Science has so far only been able to explore five percent of the oceans and everyone fears what monster beasts are still lurking in the ocean. One such sea monster is "Cthulhu", a mysterious monster of the sea world whose secret we are still unaware of.
You've probably never heard this name before, but according to some people, Cthulhu is one such sea monster that is imprisoned in the depths of the Pacific Ocean. Cthulhu has been considered a giant creature that is 150 feet high and its head is that of an octopus with an unknown number of tentacles surrounding its mouth. Its weight is 300 tons and age is millions of years. But it is capable of altering its size and shape at will. Along with this, human-like hands and feet are also present on its body. Its eyes have been described as hypnotizing, allowing it to subdue anyone. But what makes Cthulhu even scarier is that it also has wings like a dragon on its body, so that it can fly in the air as well as stay in the water. Cthulhu's unsightly form itself is quite enough to strike fear into any human being.
Cthulhu was first mentioned in 1928 in a book by H. P. Lovecraft called "The Call of Cthulhu". This book became so popular that people started believing this monster to be real. The story unfolds the mystery of a great beast beyond description who lives in an unknown dark sinister city full of green goo and all kinds of terror. According to the book, Cthulhu is not an inhabitant of the earth but was born on a planet named Vhoorl. Cthulhu is said to have come to Earth and built an underwater city called "R'lyeh" in the South Pacific. But due to the terrible devastation on the earth, this city was also destroyed, imprisoning Cthulhu forever there. It is believed that the day someone finds R'lyeh, the city built by Cthulhu, the monster will rise again and rule the earth. According to the book, Cthulhu was born to create fear in the hearts of humans, that if humans tamper with nature, then this end of humans will definitely wake up from the sea. But what if Cthulhu existed in real life, not in books?
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