

By Repentance, a more Biblically-accurate angel appears in the form of Dogma's One-Winged Angel form. The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth has archangels Uriel and Gabriel, who appear as blank-faced Winged Humanoids that attack after their statues are destroyed.Her description in this game pegs her as bringing light to everything she touches. Bendy in Nightmare Run is a spin-off of Bendy and the Ink Machine, so it also has Alice Angel - the cartoon version.She also has a second Holy Halo that floats above her head. She's also made of ink, but she's nice to Henry and helps him against the monsters at the studio. Allison is also a real-life version of Alice.She's made of ink, deformed, and is definitely not good. Susie Campbell is a real-life version of the above character, who was introduced in Chapter 3.One of the studio's cartoon stars is a shapely female named Alice Angel, a Horned Humanoid with a Holy Halo but no wings who is "sent from above," dresses in a Little Black Dress, and is noted for her talents in song and dance.Each category of angels looks the way it's described in the Bible, and the different types are helpfully and correctly identified the first time they show up. An interesting side note here - angels are described in great detail in the Bible, and Bayonetta's development team has Shown Their Work. Beat them up (as Bayonetta does throughout the games because she is an angel hunter rather than a demon hunter like her predecessor), and all that falls off, leaving horrible monsters with dripping juices, exposed muscle tissue and eyes where they probably shouldn't be. At first glance they have all the marble skin, gilded armor, and glowing halos of light (and choral accompaniment). Beyond that, it can be inferred that the angels are as much liars and tricksters as demons, under all that polite, self-righteous veneer. Bayonetta's angels and demons are less about "Good" and "Evil" factions and more about " Light" and " Dark" and the unspoken agreement to try and not kill each other and mortals enough to cause an imbalance.Baldur's Gate II: A solar (the highest rank of angel in D&D, and thusly someone even your character, the child of the god of death, does not want to mess with) serves as Mister Exposition epic level spellcasters can also summon celestials."Fallen" Sankta are implied to be reverting to their "natural" state. In fact, the Sankta are strongly implied to be an artificial race altogether, created via a highly-advanced machine from the "demonic" Sarkaz race which resemble various types of mythological monsters. For one thing, there is an enigmatic "law" that the Sankta must follow, and if they break this law - such as willfully drawing a gun and shooting another Sankta, they can "fall," causing their halos to dim and making them sprouts horns and demonic tails. Later revelations in the story, particularly the side story Guide Ahead, reveals weird things about them.Other than that, they're ordinary flesh-and-blood humanoids with no connection to the spiritual realm or the afterlife, and their nation's Hat is the advancement of firearm techology. They also possess an empathic Hive Mind, allowing them to detect the emotions and metnal state of other Sankta. They have haloes and small wings made of light, and tend to be highly religious.Arknights: The Sankta race is angel-inspired.Arena.Xlsm: Their existence is referenced in by the name of the "Summon Angelic Horde" spell.Arena of Valor: There are two angels amongst the ranks of Veda, but despite using the 'winged angel' general motif, generally being compassionate yet somehow does not heal others, and their names end with '-iel' they're different:.Aion: You start your character's life by ascending to become essentially an angel of your race's gods.When you reach the end of the Portal, you're attacked by a Black Angel, an alien, sword-toting legless monster who can shoot electricity and tries to shank you. After the War: Mark's diary mentions an Angel who came from beyond the Portal and revealed himself to him.The English version doesn't want you to know that. In the sequel, you look like a angel, but are actually supposed to be god.You use it do things like kill demonic creatures, bless your people's crops, or burn their houses down. Basically, it's a combination of a putto and a Christian angel: looking like the former, while performing the role of the latter. In the first gameyou have a little angel buddy you control in the city maintenance levels that acts as an intermediate between you and your people.
