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Physical Heaven

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Physical Heaven (trope)

Where there are demons, there are usually their opposing numbers, assuming the world isn't completely crapsack, and occasionally they will have a physical base on Earth. Much rarer than its malevolent counterpart, as heaven doesn't usually come up as often as hell in stories, due to not being quite as obvious a target for those pesky adventurers. (Though considering how much fun heaven can be to fight, this is a shame.)

Many mythological settings had physical heavens, the top of Mount Olympus being the supposed Home of the Gods. So physical heavens are more common in mythological settings.

Unless humans have found a way of shifting planes, this is a requirement for a Rage Against the Heavens plot.


Examples:

    open/close all folders 

    Anime & Manga 

    Fan Works 
  • With This Ring (2013):
    • The Hellenistic afterlife can, for some reason, be reached by walking down a very long staircase located in the Temple Of Hades on Themiscyra, even though it's not actually located under the surface of the physical planet Earth.
    • The Biblical Garden Of Eden still exists as a physical location, and can be found as a sort of pocket dimension in a small village in Iran. Paul briefly visits to steal a fruit from the Tree Of Knowledge (turns out it's actually a pomegranate, not an apple) and finds it a very disorienting experience, because while it's a very lush, beautiful place, it doesn't have a horizon!

    Literature 
  • Cori Celesti, the mountain at the centre of the Discworld, is the site of Dunmanifestin, the home of the gods. It's entirely reachable by mortals with the right skills or technology — The Last Hero revolves around a gang of old Barbarian Heroes on a quest to blow it up.
  • In The Divine Comedy, the first 7 "circles" of Heaven consist of the Moon, Sun, and the five visible planets (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn), while the 8th consists of the "fixed stars" (as most astronomers and astrologers at the time thought the stars didn't move, unlike the planets.) This eventually gets subverted in the 10th heaven (The Empyrean), where God actually "lives", and is described as being beyond matter and space.
  • Earthsea: In The Other Wind, the Heaven in the West is... in... the West.
  • The Flail from Heaven: A tree grows so tall it reaches Heaven and a peasant climbs it to spy on angels.
  • The Gaea Trilogy is mostly set in a space habitat that is, itself, alive. The hub is where the station's avatar hangs out, and it's set up as a kind of Hollywood Heaven... Gaea understands the value of theatrics.
  • Tolkien's Legendarium:
    • The continent Aman in the West with the land Valinor, which is the realm of the Valar (divine spirits made by the creator god; think angels or minor gods). Aman used to exist in the same physical plane as the rest of the continents of Arda, but after the Númenorean invasion, Eru Ilúvatar reshaped the world so Aman can only be accessed through the Straight Road, which itself can only be navigated by Elven ships transporting Elves who have become weary of Middle-earth, though a few people from other races are sometimes granted entry (Bilbo, Frodo, and Sam are allowed in because they are Ringbearers, while it is implied that Gimli is allowed in out of personal request by Galadriel). The Halls of Mandos, the place where Elves go after death, is also located in Aman, though it's more of a purgatory where their sins are cleansed before Mandos reembodies them back to life.
    • Averted with Eru Ilúvatar's domain, which is located completely outside the universe and is hinted to be where Men and Hobbits go after death. The Valar were created there, but they themselves do not have access to it as of present, as their fates, much like the rest of Ilúvatar's children save Men, are bound to Arda. Apparently, even the Valar will grow tired of Arda and envious of Men's ability to escape it.
  • The Whoniverse short story "The Ruins of Heaven" has the Sixth Doctor and Perri arrive on the city of Heaven on the planet Sheol. It turns out to be a tourist trap with the angels being actors. A Fallen angel tells Perri that the planet used to be the real Heaven, but God and the angels left to found a new one after tourists discovered it.

    Live-Action TV 
  • In-Universe example in The 100: The people living in space practice a religion where Earth is Heaven. It's where they send the bodies of the dead, and the time when they're able to return to Earth is treated like the coming of the Messianic Age.
  • Charmed (1998) features a physical 'up there' that mortals can enter, although it's both difficult and only permitted in emergencies. It's never really made clear whether this 'heaven' is where the dead reside or purely the home of White Lighters.
  • Lexx: Dead people reincarnate on the Counter-Earth planet, Water. The twin planet Fire is a Physical Hell.
  • The lands of Valinor from Aman are shown in the prologue of The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power as a place of great beauty and very idyllic.

