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I Am Legion

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All is one in Darkseid.

"Then Jesus asked him, 'What is your name?' And he replied, 'My name is Legion, for we are many.'"

Humans are very social creatures, we enjoy being around each other a great deal. Our friends, our family, our lovers, our coworkers, are all sources of wholesome fun. If you're not into that sort of thing, well, there's something wrong with you. Or not. But what happens when you go just a bit too far, become more and more of other people while less and less of yourself? Can you go so far that there's nothing left of you at all?

If this sounds like you, then your name may just be Legion.

I Am Legion is a trope where some group or individual is made more sinister or strange by having them avoid referring to themselves in the singular. Through their speech and mannerisms they will make the viewer question the nature of the character. A lone character speaking as though they were chanting along as part of a chorus, or an assembly speaking in perfect unison, regardless of the situation.

This trope inverted would be Self-Duplication; since while Self-Duplication is one person physically splitting up into many, I Am Legion is many people consciously combining into one.

Common quality of Hive Minds, Mind Hives, and cases of Many Spirits Inside of One, but this isn't necessarily so. Not to be confused with Royal "We". Often speak with Voice of the Legion. Has nothing to do with I Am Legend. Roger Zelazny's My Name Is Legion (about a secret agent with a multitude of false identities) is also not an example of this trope. Neither is the X-Men character Legion (or the same character of his own series, who has multiple personalities). Could be a Limited Social Circle that has Jumped Off The Slippery Slope. I Am Spartacus uses this as a diversion.


Examples:

    open/close all folders 

    Anime and Manga 
  • Apocalymon from Digimon Adventure uses "we" to describe himself, being formed from the data of many Digimon.
  • The Tachikoma in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex are not a group of individual sentient robots, but are instead all remote controlled by a single computer. In regular intervals, the individual AI programs are stopped and all of the data each unit has gathered during the day is compared and analyzed. When the AIs are reinitialized, each one has exactly the same set of stored memories. Somehow, they still manage to spend most of their idle time on philosophical debates with each unit expressing different views and opinions, which by all logical understanding should be impossible. They eventually realize that despite their regular synchronizations, they are developing individuality despite never having been programmed for it.
  • Played with in Medaka Box in regard to "Not Equal" Ajimu Najimi. She reveals that out of the human population, 700 million of them are, in fact, components of herself that she refers to as "Terminals". These Terminals occasionally refer to themselves as Ajimu Najimi (and vice versa) and speak of their collective will as being one and the same as hers. However, each Terminal still has his or her own personality, desires, and self. One such Terminal shared that the primary mission Ajimu Najimi gave them was to be themselves before being "Not Equal". Thus, when five such Terminals decide to oppose Najimi's latest scheme due to growing attached to Medaka's Student Council, she isn't upset about it at all despite being opposed by pieces of herself.

    Comic Books 
  • In Annihilators: Earthfall, the Magus has found a way to imprint his consciousness on others, effectively turning them into extensions of himself. He starts out by controlling a few dozen children, then quickly expands to thirty percent of the U.S. population, and keeps imprinting on more and more people with no signs of slowing down.
  • Final Crisis: Darkseid essentially possesses half the human race and turns them into conduits for his will:
    I. Am. The. New. God. All is one in Darkseid. This mighty body is my church. When I command your surrender, I speak with three billion voices. When I make a fist to crush your resistance. It is with three billion hands. When I stare into your eyes and shatter your dreams. And break your heart. It is with six billion eyes! Nothing like Darkseid has ever come among you: Nothing will again. I will take you to a hell without exit or end. And there I will murder your souls! And make you crawl and beg! And die! Die! Die for Darkseid!
  • Sonic the Hedgehog (Archie Comics) subverts this several times in its various incarnations of the villainous Dark Legion. Despite the title, the only thing that makes them a "legion" is their great numbers and shared Cyborg nature; otherwise, they're as far from a Hive Mind as you can get (though the more recent incarnations' lust for absorbing new members into their ranks through "Legionization" parallels another cyborg race listed on here).
  • Spawn: Spawn finds out he actually has 6000 souls inside him. He outright says this trope by name.
  • Spider-Girl: During the first appearance of the Venom symbiote, it outright possesses Spider-Man and is "I". Later, Normie Osborn wrapped in the symbiote, apparently civilizing it, goes by "we". So does May, although the symbiote — the same one that made half of Venom, which had just been transferred to her to heal a fatal wound — promptly jumps off her and dies in a Heroic Sacrifice for her and her father. By that point it's not exactly evil, unlike Carnage later.
  • Spider-Man:
    • Eddie Brock's Venom usually refers to himself in the plural, referring to both himself and the symbiote bonded to him. The other hosts of the symbiote generally don't, as they take a drug to suppress the symbiote's influence, but if they start losing control, they begin slipping into the plural.
    • Carnage is an exception among Symbiotes; it refers to itself almost exclusively as "I" because Cletus and its psychotic personalities sync up so well.
  • X-Men: Oddly, enough, this trope does not apply to the character Legion, despite the fact that he once quoted the passage in The Bible where the name of the Trope came from to explain his Split Personality.

