- Love_Everyone : Always jack off before posting.
- Lv999_Lich_King : She's perfect. Someone bite award me so I can comment that she's perfect here
- Maximus :
- Aevann : i gotcha fam
- Goomble : no chastity cage
- luxuriouscinnamon : The jihad will not spare any weebs
- QuadNarca : This is the first ever time I downvote Aevann. Shame! Worst post I saw today.
- Jew : this is NOT mavis
- ForgotMyPasswordAgain : remember when you banned the porn hole
- DeepKeepShill : Aevann, you're better than this. Also haram.
- kaamrev :
- FamilyGuyShill : porn = funny
- Horned_waifus_shill : I love futanari
- box : ENOUGH FROM THE CLOWN
- rDramaHistorian : 3 BIPOCs even saved this post. What is wrong with you guys?
- KangThaConquered : i saved it to use against jannies later on and no other reason
- Konggles : 🐴
- 9 : not mavis, contains peepee
- Holly_Jolly_Kong : FRICK I LOVE PEEPEE SO MUCH.
- myshitpostalt : least homoerotic vampire
- Enoby : Degenerate behavior
- 0 : She doesn't have a peepee
- khaoskong664 : wtf 7mo ago
- Holly_Jolly_Kong : Brb gonna kms
- KissingerFanBoyNoCarp : You could have used an alt and kept founder status.
- pH : Heh. You really think it's over? You'll pay. You'll all pay.
- Sphereserf3232 : I don't understand what's going on
- Cyberstalker : h/edgy has become An Hero due to neglect by it's parents
- Goomble :
- Retard : Absolute KING shit
- rDramaHistorian : The edgecels fear the spherechad
- Bruhfunny_Thrall : kill mavis
- HugeKongson : I used to be neutral on you, now I say death to all vampires heh
- TotalDonkeyEnjoyer : house femboy 🤝 house vampire
- FreedomforIsrael : It's literally just porn
- Maximus :
- molch : This is Marvin
- of_blood_and_salt : fukken saved
- USCENTCOM : Why is there so much
- 1378 :
- DooDooKong :
- WoodBerryAndNut : Mavis is a pure maiden. Delete this
- AndreaDoria : strags ruin everything
- Geralt_of_Uganda : It's just porn. Not even marked 18+
- Holly_Jolly_Kong : I fricking love this guy
- THOMAS : Thank you for sharing!
- pH : erm... haha lol
- Horned_waifus_shill : he posted this after I got unvampired so I cant unleash the full power of mavis futa, fricking jewish chad
- 12
- 27
Hey Carp, is this what you wanted? Huh huh huH? I expect nothing less than pinned for the rest of the day
Anyway, I went through all 2000+ images of Mavis on rule34.xxx. 95% of it was garbage. Seriously there's more good hentai looking at a single decent artist than in this entire category. So here's some (but not all) of the top Mavis porn with partialness to just her and no s*x.
- LiterallyShaking : it's not pedophilia, she's a 114 year old vampire
- Goomble : House Racist for life!
- Modern_Major_Jefferal : I have a lot of coins, whats in it for me?
- MayflyAlt-98 : Porn addiction
- DWHITE___________DYNAMITE :
- THOMAS : UwU Supremacists Unite
- HeyMoon : vampstrag cringe
- conspiracy_theorist : :ugly tongue:
- CREAMY_DOG_ORGASM : How old is this character
- SIMPSONIANTHIELITEDOOMER : 118
- King_K_Rool :
- blazedraper : Futanari not tagged NSFW
- 75
- 67
- BimothyX2 : I'm bimothy hello
- DeepKeepShill : Emos belong to House Edgy.