    Mythology & Religion 
  • Book of Genesis: The Garden of Eden is said to have once been a real place on Earth, presumably before being destroyed by the Biblical Flood. Two of the four rivers that are said to have originated from it are very much real rivers in the Middle East: Hiddekel is the Tigris while Perat is the Euphrates. Nobody can agree on where its original location is though; candidates have included the Armenian Highlands, Kurdistan, and the Lower Mesopotamia.
  • Classical Mythology: As mentioned above, Mount Olympus was considered to be the abode of the Greek pantheon.

    Tabletop Games 
  • Warhammer: Age of Sigmar contains two different examples of this.
    • There's Azyr, the Realm of the Heavens, seat of Sigmar himself, and potentially the least Chaos-corrupted place in the setting, though it doesn't act as an afterlife (unless you count Stormcast Eternals).
    • Then there's Shyish, which contains every afterlife, including the heaven-like ones, and like every other Realm people can physically go there, though since Shyish is every afterlife it is also Physical Hell and everything in-between
    Video Games 
  • In The Aether, you can enter the Aether "dimension" through a portal. Doesn't seem like it fits this trope, right? If you fall from it, you end up in the overworld. Even if it is technically another dimension in the game engine, it's right above your head. Except it isn't when you actually build up there. For clarification, due to the world being locked at a set number of blocks high The Aether had to become a new dimension in order to build around that block limit. It is heavily implied that it is actually just above the top of that height limit because when you fall from it you drop into the top of the main dimension at the same distance from the entrance as where you fell.
  • Age of Mythology has Arkantos' son wrecking Heaven. Well, the Greek equivalent.
  • Diablo:
    • In Diablo II you're sent to Hell in order to kill Diablo. And you find out that the forces of Heaven have a fortress set up there and in fact have a few Angels patrolling the place trying to keep things under control. Care to guess how that turned out?
    • Diablo III's fourth act has you battling demons in the High Heavens themselves to stop them from destroying everything.
  • Doom Eternal: Urdak seems to be this, although it's kept somewhat ambiguous if it's really Heaven, as while it's quite pretty, and seem to be in the "sky", the Makyrs are anything but benevolent, although it's implied that they weren't always so evil, and the current Khan Makyr made them this way.
  • In the third Heroes of Might and Magic, the Medieval European-inspired Castle faction has as its ultimate base upgrade the Portal of Glory, a gold-and-ivory, banner-draped gate to Fluffy Cloud Heaven literally built atop the clouds over the city. Despite the practical difficulties of attacking such a structure, Gameplay and Story Segregation means that successfully besieging the human castle far below puts invaders in control of the Portal as well.
  • One iteration of the Nexus Clash universe allowed angelic player characters to pour energy into the land of the mortal plane and transform buildings and terrain into the idealized landscape of Elysium. Demons could do the opposite and try to turn it into Physical Hell instead.
  • Princess Maker 2 has a physical heaven to match its Physical Hell, but it's guarded by the War God. Considering that he can potentially be beaten by a thirteen-year-old, forcing the Gods to raise the drawbridge (or rather, make it disappear), he's probably not very good at his job.
  • Risk of Rain 2 mentions a religion called the High Court, which believes that Heaven is a physical location somewhere in the universe and dedicates itself to deep-space exploration in the hopes of finding it.
  • Scribblenauts: Just as how you can summon schools and museums you can actually summon Heaven. Interacting with it produces a God. Physical Hell also exists.
  • Touhou Project has the heavenly realm of Bhava-agra, featured in the fighting games where one of its inhabitants, Tenshi, is playable (Touhou Hisouten ~ Scarlet Weather Rhapsody and its expansion pack, as well as Touhou Hyouibana ~ Antinomy of Common Flowers). It is seemingly reached simply by venturing far enough above the Youkai Mountain, past the cloud layer.

    Webcomics 
  • Housepets!: Heaven is a physical plane the living can and frequently do visit. The events of Heckraiser are kicked off when Kitsune panics and teleports an entire town's living population into Heaven, gambling on none of them noticing.

    Web Original 

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