Ominous Floating Castle

Some villains have their own country, and with a desolate volcanic wasteland around their tower that the heroes must battle their way through. Others, however, have bigger plans. Entire solar system, maybe. Alternate universe, perhaps. And right in the middle is this place, a floating castle of doom overlooking—well, pretty much nothing. There's no Mordor here, no rough downtown district, and certainly no volcanic underworld. The base floats in absolute nothingness.

On top of that, there are multiple versions with their respective associations. A Floating Continent with this place on top will often be a rather mystical area, while various space-faring series usually have an enormous battleship in the centre or edge of the universe for the alien invaders. Then, of course, anything literally in a void has a pretty good chance of being a Mind Screw. Nevertheless, it's relatively common, especially as a Very Definitely Final Dungeon in a videogame, providing the backdrop for many an extremely powerful evil force.

In general, they boil down to these three basic types:

Type 1: In a Void of Nothingness
The preserve of extremely destructive, powerful and unhinged villains, these places literally have nothing around them. Often located in an Alternate Universe, they're infinite, gloomy, and depressing places which would drive most characters completely insane. May well vanish altogether after being completed.
Type 2: Outer Space, With Nothing For Miles
The preserve of many Sci Fi or Speculative Fiction series, these are Exactly What It Says on the Tin: Floating bases somewhere in their own solar system or galaxy with nothing for miles. Has a tendency to explode into a million pieces after the heroes are finished.
Type 3: A Floating Evil Castle in the Clouds
And then there are these, often found on Floating Continents. They're just floating buildings found a few hundred (or thousand) miles high in the sky. Have a tendency to come to earth with an enormous crash once the evil inhabitant is defeated.
Examples of Ominous Floating Castle include:

Type 1

Anime and Manga

Comic Books

  • In Astro City, Infidel lives in such a palace.
  • Prometheus, a Justice League of America villain, lives in a crooked house version of this in his "Ghost Zone", which may or may not also be the Phantom Zone or Limbo.

Literature

  • In Lawrence Watt-Evans's Ethshar novels, there are magical tapestries used for transportation—you weave a picture of where you want to be. One highly advanced magician makes a tapestry of a Type 1 castle and thereby brings into being a little pied-a-terre (pied-a-void?) for himself and his mistress...
    • ...but when the return route gets blocked, said mistress ends up trapped in said castle for a few centuries.
  • In the works of H.P. Lovecraft, the Daemon Sultan Azathoth is said to sit on his black throne in the center of the universe (or possibly the multiverse), surrounded by the Ultimate Void.

Tabletop Games

  • The tomb-bodies of the Neverborn in Exalted are both Ominous Floating Mountain-Thingies and one of the setting's (many) groups of Big Bads. They really want to fall into the Void and finish dying, and they're willing to destroy all of Creation to get there.

Video Games

  • Castle Bleck and Smithy's Factory in the Mario RPGs. The former is basically a floating, glowing castle in monochrome colours set in the middle of a void that is actually called "The Void" (which Count Bleck created for his Suicidal Cosmic Temper Tantrum), and the latter is a series of platforming elements floating in a dark blue void of nothingness.
  • Possibly the Palace of Twilight in The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess. Supposedly its own separate realm, but nothing is connected to it.
  • While also a prison, the Oubliette from Metroid Prime: Hunters, although it gets pulled back to normal space so that you can fight the Final Boss inside it.
  • The Fortress of Regrets at the end of Planescape: Torment is a type 1.
  • The Arcane Sanctuary of Diablo II, which is a type 1 (floating in space).
  • The (spectacular) Chaos capital in Warhammer Fantasy Battle Online, the Inevitable City, is located on the edge of a vast crater beneath a seething hole in reality. The Eternal Citadel, the fortress where the Big Bad lurks, sits on one of many floating chunks of rock hanging beneath the Alien Sky.
  • In Kingdom Hearts II we have the villain's hideout, the Castle That Never Was, which is literally 'right next to the Realm of Nothingness.'
  • In Dragon Age the Black City, which supposedly was the home of The Maker and the location of heaven before it was corrupted by the hubris of mortals, appears as a vaguely city shaped blob of darkness in the otherwise empty sky of The Fade. Interestingly enough, the Black City is the only permanent landmark in the Fade.

Webcomics


Type 2

Anime and Manga


Comic Books

Film

Literature

  • Azathoth. He resides in the center of the universe.

Live-Action TV

  • The Cylon Colony was floating in empty space during "The Plan", but by the time of "Daybreak" it had been moved to the accretion disk of a black hole so that it would be hard for anyone but a Cylon to 1) find it and 2) be able to enter it. Extra points for being a black techno-organic construct with eight arms, each one miles long.