    Fan Fiction 
  • A Certain Droll Hivemind: The protagonist is the 11111th clone of Misaka Mikoto, part of a Hive Mind of nearly ten thousand surviving clones. She therefore switches between "we" and "I" interchangeably, as the rest of the Network is often commenting and offering advice on her life at any given moment. The question of how much a single Sister can truly be called an "individual" is an open question, and may even be changing over the course of the fic. Near the end, Misaka-19421 gives her some advice, and Misaka-11111 says aloud that she came up with it "with no one else's assistance." Misaka-19421 complains. Misaka-11111 points out that they are all technically the same person. Misaka-19421 points out that she has previously said otherwise.
    Misaka-11111: She is obviously wrong and I do not need to explain further how the cases are different.
    Misaka-10901: Consistency is not Misaka-11111's strong point. Perhaps there was a glitch in the Testament machine when they were loading in her consistency protocols. She is almost as bad at it as she is about not whining when she forgets her lunch which is entirely her own fault.
    Misaka-11111: I do not know what Misaka-10901 is talking about. She is probably just being mean again.
  • In the Naruto fic The Darkness in Kage Bunshin, this is the reason why the Kage Bunshin technique was forbidden. They eventually become flesh and blood, and psychically linked to the point where they lost track of the original.
  • In Nobody Dies, a group of enthralled people speak in unison to punctuate the words of their leader. A direct Shout-Out to the trope picture above, from Final Crisis. "I am Legion, I am numerous. When I strike down your army, it is with SIX BILLION FISTS! When I stare my hatred into the depths of your soul, it is with SIX BILLION EYES!"
  • Team 8 has one of Naruto's Kage Bunshin say this to another shinobi, then another clone rolls his (its?) eyes and smacks it to get rid of it. The other one (horror) is the reason why it was forbidden. They eventually become flesh and blood, and psychically linked to the point where they lost track of the original.