- Lappland : Poser
- CREAMY_DOG_ORGASM : Come back to house furry also buy me an unban award please
- Soren : Ungrass me b-word
- Goomble : Join House Racist next
- ThreeLetterAgent : frick carp
- EskomSePoesOfficial : Top 10 anime betrayals
- MarseyIsMyWaifu :
- peepeehands : now this is autism
- SexyFartMan69 : Mavis x Carrot Top ITT
- ContinentalBussy : Jewdank level bad
- 2shy : Do Jinx next
- Dramacel : Foid nonsense
- Shellshock : Almost time for Halloween don’t come to my house or else I’ll suck your peepee—blood, I’ll suck your b
- 16
- 68
They went on vacation to Japan!
They sang karaoke. ____________________________________ and went hiking
Here she is jogging in the evening _____________Random picture from before they left
They went out to eat _________________________ Then they used the hot spring
She actually gave him a rose autonomously Here's a selfie with her dad after they got back
They also learned how to ski but I forgot to take pictures
Hope you enjoy, vampies! (vampire besties)
I stole the Dracula sim off the gallery but I made Johnny and Mavis :)
- box : brapathianflorist
- RICHARD_NIXON_IS_GOD : Print more coins and do it again tmrw so nobody gets the house edgy founder
- SIMPSONIANTHIELITEDOOMER : brap (that's box brapified)
- AIDS_IS_A_CHOICE : what the frick is an Ylvanian Florist?
- FormerLurKONG : So now is the time to join house edgy?
- Dbol_Debbie : VIGGAS KEEP LOSING
- 60
- 84
IT DOES NOT.
- BazballShill : bite me, you hoe
- Lv999_Lich_King : You will never be a Mavis. You have no vampire fangs, you have no cute haircut, you have no hotel.
- 33
- 34
I have left Furry to become a Vampire and I will bite every single false house member in perpetuity.
Donations are needed and will be allocated entirely to the cause.
Report the unbitten edgecels here.
UPDATE: I have thrice bitten every poster in this thread: https://rdrama.net/h/edgy/post/182424/shadowrage
You should as well.
IF EVERY EDGY MEMBER IS BITTEN THEIR HOLE WILL DIE IN 7 DAYS FROM INACTIVITY SINCE NO ONE CAN POST THERE
- 46
- 53
As promised! I got the wedding and vacation each for around 30 usd and the bat mavis for about 60 usd. I had these before joining rdrama btw lol.
Feel free to bully lol
- DKWasRightAboutKremlings : Wow you used an eraser, do you want a sticker? Just let the hole die ty
- Horned_waifus_shill : i want to live a happy life with Mavis
- birdenthusiast : This hole can’t die. Vampire are undead
- 9
- 60
- peepeehands : /h/shrekdickdimension
- 1378 : porn = funny
- Lv999_Lich_King : God I miss [h/shrekdickdimension] so much...
- transgirltradwife : Mavis looks like a 12 year old
- SIMPSONIANTHIELITEDOOMER : I should have won https://rdrama.net/post/182111/this-is-mavis
- Stoicpeace : Vampires are no longer scary and they have never been "hot". Goth aesthetic is cringe.
- HeyMoon : vampstrag cringe
- 10
- 50
The winner of this week’s /h/vampire post contest is @ComfyQueen_Posting and their post Types of Vampires: Lilith I really enjoyed their deep dive.
Good job! I’m too lazy to paste this into GPT to rewrite this post in a more gothic vibe so you’ll have to take this gif instead.
Love you bloodsuckers! Wear lots of sunscreen for these last few days of June.
- antiracist_tulpa : >tfw no vampire bf
- KissingerFanBoyNoCarp : First good h/vampire post ever.
- peepeehands : this is Mavis
- free_palestine : lost opportunity to make her look like Mavis
- N : I CAN'T COMMENT BECAUSE I'M NOT IN HOUSE VAMPIRE nice art btw
- Gotchfutchian : would
- 8
- 77
Pretty sure I'm missing stuff but eh, whatevs
Edit: probably gonna repost this later, I noticed some things I want to fix including part of her right leg is missing lol
- Penny : who is she 👀
- birdenthusiast : Vampire baddie 🧛♀️
- DKWasRightAboutKremlings : Where's her tits
- FamilyGuyShill : haha Jonathan you are banging my daughter
- FukinSukinCukin : That's a man
- King_K_Rool : why do they look r-slurred?