Tabletop Games

  • The Zurich Station from Shadowrun, located on Earth's orbit. It houses the central governing body of all Evil Mega Corps. THE. MOST. SECURE. FACILITY. EVAR.

Video Games

  • Bowser's Castle and Reactor in Super Mario Galaxy. The Super Mario Bros. series loves this trope.
    • And Bowser's Galaxy Generator in Super Mario Galaxy 2. It's literally a castle bigger than the actual galaxy inside it.
  • Tales of Symphonia has Yggdrasil's castle, Vinheim.
  • Freeport 7 in Freelancer counts to some degree: It explodes in a million pieces at the very beginning of the game, and it looks like the only base in the entire system (there's an unofficial mod that lets you enter the Freeport 7 system, which is indeed completely empty except for the remains of Freeport 7).
    • Then there's Nomad city...
  • High Charity from Halo 2.
  • The Floating Fortress in the NES and MSX2 versions of Final Fantasy I. In remakes, though, it's a Type 3 floating castle. Except the castle itself is not evil; it was constructed by the Lefeinish before Tiamat the Wind Fiend screwed them over and seized the castle.
  • The Air Castle in Phantasy Star IV. Explained in better detail below.
  • The Collector Base from Mass Effect 2 - it and the mass relay to access it are the only landmarks in the area at all. Of course, there's not nothing around - there's the ruins of thousands upon thousands of ships that have tried and failed to enter Collector space over the millennia.

Type 3

Anime and Manga

  • Laputa: Castle in the Sky, which is Exactly What It Says on the Tin. Laputa isn't an evil castle per se, but lots of bad things happen there.
  • The Gravekeepers' Palace in Mahou Sensei Negima, the base of operations of Kosmo Entelecheia during Ala Rubra's time. As Rakan said, "Now that's what I call a Final Dungeon!!"
  • Digimon Kaizer's flying fortress in Digimon 02.
  • The Castle of Dark Illusions in Yu-Gi-Oh!!.
  • Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's has the Ark Cradle, ZONE's fortress which is constructed from the ruins of the destroyed Neo Domino City in the future, and is set to crash into and destroy the present day version of the city.
  • Schneizel's Damocles fortress from Code Geass may count as this. It's basically an amalgamation of the earlier airships with a Britannian-style palace, using float systems and energy shields introduced earlier in the series. knowing Schneizel, who had those technologies commissioned, this was all a part of the plan. True to its name, it's not only shaped like a hovering sword, but also houses a stockpile of FLEIJA warheads that could be launched on any city at Schneizel's whim, thus enforcing peace.
  • Episode 6 of The Soultaker was aptly named "The Malevolent Stratosphere Castle" for its location. It was a safe haven for a mutant who had become jaded with his work for the Hospital and sought to end his life in peace.
  • A Certain Magical Index: The Star of Bethlehem and Radiosonde Castle.

Comic Books

  • Rather viciously subverted in Elf Quest, which begins (almost) with a magical fairytale castle appearing in midair... above a group of terrified neanderthals, who promptly attack its elfin occupants when it comes crashing to the ground moments later.

Fan Works

  • Ponies Make War: The boon that Nihilus asks for in exchange for serving Titan is a floating fortress, something her Co Dragon Esteem views as tacky and cliche. And true to form, it collapses when Nihilus is defeated by the Elements of Harmony.

Fairy Tales

  • The giant's castle in Jack and the Beanstalk. In some versions, it is implied that there's a whole world of giants up in the clouds.

Literature

  • The floating castle made of clouds from Piers Anthony's Xanth series counts as it is currently the home of the Demon Xanth, his consort Chlorine and their son. Somewhat subverted in that the Demon currently in residence isn't actually evil.
  • Isaac Asimov wrote a short story entitled Shah Guido G. which features the titular despot ruling future Earth from his flying city before it is destroyed by piling on too much weight. (The title, when pronounced correctly, warns the reader that the entire story is a set-up for a truly hideous pun.)
  • Castle Black in Steven Brust's Dragaera, a non-evil example. Of course, the Empire is littered with the ruins of castles that fell out of the sky the last time The Magic Went Away.
  • The Castle in the Air from Norman Juster's The Phantom Tollbooth. (Actually a floating prison, inhabited by a couple of captive princesses.)
  • The original Laputa appears in Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels, where it is a floating island inhabited by scholars. Their relationship with the peasants who live below is often strained, but they are not out-and-out evil.
  • The Flying Citadels in the Dragonlance novels.
  • In the Ethshar series, the same wizard mentioned under Type 1 also created a Type 3 flying castle, which was brought down by a Fantastic Nuke.
  • In Castle in the Air by Diana Wynne Jones, the castle of the title is the villain's base of operations.

