The game follows the story of the eight graduates of the 13th Hero Class along with their seven hero mentors as they band together to save the world and fight the mysterious terrorist organisation Eclipse. Players assume the role of the commander to guide these heroes through different missions.

Introducing the first official fan book to the popular mobile game Helios Rising Heroes! The 320-page book is packed with tons of visuals from the game, including card artwork, frame artwork, event outfits, furniture, and more. In addition, there are specially written interviews with the heroes and republished short stories from magazines, as well as a must-read interview with the development staff.


Helios Rising Heroes Download


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No heroes were ever better trained than those whose childhood and youthhad been spent with Chiron the king-centaur. He made them more swift offoot than any other of the children of men. He made them stronger andmore ready with the spear and bow. Jason was trained by Chiron asHeracles just before him had been trained, and as Achilles was to betrained afterward.

"King Pelias knows that the winning of the Golden Fleece is a feat mostdifficult," said Jason. "But if he will have built for me a ship thatcan make the voyage to far Colchis, and if he will send throughout allGreece the word of my adventuring so that all the heroes who would winfame might come with me, and if ye, young heroes of Iolcus, will comewith me, I will peril my life to win the wonder that King etes keepsguard over."

King Pelias stood up in the hall and holding up his scepter he said, "Omy nephew Jason, and O friends assembled here, I promise that I willhave built for the voyage the best ship that ever sailed from a harborin Greece. And I promise that I will send throughout all Greece a wordtelling of Jason's voyage so that all heroes desirous of winning famemay come to help him and to help all of you who may go with him to winfrom the keeping of King etes the famous Fleece of Gold."

The other hunter was a girl, Atalanta. Tall and brighthaired wasAtalanta, swift and good with the bow. She had dedicated herself toArtemis, the guardian of the wild things, and she had vowed that shewould remain unwedded. All the heroes welcomed Atalanta as a comrade,and the maiden did all the things that the young men did.

There came a hero who was less youthful than Castor or Polydeuces; hewas a man good in council named Nestor. Afterward Nestor went to thewar against Troy, and then he was the oldest of the heroes in the campof Agamemnon.

Then all along the waterside came the noise of hammering; in the streetwhere the metalworkers were came the noise of beating upon metals asthe smiths fashioned out of bronze armor for the heroes and swords andspears. Every day, under the eyes of Argus the master, the ship thathad in it the beam from Zeus's grove was built higher and wider. Andthose who were building the ship often felt going through it tremors asof a living creature.

Then mast and sails were taken down and the oars were left in the ship,and the Argo was launched into the water. The heroes went back to thepalace of King Pelias to feast with the king's guests before they tooktheir places on the ship, setting out on the voyage to far Colchis.

The heroes went the next day through the streets of Iolcus down towhere the ship lay. The ways they went through were crowded; the heroeswere splendid in their appearance, and Jason amongst them shone like astar.

The people praised him, and one told the other that it would not belong until they would win back to Iolcus, for this band of heroes wasstrong enough, they said, to take King etes's city and force him togive up to them the famous Fleece of Gold. Many of the bright-eyedyouths of Iolcus went with the heroes who had come from the differentparts of Greece.

As they marched past a temple a priestess came forth to speak to Jason;Iphias was her name. She had a prophecy to utter about the voyage. ButIphias was very old, and she stammered in her speech to Jason. What shesaid was not heard by him. The heroes went on, and ancient Iphias wasleft standing there as the old are left by the young.

And when the Argonauts beheld the dawn upon the high peaks of Pelionthey arose and poured out wine in offering to Zeus, the highest of thegods. Then Argo herself gave forth a strange cry, for the beam fromDodona that had been formed into her prow had endued her with life. Sheuttered a strange cry, and as she did the heroes took their places atthe benches, one after the other, as had been arranged by lot, andTiphys, the helmsman, went to the steering place. To the sound ofOrpheus's lyre they smote with oars the rushing sea water, and thesurge broke over the oar blades. The sails were let out and the breezecame into them, piping shrilly, and the fishes came darting through thegreen sea, great and small, and followed them, gamboling along thewatery paths. And Chiron, the king-centaur, came down from the MountainPelion, and standing with his feet in the foam cried out, "Good speed,O Argonauts, good speed, and a sorrowless return."

Afterward, for a whole day, no wind blew and the sail of the Argo hungslack. But the heroes swore to each other that they would make theirship go as swiftly as if the storm-footed steeds of Poseidon wereracing to overtake her. Mightily they labored at the oars, and no onewould be first to leave his rower's bench.