- Certifiedcarpussyoperator : Jannie abuse to ressurect a house
- JohnnyBOO : It's literally a contest
- Dramacel : who the frick is mavis??
- Lv999_Lich_King : Mavis is my waifu
- Guzzy :
- ACA : Mavis is an underage goth girl who voooompires fetishize
- Downie : Isn't Mavis married?
- birdenthusiast : Who moved this out it back in /h/vampire also Mavis is an adult smh
- antiracist_tulpa : TOTAL VAMPIRE DEATH
- Lv999_Lich_King : Queen of the Darned
- ReKonger0 : I made a good case for The Last Man on Earth before I saw what hole this is, frick you
- Lappland : Lost boys is good.
- H : You forgot Only Lovers Left Alive and the entire Twilight Series, idiot
- 15
- 44
Here's a list of 8 quintessential vampire kinos that all children of the night must watch ASAP.
If you watch 1 a week you'll be finished in time for Halloween
1. Nosferatu (1922)
The OG. Ostensibly not about Dracula, but everyone knows that was just to avoid copyright. Great flick, even if it portrays vampires as ugly (untrue).
2. Dracula (1931)
Bela Lugosi is the definitive vampire to this day. His facial expressions and line deliveries are delicious.
3. Horror of Dracula (1958)
Christopher Lee as the first overtly sexy Dracula. This film's success spawned many sequels, where Lee often refused to speak because the scripts were so bad.
4. Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992)
Count Chadula moves to London and slays mad amounts of puss, cucking like 4 guys until they hire Van Helsing to stop him. He even fricks one girl in a graveyard while in his monsterous hairy form. A flawed masterpiece.
5. Interview with the Vampire (1994)
Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt are gay vampire lovers, and they have a vampire daughter together. Very progressive. It all ends in tragedy, of course.
6. From Dusk till Dawn (1996)
Quentin Tarentino plays himself (a creepy pervert). Also Salma Hayek humina humina humina awooooga boi-oi-oi-oi-oing
7. Blade (1998)
The first black superhero. He's half man, half vampire. And like all mutts, he's self-hating - so he hunts down vampires for a living. Has one of the most memorable opening scenes of any movie ever.
8. Van Helsing (2004)
Slopkino. Dracula isn't that memorable a villain, but his 3 brides are. Critics hated it, which means you know it's good.
What kinos should be added to the list? Answer below.
- Ninjjer :
- 17
- 13
- Maximus :
- peepeehands : mommy
- King-Krazy : where penid
- Gato : That's a man.
- 5
- 35
I stop using Brave for a couple of days and now this shows up in my Instagram suggestions
- Modern_Major_Jefferal : ALUCARD REEER
- LankyKongickle : Emiel Regis Rohellec Terzieff-Godefroy
- FunkyKong : This is elder scrolls erasure !nwahs
- DeepKeepShill : Andrei from VTMB
- 24
- 18
- birdenthusiast : Winner of /h/vampire contest pls don’t unpin 🥺
- 11
- 18
Congratulations vampiricels You made it to another week, and to another essay post from the greatest of all rDrama Houses
Lilith is a being from Hebrew mythology with a rather multilayered history. While it’s a bit of an oversimplification to just call her a vampire, Lilith’s mythology heavily overlaps with vampires in the way that demons and succubi overlap with vampires, and she has long been associated with blood sucking.
EARLIEST LEGENDS:
As mentioned in my previous House Vampire post, most of the mythology associated with modern vampires originated in early modern south and eastern Europe. However, the idea of a blood or at least life force draining being of undead or demonic origin has independently emerged across cultures and time periods. Even the ancient Mesopotamians and pre-Jewish Israelites had mythological beings that can be retroactively thought of as vampire esque.