    Films — Live-Action 

    Literature 
  • While she never quite goes as far as referring to herself in the plural, recurring Animorphs villain Sub-Visser 51/Taylor will switch back and forth frequently, sometimes even mid-sentence, as to which of Yeerk and Human is to be referred to in the first person and which is to be referred to in the third.
  • Mucho Maas from The Crying of Lot 49.
  • In the Dexter book series, whenever Dexter lets the Dark Passenger "take the wheel" he has a tendency to refer to himself as we and us when he speaks to his victims — referring to him (Dexter) and the separate entity that is the Dark Passenger.
  • Discworld:
    • Whenever one Auditor uses a personal pronoun in the singular, it actually pops out of existence, as if it either extinguishes itself in horror or is extinguished by the others on the grounds that to be an individual is to be alive, and all mortal lives are impossibly short next to the lifespan of the universe. Later in the books, they try mortality out and the first one gives herself a Meaningful Name, because they don't see the point of names that aren't descriptive — Lady Myria Le Jean. (Since that's a little difficult, here's some help — Myria, from "myriad", meaning "innumerable", and Le Jean pronounced in the proper French manner sounds a lot like the French pronunciation of "legion".)
    • Also the Hiver from A Hat Full of Sky. While it obviously qualifies as a Hive Mind, there is a part of it which could be referred to as 'the original' that is changed every time a new mind is added to the mix.
  • The demonic sword Saika from Durarara!!. It leaves a cut in each of its victims' souls, where a "daughter sword" is born, thus making the victim a part of Saika as well as a servant and mouthpiece.
  • In one scene of It, a woman whose daughter is taken by Pennywise hears voices coming from her sink drain. When she asks who they are, they reply "We are Legion".
  • In John Dies at the End, a person possessed by a swarm refers to himself as Shitload, "because there is a shitload of us in there".
  • In Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, the Trope Namer scene is retold. It is basically the same, though it seems The Bible opted to... tone done the original line.
    Legion: My name is Legion, for there are a shit-ton of us in here.
  • In the Matthew Swift books, the blue electric angels think of themselves in the plural, despite being essentially a single entity. Since they're merged with the protagonist at the beginning of the first book, the books' narrative pronoun is "we" about half the time.
  • Ygramul the Many, a giant spider consisting of millions of small hornets, from The Neverending Story.
  • Nineteen Eighty-Four: Winston discovers the truth behind the Party's plan in a book written by fugitive rebel leader Goldstein:
    The ideal set up by the Party was something huge, terrible, and glittering — a world of steel and concrete, of monstrous machines and terrifying weapons — a nation of warriors and fanatics, marching forward in perfect unity, all thinking the same thoughts and shouting the same slogans, perpetually working, fighting, triumphing, persecuting; three hundred million people, all with the same face.
  • In The Stand, it is revealed by Tom Cullen in a trance that Randal Flagg is neither truly human nor an individual, in fact Tom uses the line: "He's always outside. He came out of time. He doesn't know himself. He has the name of a thousand demons. Jesus knocked him into a herd of pigs once. His name is Legion. He's afraid of us. We're inside."note 
  • An interesting use in Star Trek: Vanguard combines this trope with Me's a Crowd. The Shedai Serrataal ruling class often speak as though they're a collective (despite being in reality an ideologically diverse bunch) and can also take on multiple forms at once, controlling several bodies simultaneously. The Apostate, when describing the Shedai caste system, explains "I am Serrataal, I am legion", thereby making use of the I Am Legion trope while also using the same words to point to the Me's a Crowd nature of his powers.
  • The Morah, and its army, the Zars, from Wind on Fire.

    Live-Action TV 
  • Angel:
    • Jasmine's image and voice immediately brainwash witnesses to worship and obey her. Over time, this connection advances into making them extensions of her that she calls the "Body Jasmine", allowing her to remotely sense and act through their bodies. This even extends to reflecting damage from them onto her, though on her body, it quickly heals with no actual harm; this leads to a notable scene in which the team, inoculated against her enthrallment, are slaughtering her minions while she is shown laughing maniacally as the fatal wounds harmlessly reflect on her body, secure in her victory.
    • In the finale, Hamilton says to Angel that he would never defeat Wolfram & Hart because "[they] are Legion. They are forever."
  • In the Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode "Primeval", while Buffy prepares to face Adam, the Scooby gang performs the Enjoining Spell that gives Buffy the combined power of her friends and she speaks with the combined voices of herself and those casting the spell.
    Buffy: You could never hope to grasp the source of our power. [rips out Adam's uranium core] But yours is right here.
  • Doctor Who:
    • The Cybermen on occasion, particularly in the new series. "You will become identical. You will become like us."
    • The Ood pull a similar trick in "The Impossible Planet"/"The Satan Pit" once they're possessed by the Beast. "He is awake." "AND YOU WILL WORSHIP HIM."
    • In "The End of Time", the Master transforms everyone on Earth into a clone of himself, with a single shared consciousness.
  • In the A Haunting episode "The Diabolical", a ghost hunter explains that some hauntings can be explained by one spirit taking the form of many, which are called Legion.
  • In one episode of House, a game producer posts his symptoms online to find a diagnosis receives this as a suggestion. Foreman and Thirteen shoot it down as they go through several other suggestions:
    Foreman: You are possessed by the biblical demon "Legion".
    Thirteen: Nope, no jumping off a cliff in a herd of pigs.
    Foreman: Otherwise, it did fit.
  • The Mentalist: A common theory about the "He Is Man" message at the end of "Red John's Friends" is that it was supposed to read "He Is Many". Given that Red John is said to have an absurdly high number of "followers"...
  • Appropriately enough, the Red Dwarf episode "Legion" (which had the working title "Call Me Legion") features a being which only exists as a combination of nearby conscious minds. He's referred to as a "gestalt entity"; this term was also frequently used to describe the "Grant Naylor" persona under which the programme's co-creators Rob Grant and Doug Naylor were often presented. When Legion tries to keep the crew imprisoned with him forever (for he would cease to exist without them), Kryten knocks everyone else out so his is the only conscious mind Legion could exist from — which means he is compelled to follow Kryten's mechanoid programming and help him get the humans back onto Starbug.
  • In The Sarah Jane Adventures, we have the Trickster, especially in "The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith".
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation: "WE ARE THE BORG. YOU WILL BE ASSIMILATED. RESISTANCE IS FUTILE."
  • At one point in Storm of the Century, it's realized that Magnificent Bastard antagonist Linoge's name is an anagram of Legion, complete with the character who realizes this quoting the relevant Bible passage. Given what we see of Linoge, that he is either a demon or some sort of avatar for them is quite likely.
  • Ultra Series:
    • Yapool (debuting in Ultraman Ace) often does this. In earlier appearances, this was actually because Yapool was the Yapool, an entire alien species, but Yapool's identity was later retconned as the collective consciousness of an alien race.
    • Chaos Header, Big Bad of Ultraman Cosmos, refers himself in similar fashion due to the fact that he's actually a single-minded mass of tiny virus-like entities rather than a singular being.