Tabletop Games

  • Silver towers of Tzeentch in Warhammer 40,000 are floating ominous floating towers powered by daemonic energy. They don't float all that high, tho, only a few meters above ground, but they're still Ominous Floating Towers that shoot bolts of sorcerous energy at people.
  • Mobile floating castles were used in the War of the Lance, from the Dragonlance D&D setting. They were built by the bad guys, so qualify as ominous too.
  • Forgotten Realms being a reasonably magic-rich setting, it has
    • Netherese Enclaves (cut off and upturned top of a mountain)
    • Flattery Wyvernspur's castle, Temple in the Sky and several cases when the top half of a wizard's tower remained in a good condition and in its proper place for several centuries after lower floors were completely (and violently) removed. Starting with the one from which young Elminster Elmara with her band of adventurers were kicked out in The Making of a Mage.
  • Exalted has the (now ruined) Flying Fortress of Bagrash Köl.
    • Also, Titan fortresses. Which can quite cheerfully wipe a city off the map.

Video Games

  • Not exactly owned by the villain, but the Advance Base Rakion at the Mesos Floor in Ace Online/Air Rivals can look rather intimidating to inexperienced pilots. It doesn't help that it's the largest map in the entire game and that players from ANI and BCU must fight for control of the Advance Base to put it into use.
  • The Floating Palace in Arcana Heart, which is where the final battles take place.
  • Agua from the first Breath of Fire I. Obelisk too, but only after the Tyr is released.
  • The Shadow Shard in City of Heroes. Where do we start... Well, it's got several Ominous Floating Castles, separated by Floating Continents.
    • As well as the base for Ouroboros, the "time travel agency"
  • Mario & Luigi
    • Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga has Bowser's Castle hovering over the Beanbean Kingdom to destroy the nation's largest city.
    • Bowser's Castle in Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story is capable of flight, despite not actually looking like it was designed for it like it was in Superstar Saga. Although it flies at an lower altitude, it still serves as an introduction to game's giant boss fights.
    • Mario & Luigi: Dream Team has Neo Bowser Castle hovering in the skies above Pi'illo Island after it destroyed several smaller islands, and roughly a third of the game is focused on finding a way to ground it.
    • Neo Bowser Castle from Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam (yes, they're reusing the name) plays a part of Bowser's Roaring Rampage Of Revenge by demolishing Peach's Castle and the story spends a lot of time of reaching it...without shooting it down, this time.
  • Dark Cloud
    • The Moonflower Palace of Dark Cloud 2 used to be one, until it engaged the heroes' own flying fortress, Paznos, and it was sent hurtling right towards Palm Brinks. Paznos' robot mode was barely able to ground it elsewhere.
  • Giga Wing 's fourth stage is set on a Floating Continent, and the stage following it one-ups it with a floating city.
  • Most of the ancient Wingly cities in Legend of Dragoon were like this until the Dragon Campaign.
  • Daos in Lufia II had his castle on top of what was aptly named The Floating Continent.
  • Square likes this trope:
    • The Black Omen in Chrono Trigger floats in the air for thousands of years, such that when it appears, people comment on it regardless of the time period you visit. In fact, it's been around so long that people aren't even scared of it anymore, even though is a obsidian floating Magitech imposing thing that's even named the Black Omen.
      • Sky Dragon's Isle takes to the skies and transforms into Terra Tower, aka Dinopolis, in Chrono Cross.
    • Tiamat's Floating Tower in Final Fantasy, mentioned in Dissidia and it's sequel with the dungeon 'Dreams of a Flying Castle' and mentioned in the Cosmos Reports.
    • The Castle of Emperor Palamecia in Final Fantasy II. It's kept aloft by a massively destructive Cyclone, and can only be reached with the help of a flying dragon.
    • The highly technological Tower of Zot of Final Fantasy IV, Golbez' personal base of operations until he moves to the Tower of Bab-Il.
    • The Lonka Ruins of Final Fantasy V, sustained by the Earth Crystal.
    • Ultimecia's castle in Final Fantasy VIII. It's so floaty that it has to be held down with improbably huge chains. Also, it's possible that Galbadia and Balamb Gardens are examples of this, which are rocket-propelled and mobile. Not castles, strictly speaking, however...
      • Lunatic Pandora, the Esthar fortress housing the Crystal Pillar, also counts as one.
    • The Mana Fortress in Secret of Mana, which once destroyed the world.
    • Sky Fortress Bahamut from Final Fantasy XII. Double bonus since it's also an Evil Tower of Ominousness, tall enough to reach the clouds with its upper decks while its bottom floats just a few hundred feet above ground level.
