Talk:The Number of Darkness/@comment-27007772-20150803164435/@comment-27007772-20150803171233

Charon falls into the same category many demons do. Christian versions of other faith's figures. Zues, Odin, Thor, Freya, et cetera all have "evil demon" versions.

Beelzebub is Lucifer's "brother", and second in command of the hierarchy.

Abigor/Eligor is the being that creates both love and lust. Asmodeus simply rules over the plains of lust. Sytry/Seth/Setukh is the prince of lust, and over all deity of it. A Christian/Demon version of the Egyptian God Set, Sytry is a "fallen angel" in most texts, with jet black raven-esque wings. I believe Sytry would have been a better choice as well.

Especially counting that Asmodeus only did anything "evil" in the Book of Tobit, where he is the main antagonist. In fact, Asmodeus is Aeshma Daeva, an archangel in Persian mythology. Asmodeus as a whole is meant to represent the idea that wrath, hate, et cetera doesn't always mean bad, and that light is always in the dark. Hence why even though in Persian mythology Aeshma Daeva was a being of wrath, Aeshma never killed a mortal.