Mesopotamia is a historic term for a region of the Middle East mostly encompassed by modern day Iraq and Syria. The history of the region is essentially a history of recorded civilization, as the fertile land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers gave rise to some of the earliest known agricultural societies. The ancient Sumerians in particular represent the arguable start of continuous western history, and what I mean here is that actual Sumerian records have survived into the present day. Their language is still known and their mythological influences remain in literary studies. The same is true of their immediate successors; the Akkadians, the Babylonians, the Assyrians, etc.
In other words, Sumer represents the start of when firsthand accounts of the past remain preserved and knowable into the present day. While agricultural civilizations may have existed before Sumer, and while there’s evidence for particular cultures going back into the Ice Age, anything before Mesopotamia’s time is only known through archaeology. We can only guess as to what those people thought of themselves.
Though it’s disputed by mainstream academics, some believe Lilith’s earliest legends go back to Sumerian culture, which means we Vampires may be as old as society itself Samuel Noah Kramer, an academic on Sumer and Assyria, translated the ki-sikil-lil-la-ke as "Lilith" in Tablet XII of the Epic of Gilgamesh dated c. 600 BC. This part of the Epic involves a tree that is overtaken by a serpent and a spirit before Gilgamesh kills the serpent and causes the spirit to flee. The parallel to the Biblical garden of Eden is clear, though not all experts agree on a direct connection.
At the very least, Sumerian culture produced the Edimmu, reanimated ghosts of the improperly buried who drained the life force of their victims. These beings are obviously reminiscent of vampires, but that may be a post for a later day. Sumerian and Akkadian mythology also has the Lilu as a kind of winged demon, with Lilitu as the feminine term.
BABYLON AND THE ANCIENT HEBREWS
Though the Sumerian cities were eventually conquered and lost their political independence, the abstract culture remained relevant in the Middle East for several thousand years. The educated elite of the successor civilizations studied their mythology and language much in the way that medieval nobles would learn about Latin and Greco-Roman legends. Babylon was one such empire, and though they were only one of the Bronze Age powers to dominate the Fertile Crescent, Babylon became particularly infamous in history thanks to later biblical influence. People who have never even heard the word Mesopotamia still vaguely know the word Babylon, the very name now forever associated with the original Jewish diaspora and negative concepts like wickedness and apostasy.
Seriously, you could talk to a hundred people on the street and none of them would know anything about, say, Elam, or Assyria, or Mitanni, or what have you. But thanks to Judaism’s ultimate influence on western history, everyone knows about Babylon. Their ancient infamy has been forever preserved through biblical folklore, very much like Lilith herself.
Meanwhile, the ancient Israelites (Hebrews) were the group of people who — no points for guessing this — ultimately founded Judaism. Hebrew culture goes back even further than this though, with the earliest Israelites practicing the same polytheistic religion as the nearby Canaanites and Phoenicians. (Who eventually founded Rome’s best buddy Carthage) Scholarly consensus believes Yahweh was one of these many gods and that the Israelites gradually evolved into a monotheistic society by worshipping him over the others. The changing views on Baal illustrate this development; Baal was simply the northwestern semitic word for lord and was used in pre-Jewish times to refer to many different gods, even Yahweh. As Judaism became codified the word fell out of favor, and the Bible itself associates the word with paganism and false idolatry. Meanwhile and in contrast, the classical era Carthaginians continued to worship a distantly related Baal Hammon as their supreme god, entirely independent of Jewish influence. With the passage of time Hebrew mythology took a negative view on the Canaanite myths that contradicted their emerging religion, and it’s possible a similar hostility emerged towards the foreign influences of Babylon — that is, Hebrew folklore sought to associate Babylonian influence with sin and apostasy as a way of preserving their native culture in the face of imperial assimilation. In this way Babylon may have served as an indirect vector for Sumerian mythology to influence Judaism, but only in the sense that Jewish texts took entities like the lilitu and made them even more demonic and sinister
Ancient Israel would have been exposed to Mesopotamian culture through the Babylonian conquest, but there’s no way to prove if Lilith is definitively connected to the Sumerian myths. In any case, Lilith appears unambiguously in several of the Hebrew texts that would go on to inspire the Bible. She appears once in the Hebrew Bible in prophecy regarding the Kingdom of Edom. There is also an either pre or post Jewish reference in the Arslan Tash tablets, though the exact authenticity of these artifacts is of endless debate. The Dead Sea Scrolls also make a definite reference, though it’s notably in plural. There are five references to Lilith in the Babylonian Talmud. The Midrash Rabbah collection contains two references to Lilith, the first a vague suggestion to a woman before Eve — similar to Lilith’s medieval depictions — and the second a direct reference.
