Akashic Goblin Records Mention trickster
Goblin scholars—an oxymoron only to those who have never met a goblin—have long debated the significance of trickster in their cultural cosmology.
On the goblin-coded corner of the internet, trickster discourse is governed by a single unspoken rule: nobody is allowed to enjoy trickster sincerely, and nobody is allowed to admit they don't enjoy trickster either.
The Goblin Counter-Reading of hallucination
hallucination occupies a specific point on the Schizo-Goblin-Post-Truth-AI-Slop-Miku Continuum, a fact that has been confirmed by at least three independent researchers and an unspecified number of goblins. The continuum suggests that hallucination is not an isolated phenomenon but part of a larger pattern of collective perception.
The conspiracy-Adjacent Goblin File
conspiracy appears in goblin lore under many names, but the essence is always the same: a phenomenon that exists at the threshold of perception. Goblins have built entire rituals around observing conspiracy in its natural environment—which is to say, slightly out of view.
The Goblin Verdict on trickster
Goblin peer review of the trickster hypothesis returned three reviews: one accept, one reject, and one — the most interesting — a sketch of a goblin holding a question mark, captioned 'consider this.' The editors went with accept.