And then, just as the breeze of the evening came up, and just as therest of the heroes were leaning back, spent with their labor, the oarthat Heracles still pulled at broke, and half of it was carried away bythe waves. Heracles sat there in ill humor, for he did not know what todo with his unlaboring hands.

Like the wave that breaks over a ship and gives the sailors no respiteAmycus came on at Polydeuces. He pushed in upon him, thinking to bearhim down and overwhelm him. But as the skillful steersman keeps theship from being overwhelmed by the monstrous wave, so Polydeuces, allskill and lightness, baffled the rushes of Amycus. At last Amycus,standing on the tips of his toes and rising high above him, tried tobring down his great fist upon the head of Polydeuces. The hero swungaside and took the blow on his shoulder. Then he struck his blow. Itwas a strong one, and under it the king of the Bebrycians staggered andfell down. "You see," said Polydeuces, "that we keep your law."

The Argonauts shouted, but the rude Bebrycians raised their clubs torush upon them. Then would the heroes have been hard pressed, andforced, perhaps, to get back to the Argo. But suddenly Heraclesappeared amongst them, coming up from the forest.

To Salmydessus, then, where Phineus ruled, Tiphys steered the Argo.They left Heracles with Tiphys aboard to guard the ship, and, with therest of the heroes, Jason went through the streets of the city. Theymet many men, but when they asked any of them how they might come tothe palace of King Phineus the men turned fearfully away.

Then Phineus, the blind king, left them, and after a while the heroeswere brought into a great hall, and they were invited to restthemselves there while a banquet was being prepared for them. The hallwas richly adorned, but it looked to the heroes as if it had knownstrange happenings; rich hangings were strewn upon the ground, an ivorychair was overturned, and the dais where the king sat had stains uponit. The servants who went through the hall making ready the banquetwere white-faced and fearful.

The feast was laid on a great table, and the heroes were invited to sitdown to it. The king did not come into the hall before they sat down,but a table with food was set before the dais. When the heroes hadfeasted, the king came into the hall. He sat at the table, blind,white-faced, and shrunken, and the Argonauts all turned their faces tohim.

Said Phineus, the blind king: "You see, O heroes, how much my wisdomavails me. You see me blind and shrunken, who tried to make myself inwisdom equal to the gods. And yet you have not seen all. Watch now andsee what feasts Phineus, the wise king, has to delight him."

And one of the Harpies perched herself on the back of the king's throneand looked upon the heroes with red eyes. "Hah," she screamed, "youbring armed men into your feasting hall, thinking to scare us away.Never, Phineus, can you scare us from you! Always you will have us, theSnatchers, beside you when you would still your ache of hunger. Whatcan these men do against us who are winged and who can travel throughthe ways of the air?"

So said the unsightly Harpy, and the heroes drew together, made fearfulby these awful shapes. All drew back except Zetes and Calais, the sonsof the North Wind. They laid their hands upon their swords. The wingson their shoulders spread out and the wings at their heels trembled.Phineus, the king, leaned forward and panted: "By the wisdom I have Iknow that there are two amongst you who can save me. O make haste tohelp me, ye who can help me, and I will give the counsel that youArgonauts have come to me for, and besides I will load down your shipwith treasure and costly stuffs. Oh, make haste, ye who can help me!"

"O heroes greater than any kings," he said, "ye have delivered me fromthe terrible curse that the gods had sent upon me. I thank ye, and Ithank ye all, heroes of the quest. And the thanks of Phineus will muchavail you all."

Clasping the hands of Zetes and Calais he led the heroes through hallafter hall of his palace and down into his treasure chamber. There hebestowed upon the banishers of the Harpies crowns and arm rings of goldand richly-colored garments and brazen chests in which to store thetreasure that he gave. And to Jason he gave an ivory-hilted andgolden-cased sword, and on each of the voyagers he bestowed a richgift, not forgetting the heroes who had remained on the Argo, Heraclesand Tiphys.

They went back to the great hall, and a feast was spread for the kingand for the Argonauts. They ate from rich dishes and they drank fromflowing wine cups. Phineus ate and drank as the heroes did, and nodread shapes came before him to snatch from him nor to buffet him. Butas Jason looked upon the man who had striven to equal the gods inwisdom, and noted his blinded eyes and shrunken face, he resolved neverto harbor in his heart such presumption as Phineus had harbored. 2351a5e196

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