    Mythology and Religion 

    Music 
  • E Nomine's "Der Fürst Der Finsternis", actually about Satan, contains the line "My name is legion".
  • Black Sabbath's "I" has the lyrics "I am Wicked / I am Legion / Strength in numbers a lie / The number is one".
  • HammerFall's song "Legion", which describes the Biblical demon.
  • Marduk has a song called "Legion" with the line "My name is legion, for we are many in here".
  • Arch Enemy (Band)'s song "Nemesis" has the line 'We are Legion/Voice of Anarchy'. Angela Gossow's singing style is the perfect compliment to the lyrics.

    Podcasts 
  • Played with in the RiffTrax for Paranormal Activity, in the scene where Katie changes her mind about leaving, and Mike riffs, "For we are Legion, and we are very comfy here."

    Tabletop Games 
  • Warhammer 40,000's Thousand Sons Traitor Legion have a rule representing their status as possessed suits of armour entitled "We Are Legion."

    Toys 
  • Lampshaded in BIONICLE after Brutaka gets possessed by Antidermis:
    Axonn: Just so you know... Brutaka's his own "we" now. Long story.

    Video Games 
  • The Overlord Doom Blade from AdventureQuest Worlds houses several darkness elementals.
  • The unexpectedly sinister Animal Crossing: City Folk features this as one of the random comments while playing hide and seek.
  • Batman: Arkham City: What's worse than getting into a battle with Ra's Al Ghul? How about a battle against around 20+ Ra's Al Ghul sand clones who pounce on you while shouting "WE ARE LEGION"?
  • In Battalion Wars, Countess Ingrid is eventually possessed by the Iron Legion — an army of ancient soldiers she revived — and starts spouting lines which usually contain the phrase, "We are Legion!".
  • Legion itself is a popular Recurring Boss in the Castlevania series, starting with Symphony of the Night, in which it's called "Granfalloon".note  It takes the form of a giant orb with several acid-spewing tentacles sticking out, but is always initially covered in a giant layer of tortured souls/corpses, which it drops to attack you. It also doubles as the first stage of an Optional Boss in Castlevania: Curse of Darkness. Two variations are introduced in Harmony of Dissonance: the first one is dubbed "Legion (Saint)", which fits the description above, while the second one is called "Legion (Corpse)", which has the shell of bodies replaced by an indestructible armor composed mostly of human skulls and the weak spot being a seemingly crucified rotten corpse.
  • Command & Conquer: Tiberian Series:
  • Dead by Daylight has the Legion killers, a gang of Teens Are Monsters merged into one being to work under the Entity, played as a Composite Character.
  • When two characters merge their minds in Deus Ex, they use the words "I... I... We... are... one."
  • In Diablo III, Azmodan plans to become the Prime Evil, the embodiment of all seven Great Evils in one being, and Diablo, after accomplishing exactly that courtesy of Adria's betrayal, actually says this before the final battle.
  • The Masters of the Bazaar in Fallen London frequently talk like this. Their precise nature is unknown, so it's not clear whether they're attempting the Royal "We", or referring to themselves and the Bazaar, or whether each individual Master is in fact some kind of colony, somehow. It's fairly clear they aren't all a collective mind, however, since they've been known to work at cross purposes, and it's possible they're just too alien to describe properly, or to properly describe themselves.
  • In both Final Fantasy III and Dissidia Final Fantasy the Cloud of Darkness refers to "herself" in the plural. The reason for this could either because "she" is actually a personification of the chaotic forces that herald the coming of the Void, or because "she" is including her attack tentacles when talking about "herself". (It should be noted this was added to the English version. In the Japanese version, she uses 'Washi,' a pronoun for old men.)
  • Fittingly enough, Legion from Fire Emblem.
  • The quote gets used in Legacy of Kain: Soul Reaver.