Assyriologist Eberhard Schrader (1875) and Moritz Abraham Levy (1855) suggest that Lilith was a demon of the night, known also by the Jewish exiles in Babylon. This would certainly be possible through Babylonian cultural influence. This view is challenged by some modern research such as by Judit M. Blair (2009) who considers that the context indicates unclean animals. Still, even this interpretation suggests an association between Lilith and impurity, not unlike the more early modern depictions of vampires and succubi as corrupters.
It’s further worth noting that the Greek Old Testament translated the references into onocentaurs or satyrs. The Romans translated them into lamias, somewhat similar as child preying monsters, but also with snake tails. Some early English translations also preserved the references to lamias.
MODERN LILITH
Even if she started as a type of demon, Lilith is most remembered as a singular entity from the Bible and so inevitably made the transition from Jewish to Christian European lore. I think this is notable because her influence mostly consisted of unofficial folklore rather than in Church approved canon. I doubt theologists debated her role in things the way they debated concepts like the Holy Trinity, and some translations of the Bible even turned her references into other creatures entirely. Still she persevered as a traditional Hebrew demon the more superstitious simply couldn’t manage to shake. Her further references in the Bible were probably written to invoke her existing infamy — in other words, her name was shorthand for sin and adultery/child killing just as Baal became short hand for false idolatry and paganism.
Lilith survived in Mesopotamian folklore as late as the 6th Century AD. She features as a “type” of demon in Jewish occult incantation bowls made in the Sassanid controlled Middle East to protect households and their children. The Alphabet of Sirach, written in an Islamic country between the 8th-10th centuries, (exact date unknown) is one of the earliest works to mention Lilith as Adam’s first wife, the prevailing interpretation of her by the Middle Ages. This may represent a conflation of older ideas, as some Jewish texts mention a cryptic “first Eve” and Lilith was already a byword for sin.
Indeed it was her appearances in fringe Jewish mysticism that established her connection to the biblical Eden, as opposed to mainstream church doctrine. The first medieval source to depict Adam and Lilith in full was the Midrash abkir, the figure reappearing centuries after the Middle Eastern references. Kabbalistic mysticism established a direct relationship between Lilith and God, and the Zohar and Treatise on the Left Emanation also mention connections to Adam, Cain, demons, and other mystic figures like Asmodeus and Samael. Some versions even preserved the plural Liliths, with a lesser one as Adam’s first wife and a greater one having always been a demon.
Just like the more general vampires, Lilith achieved mainstream prominence in early modern Europe. Her being Adam’s first wife became widely popularized with the 17th century Lexicon Talmudicum of German Hebraist scholar Johannes Buxtorf. Lilith's earliest appearance in the literature of the Romantic period was in Goethe's 1808 work Faust: The First Part of the Tragedy. Paintings of Lilith became popular around the mid 19th century. The Victorian poet Robert Browning re-envisioned Lilith in his poem "Adam, Lilith, and Eve" published in 1883, notably focusing on her emotional attributes rather than her demonic reputation. Scottish author George MacDonald also wrote a fantasy novel entitled Lilith, first published in 1895. Many of the traditional characteristics are present in the author's depiction, long dark hair, pale skin, a hatred and fear of children and babies, and an obsession with gazing at herself in a mirror. MacDonald's Lilith also has vampiric qualities: she bites people and sucks their blood for sustenance.