  • Bowser's castles in Paper Mario (pictured) and Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga.
    • And yet another example in Yoshi's Island DS, which has to be reached by space rocket (although it's shown in the clouds in the intro), and like most Mario examples, crashes to the ground after the Final Boss is defeated.
  • The Air Castle in Phantasy Star was this in the first game. It re-appeared in the fourth game as the second type, given that the planet it was on was destroyed in the second game.
  • Tales of the Abyss gives us the Glorious Land of Eldrant. In a subversion, it crashes to earth before the Big Bad is defeated when he attempts to squash the party.
  • Also from the Tales series, Tales of Vesperia has the Ancient Tower of Tarqaron.
  • Valen's Fortress in Threads of Fate manifests itself as a floating, pointy fortress.
  • The end cutscene of Viewtiful Joe 2 shows one of these, allegedly the source of the Black V-Watch and Black Film. However...
  • The Scourge Necropoli in Warcraft, most notably Naxxramas (an Instance that was revamped for the new expansion), and Acherus: The Ebon Hold (The Death Knight's answer to Moonglade). They also showed up all over the place during the Zombie Apocalypse event.
    • Tempest Keep and its satellite structures in World of Warcraft float over the edge of Outland, above a drop into the Twisting Nether.
  • Necron Monoliths in Dawn of War: Dark Crusade are a Type 3. The only Necron building that can produce units, once fully upgraded it flies, teleports decent distances, and brings enormous firepower to bear on anything unfortunate enough to get in its path. If it ends up being severely damaged, it teleports back to its original location. Not really ominous, as that implies that your doom is merely impending, Monoliths are the final seal on your tomb.
  • While not so much ominous or a boss level, Wario Land Shake It! has Airytale Castle, Prism Prison and possibly Launchpad Labryinth in this kind of floating building.
  • The lost city of Kefin in Ys V.
  • In the Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, Ganondorf does this to his eventual hideout of Hyrule Castle. Annoyingly, the void is only about 50 feet from the nearest cliff edge and you spend the latter two-thirds of the game only that far away from the final boss.
  • Another Zelda example: In Majora's Mask, the whole plot and lots of other things revolve around the moon. The moon has a hideous face on it and Majora's mask is trying to crush the land with it. It also is the final dungeon and where you fight the Mask at the end.
  • Both Legend of Legaia and its sequel do this, although the first one does score extra points for having the tower being a piece of junk made to fly specifically to invoke this trope and lure the player's to a Load-Bearing Boss fight.
  • Power Stone 2 takes place in a castle in the sky. In addition to collecting the titular wish-granting MacGuffins, the objective of the game is for the player characters to fight their way out of the castle. True to the form of this trope, defeating Dr. Erode, the master of the castle, in the Final Battle leads to the destruction of the castle.
  • Strider has the Ballog/Balrog Flying Fortress, and the Third Moon.
  • Malefor has this as his lair in the final The Legend of Spyro game. Between the second and third game, Malefor retook the Dragon Temple after being set free, then used his magic to lift it high about the ground and use it as his castle. For added ominousness, it's over a volcano.
  • This is a somewhat popular model of base to build in Minecraft. Due to gravity not working on most blocks, it can be made out of dirt, stone, brick, wood, metal or even, theoretically, water and ice.
  • The Sky Palace in Alisia Dragoon.
  • In Billy Hatcher and the Giant Egg, Giant Palace initially comes off across this way in its first mission. It's subverted though when Billy and his chums boot Dark Raven out, bringing morning. As a result Giant Palace becomes a much nicer place.

Webcomics

Western Animation

  • This trope is probably what the Magus from Gargoyles had in mind, when he froze them in their stone form "until the castle rises above the clouds". The possibility that buildings would one day be tall enough for the place to become a clouddeck penthouse didn't occur to him.
  • Magneto's fortress Asteroid M. from X-Men: Evolution.
  • "Merlin" actually Venger has one in the "The Day of No Tomorrow" episode of the Dungeons & Dragons cartoon.
  • DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp has a great example when the villain uses magic to turn Scrooge's money bin into a Floating Castle that is very ominous.
  • The film version of Phantom Tollbooth has one of these, although it's merely surrounded by an evil region rather than being evil in and of itself.
  • Metalocalypse'\1= \2 \1=s Mordhaus was turned into a free-floating complex during renovations.

Web Original

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