    Kain: As long as one of us stands, we are legion.
  • The playable character Legion in MARDEK RPG 3 is a robot built by Meraeador and bound to a soul... except that Meraeador stutterd the magic words, and so Legion has four souls. Three of them are crazy, and one of the three can't even speak coherently.
  • Mass Effect:
    • In a variation, every individual of the Reaper species is its own numberless legion, although the few we interact with still refer to themselves in the singular. Mass Effect 2 reveals that they reproduce by liquefying millions of individual organics and pumping their genetic paste into a shell. Legion describes a Reaper as "one ship, one will, many minds".
    • In ME2, a geth ends up rescuing Shepard and is then rescued by him/her in return and brought back to the Normandy. Shepard asks what it should be called, and it simply replies "Geth", claiming it is not an individual and that there are currently "1,183 programs active within this platform". EDI recites The Bible passage and names it Legion, which it "acknowledges as an appropriate metaphor".
    • The entire geth race is this trope; the geth are made up of two components: "platforms", the physical bodies you see in the game, and "runtimes", the actual artificial intelligence programs. To do anything physically, runtimes must inhabit platforms, usually requiring at least a few hundred runtimes per platform to run the platform's systems. Since geth platforms are all connected via FTL communication, geth runtimes will freely swap between platforms. Legion is partly unique in that it is made up of over a thousand runtimes inhabiting a single platform, over eleven times more than is normal for geth platforms. It needs this many because the geth get smarter the more of them are together; with over a thousand, Legion is able to function autonomously outside geth space and make contact with organic beings.
    • Legion once describes the geth as a "shattered mind". The geth's ultimate goal is to build a Dyson sphere so that all runtimes can share at once.
    • In Mass Effect 3, depending on the choice you make, the geth runtimes can achieve true sentience and individuality.
  • Mortal Kombat's Ermac, being a Hive Mind of numerous souls. He even uses the "We are many" mantra in Mortal Kombat 9.
  • In [PROTOTYPE], Alex Mercer is really The Virus that manifested itself into the person known as "Alex Mercer" just after the death of the original Alex Mercer. Throughout the game, Alex Mercer consumes various people and gains their memories and skills, but this has also resulted in him having to relive those peoples' memory of their deaths over and over. Alex/Blacklight even says outright that the people he has killed are part of him and are him, implying that the individuals he has consumed are bleeding into his sense of self. This explains why he slowly (very slowly) starts to grow something akin to a conscience; the original Mercer was a complete sociopath, but as the game goes on, he consumes people who aren't, giving him more of a sense of right and wrong.
  • The Original Generation antagonists from SD Gundam G Generation DS are Legion. The protagonist is their Super Prototype who is free from the Hive Mind and joins other heroes against the Legion.
  • The antagonist in Shadow Man is named (and may have been) Legion, and he and his group of serial killers (called "The Five") use The Bible quote as a mantra. His goal is to trick the protagonist into collecting a series of demonic souls for him so he can unleash them to bring about The End of the World as We Know It, natch. Both the game and instructions seem to imply heavily that this is the Legion from The Bible, but never openly state it to be the case.
  • Dormin from Shadow of the Colossus refers to theirself as "we". Granted, Dormin also has two voices speaking at once, and was split into sixteen different collossi/shadow beings.
  • In System Shock 2 — "Glory to The Many".
  • The Prometheus robots in TimeSplitters Future Perfect say this at random (or more specifically, we are legion).

