The Elemental Kings (Might 100)
These four protogonoi each encompass the entirety of one of the four classical elements. They are spirits of immense power who can only be invoked by a concerted effort by a group of powerful theurgists. They contain the totality of the element – its physical nature, its symbolic nature, and its humour.
There is no confirmed instance of them ever having been summoned but several events are rumoured among theurgists to have been caused by invoking them: the Great Flood, the Thera eruption (which may have destroyed Atlantis), and the Cretan earthquake of the 4th Century which raised the island by 30 feet and destroyed much of the eastern Mediterranean coast are all thought to have been possibly caused by the Kings.
They are: Ghob, King of Earth, who rules the Melancholic Humour; Nicksa, King of Water, who rules the Phlegmatic Humour; Paralda, King of Air, who rules the Sanguine Humour; and Djin, King of Fire, who rules the Choleric Humour.
Ghob appears as an immense man of squat, dwarfish, proportions made of stone, easily mistaken for a mountain until he moves. Nicksa appears as an undine of titanic size formed of rarefied water. Paralda as an impossibly huge storm that sometimes seems to resemble a massive human woman, and Djin as a colossal fire in the shape of a Salamander.
Characteristics: Int +0/+9/+9/+0, Per +0/+9/+9/+0, Pre +0/+0/+9/+9, Com +0/+0/+9/+9, Str +9/+9/+0/+0, Sta +9/+9/+0/+0, Dex +9/+0/+0/+9, Quik +9/+0/+0/+9*
Personality Traits: Melancholic/Phelgmatic/Sanguine/Choleric +9*
*For Ghob/Nicksa/Paralda/Djin (Earth/Water/Air/Fire)
Size: +23
Combat Stats: N/A*
*The idea of fighting an elemental king physically is absurd, it would be like trying to have a fist fight with a mountain.
Powers:
King of (Element), variable points (Init 0)
The elemental kings can replicate any effect related to their element, or the humour it governs, at a cost of 1 might per magnitude. As this means anything up to a level 500 spell the only real limit here is what the spirit is willing to do and the imagination of the theurge.