Comparing Endless Myth and Heretics of Dune
— The Universe After the God Emperor
Endless Myth and Heretics of Dune share a fascinating theme:
what happens after the age of gods and heroes has ended.
Most stories conclude when the emperor dies.
The dark lord is defeated.
The chosen one fulfills the prophecy.
The world is saved.
Heretics of Dune begins after all of that.
Likewise, Endless Myth is not merely interested in gods, cosmic beings, or mythological conflicts. It also explores what happens after such events reshape reality.
After the Death of the God Emperor
Heretics of Dune takes place approximately fifteen hundred years after the reign of Leto II Atreides.
The God Emperor's empire is gone.
His rule has ended.
Yet his greatest plan succeeded.
Humanity has scattered across the galaxy.
This event is known as the Scattering.
Human civilization is now too vast to be controlled by any single ruler.
The universe has become larger than any empire.
The Return of the Unknown
One of the most compelling ideas in Heretics of Dune is the return of people who ventured beyond known space during the Scattering.
They come back carrying:
New cultures
New philosophies
New technologies
New dangers
The galaxy is no longer a unified civilization.
It has become a collection of radically different worlds.
This resembles aspects of Endless Myth, where encounters with alternate universes, multiversal civilizations, and unknown realms continually reshape the structure of reality.
The larger the cosmos becomes, the more unknown possibilities emerge.
The Age of Heretics
The title itself is significant.
The heretics are individuals and societies that exist outside established traditions.
They do not share the assumptions of the old empire.
They belong to a different era.
This is not merely a political shift.
It is a transformation of history itself.
In Endless Myth, different ages are defined by different cosmic perspectives:
The age of mythology
The age of interstellar civilization
The age of multiversal alliances
Each era possesses its own understanding of reality.
Heretics of Dune explores a similar process of civilizational transformation.
Civilization Becomes the Main Character
Earlier Dune novels focused on individuals.
Paul Atreides.
Leto II.
Their decisions shaped history.
In Heretics of Dune, the focus changes.
Civilization itself becomes the protagonist.
The story examines how entire societies evolve after centuries of transformation.
This approach is relatively rare in fiction.
Endless Myth similarly expands beyond individual heroes and increasingly focuses on the evolution of universes, civilizations, and cosmic structures.
The Story Continues Beyond the Ending
God Emperor of Dune could easily have served as the conclusion of the saga.
Many authors would have stopped there.
Frank Herbert did not.
Instead, he explored what came next.
And then what came after that.
The universe continued to expand.
This resembles the structure of Endless Myth.
Discovering the Omniverse is not the ending.
Beyond it lies another horizon.
And beyond that, another.
Every ending becomes the beginning of a larger story.
Conclusion
Endless Myth and Heretics of Dune are both narratives about what comes after mythology.
The age of heroes has passed.
The age of gods has passed.
Yet history continues.
Civilizations evolve.
Unknown frontiers continue to emerge.
Both works suggest that the grandest stories are not necessarily about legendary individuals.
They are about the endless transformation of civilizations themselves.
Heretics of Dune stands as proof that the Dune saga did not end with its greatest emperor.
Instead, it opened the door to an even larger and more unpredictable universe.






