About: Dynamorph   Sponge Permalink

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Dynamorphs are strange, invisible energy beings that sometimes bond with people. The person then becomes a "Dyna-Host" and acquires super-powers. This bond has been compared to Avatar bonding, but is apparently quite different. It has not been outright stated, but Dynamorphs do not seem to require to 'feed' on energies from their hosts like magical spirits. Dynamorphs aren't magical and, in the words of the Green Witch, they "don't mix very well" with magic. Dynamorphs can be removed.

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  • Dynamorph
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  • Dynamorphs are strange, invisible energy beings that sometimes bond with people. The person then becomes a "Dyna-Host" and acquires super-powers. This bond has been compared to Avatar bonding, but is apparently quite different. It has not been outright stated, but Dynamorphs do not seem to require to 'feed' on energies from their hosts like magical spirits. Dynamorphs aren't magical and, in the words of the Green Witch, they "don't mix very well" with magic. Dynamorphs can be removed.
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abstract
  • Dynamorphs are strange, invisible energy beings that sometimes bond with people. The person then becomes a "Dyna-Host" and acquires super-powers. This bond has been compared to Avatar bonding, but is apparently quite different. It has not been outright stated, but Dynamorphs do not seem to require to 'feed' on energies from their hosts like magical spirits. Dynamorphs aren't magical and, in the words of the Green Witch, they "don't mix very well" with magic. First, while there ARE teenaged Dyna-hosts, they’re pretty scarce. The current theory being that Dynamorphs prefer mature nervous systems to settle into, and they also seem to prefer… dynamic, active, motivated hosts, which is why you hear about superheroes and supervillains being Dyna-hosts, not farmers who use their powers to clear out fields. Also, they’ve noticed that Dyna-hosts who go insane tend to lose control of their Dynamorph, so the hob that hormones play on teenagers’ minds may have something to do with it. Second, from all that I’ve heard, when a person bonds with a Dynamorph, they KNOW about it. Dynamorphs can be removed. It’s rather controversial, but the prevalent Legal Argument is that being a Dyna-host isn’t a natural condition, as being a mutant is, and that people don’t have a right to possess one. A criminal who abuses his power can have the courts order that the Dynamorph be removed. It doesn’t happen a lot, as there are all sorts of legal tricks to keep the authorities from doing it before the super-crook can arrange an escape, but it does happen. It is unknown where they come from, but they seem to be a recent phenomenon. The first identified case of a Dynamorph bonding was in 1934, in Great Britain, with the man Bristol Marvel.
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