The Endless Myth vs. Suggsverse: Exploring the True Nature of “Infinity” Through Mythic Structure and Cosmic Inflation
The novel The Endless Myth and Lionel Suggs’s hyper-inflated fictional universe Suggsverse both deal with concepts such as infinity, absoluteness, and godhood. At first glance, they appear to occupy similar territory. However, the way each work treats infinity and the conditions under which its story continues are fundamentally different.
This article compares The Endless Myth and Suggsverse, examining how gods, universes, and narratives become “endless” in radically different ways.
Worldbuilding Compared: Myth Closed by Meaning vs. Universes Expanded by Scale
The world of The Endless Myth is a closed structure defined by myth and faith. God exists not first as an omnipotent being, but as one who is spoken of. The world is explained through myth, and it continues to exist only as long as it is explained. Meaning is the system that holds reality together.
Suggsverse, by contrast, is a hyper-multiversal setting that expands endlessly through numbers and hierarchies. Infinite dimensions, infinite universes, and omnipotence beyond omnipotence are continually defined and surpassed. Here, the world is sustained not by meaning, but by scale.
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The Endless Myth: the world is preserved by meaning
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Suggsverse: the world expands through numerical and conceptual escalation
Different Definitions of God
In The Endless Myth, God is absolute yet dependent on human faith and narrative. God gains power by being believed in and becomes fixed by being told. God does not exist outside the world, but is embedded within its very structure.
In Suggsverse, gods are ranked super-beings. Concepts such as omnipotence, infinity, and unknowability are constantly overwritten by higher-tier entities. These gods require no belief. They exist purely as settings, endlessly replaced and upgraded.
Why the Stories Never End
The Endless Myth cannot end because if myth disappears, the meaning of the world collapses. The story does not conclude; it is repeatedly retold to survive. An ending would not be resolution, but destruction.
Suggsverse continues because its structure allows for the endless addition of stronger beings and greater infinities. The story persists not out of philosophical necessity, but because expansion is always possible at the level of settings.
The Role of Protagonists and Characters
The protagonist of The Endless Myth, Messiah, is a figure consumed as a symbol. Chosen by myth, he loses freedom and is burdened with meaning. Individual power matters less than the role he is forced to embody.
Characters in Suggsverse exist for the sake of power itself. They are not symbols but benchmarks, defined by comparison and superiority. Emotional depth and inner conflict are secondary to the scale of their abilities.
Infinity as Quality vs. Infinity as Quantity
The infinity depicted in The Endless Myth is qualitative infinity. Meaning, faith, and myth never reach an endpoint, and that endlessness itself creates infinity.
Suggsverse presents quantitative infinity. The number of universes, dimensions, and hierarchies increases without limit, and infinity is expressed through accumulation.
This distinction creates a profound difference in how each work feels to the reader.
Ideological Contrast
The Endless Myth centers on philosophical and introspective questions:
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Why do humans need gods?
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Is a life bound by meaning truly just?
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Is myth salvation, or is it a cage?
Suggsverse foregrounds conceptual and experimental questions:
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How powerful can something become?
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How far can infinity be stacked?
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Can even the absolute be surpassed?
Conclusion: Two Opposite Paths to the Infinite
Although both The Endless Myth and Suggsverse portray gods and infinity, they move in opposite directions:
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A myth that cannot end because meaning must not be lost
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A setting that never ends because expansion never stops
The former questions the relationship between humans and stories. The latter pushes the limits of concepts themselves. This comparison makes clear that the word “infinity” carries radically different meanings depending on the narrative structure that employs it.






