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Death note rules wall scroll
Death note rules wall scroll









death note rules wall scroll

For the Death Note to work, a person's name must be written out clearly, spelled correctly, and you must be able to have a clear image of what that person looks like in your head. Also differing from the Death Note is that specificity isn't exactly crucial when singling people out. After somebody is identified, the people in control of the scroll have exactly one hour to save the possible victim, which is much more generous than the Death Note's six minutes and forty seconds. Instead of writing names on it that causes those people to die, the scroll instead tells the holder of people who need to be saved. In a way, it seems to act as a sort of reverse- Death Note. Related: Super Sons: DC Hints at Superboy and Robin's Future - And It's Perfect While its origins remain mostly a mystery, both Robin and Rora mention Vandal Savage, implying that he once owned or was looking for the scroll, and maybe even had a hand in its creation. In the first issue of Challenge of the Super Sons, the superhero duo was sent into the past in the previous issue by a mysterious woman named Rora for an unknown purpose.Īt the start of Challenge of the Super Sons #2, they returned from their travels at the beginning of the second issue, sporting torn black cloaks and holding the mysterious Doom Scroll. The purpose of this scroll, however, is not to kill those whose names are written on it, but to save them instead.

Death note rules wall scroll series#

In the latest adventures of Superboy and Robin, the two heroes came into possession of a scroll that works similarly to the book in the popular manga series Death Note.

death note rules wall scroll

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death note rules wall scroll

WARNING: The following contains spoilers from Challenge of the Super Sons #2 by Peter J.











Death note rules wall scroll