Today Lilith remains a popular figure in Wicca and other neo-pagan followings. Sympathetic portrayals generally have her as a human witch rather than a demon or vampire, though there are of course vampire centric stories that often invoke her. Some feminists see her as an icon, a woman who exercised free will rather than conforming to expectations. You’ll even see cringe types naming their kids after her.
To me Lilith is a fascinating concept because of how long lived her motif has become. Even if her origins are nebulous and subject to endless interpretation, I personally find it interesting that a legend could survive this long and create a kind of cross-cultural continuity to human history. It’s doubly intriguing that the character has survived largely through myth and folklore, never having been reinforced by actually mandated religious canon from an organized church.
There aren’t many other Bronze Age characters that still elicit an emotional reaction from people, as opposed to just purely clinical academic attention.
AS A VAMPIRE:
As you may have gathered, Lilith isn’t just a vampire but there definitely are connections. There are arguably three different ways of looking at the concept, but all invoke vampiric traits.
As demons, the lilitu were known for prowling in the night and could sometimes cause storms. (A trait shared by a few vampire variants like Strigoi with hail) These demons are said to possess wings, which I think is notable as this was many thousands of years before bats became associated with vampires.
The Hebrew Lilith was sometimes a kind of demon and sometimes a specific individual, with the demonic Lilith possibly becoming one and the same with the concept of a previous Eve over time. As a demon Lilith was notable for blood sucking and child killing. The superstitious made prayers to keep Lilith away from their children. Lilith was also seen as a kind of succubi and was said to cause male, heh, “nocturnal emissions”. She could take the form of either men or women and seduce their partners. Children born to these arrangements would be cursed by her and eventually killed. The Alphabet of Sirach portrays her as hunting men for semen and blood, to create more demons and sustain her life force respectively. It’s possible Lilith in particular inspired the s*x appeal that modern vampires are often given, as she was portrayed this way by 19th century depictions around the time the concept of more human-like vampires was taking off.
The biblical Lilith is an individual and is more of a demon or witch than a kind of creature, but she is still sometimes associated with blood sucking and the child killing that particular vampire types are known for. The 1950 Knox Bible outright translates her Old Testament references into “vampire”.
IN POPULAR CULTURE:
In The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis, the White Witch (the main antagonist of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe) is said to be a descendant of Lilith, referred to as Adam's first wife.
The character Leeloo in the movie The Fifth Element, a futuristic fantasy, turns the concept of Lilith on its head by saving humanity instead of devouring it. Leeloo is depicted as fair-skinned and with strawberry blonde hair, young and lithe, similar or identical to the romantic era paintings. Leeloo is represented as the original woman (first wife of Adam) and is born speaking the "Divine Language".
In the anime series Neon Genesis Evangelion — a show that makes many references to Jewish mysticism — Lilith is a seed of life created by an alien race that ultimately created life on Earth instead of Adam, the intended seed. The antagonist Angels are the progeny of Adam, with the “Lilin” actually being the human race of the setting.
In Fall from Heaven, a semi-officially supported mod for the Firaxis game Civilization IV, the character Os-Gabella is heavily inspired by Lilith. She refused to be the wife of Nemed, a character inspired by the biblical Adam, and instead corrupted two of his later children into the first vampires. Os-Gabella comes to lead a civilization of demons, while her children go on to establish a kingdom of vampires with blood sucking as an actual 4X game mechanic.
IN HOUSE VAMPIRE CULTURE:
We’re all quite familiar with the concept of a vampire temptress
Mavis