Gallifreyan God of the Tardis as Supreme Princess Dean Winchester oversaw it all on his floating Chevy Impala.
I just realized that the Kanes are approximately 3 to 4 years younger than Percy and his friends. Percy was sixteen during the attack on Manhattan and Sadie said that she was twelve during the events of the Red Pyramid, which took place a year or less apart based on the release dates of the books.
This has got me thinking that Percy and his buddies have this cute older-sibling relationship with the Kanes, teasing them, helping them out with their personal issues with some elderly knowledge, tutoring them with class, all sorts of things that big brothers/sisters do.
Plus, Magnus would be three years younger than the Kanes as well! I could see them enjoying being older than another pantheonâs hero for once!
You ever think about the fact that CHB is just a quirky orphanage run by a horse and an alcoholic sentenced to a century long rehab for adrenaline junkies?

Reading Blood of Olympus