    Visual Novels 
  • In Sunrider: Mask of Arcadius, the eponymous Big Bad Veniczar Arcadius is revealed to be one of the Prototypes, a collective of genetically enhanced clones sharing a Hive Mind. This is best demonstrated when Arcadius comes after the heroes in his personal mech during the final battle: Sola obliterates Arcadius with a single shot, cutting him off mid-gloat... only for his dozens of clones to show up and finish the gloating in unison. His flagship is even called the Legion, in a subtle bit of foreshadowing.
  • Nero Chaos in Tsukihime. Technically, he does refer to himself as I, but also admits that the remaining part of him that was once a human is now very small. Say, about 1/666? The other 665 parts are animals and mythical beasts. He still mostly acts human presumably because the human part is what holds it together plus the intelligence factor, but it's implied that this won't always be so and that he is becoming something else... or was, until Shiki killed him.

    Webcomics 
  • Kharla'ggen of Drowtales always calls herself "we", and not in the Royal "We" sense despite being a noble, and her adopted sister Kiel believes that she has multiple people in her head due to her aura absorbing powers. Kiel thinks this also means that Kharla's never really felt alone. To drive the point home, in chapter 47 after she merges with a massively powerful demon God who wreaks havoc through the city, a crying and clearly in pain Kharla uses "I" for the first and last time on page just as she's about to be eaten.
  • Kano from Kagerou sometimes refers to himself in the plural. He's the protagonist with a bad case of multiple personality disorder. It's a weird comic.
  • Scarlet from Sequential Art and her sisters, while it's easy to forget, are cyborgs forming a Hive Mind at will, which makes them talk in unison. When the protagonists getting played a Realm of Lorecraft board game, Kat suggests Scarlet team up with her "sisters". The following dialog occurs:
    Squirrel girls: Bio-computing effectiveness at 100%... [as their knight avatar] we are legion!
    Art: That's... kinda creepy.
  • Tina from Wapsi Square is actually a swarm of demons inhabiting the body of a girl who was fatally injured in a car accident.

    Web Originals 
  • In DO NOT TAKE THE SHELLS, the woman on the beach, on top of having odd pauses in her speech, never uses the word "I". The main character is somewhat confused by this:
    Woman: Name? Don't... think we have a name.
    Harris: We?
    Woman: We don't have a name. We don't need... one.
    Harris: Where are the others, then?
    Woman: There are no others. Just us.
  • In The Mad Scientist Wars, this happens in an alternate future which is thankfully averted. It's executed particularly creepily by using the scene as a major Break the Cutie.
  • TV Tropes: This little gem from our Mary Sue page:invoked

    Web Videos 

    Western Animation 
  • The Adventure Time episode "Up a Tree" has an obvious Shout-Out to Pirates of the Caribbean, creatures that live in a tree repeatedly say this: "In the tree, part of the tree. In the tree, part of the tree."
  • Avatar: The Last Airbender:
    • In the Avatar State, an Avatar is channeling the combined skill of every Avatar that came before him/her.
    • Also Joo Dee. Aang and his friends started to get suspicious when Joo Dee (their guide and caretaker) disappeared and a clearly different woman took her place. In a later episode, we see a whole roomful of women being brainwashed into assuming the name and identity of "Joo Dee". Appropriately, according to Avatar Wiki, "Joo Dee" is the Chinese equivalent of "Jane Doe".
  • Codename: Kids Next Door: The Delightful Children from Down the Lane, due to a brainwashing device that overloaded.
  • The Spectacular Spider-Man: After he starts using the symbiote, Peter notices himself thinking "we" instead of "I".
  • Steven Universe: White Diamond can do this with a shot of her eye beams to any Gem, including other Diamonds.

    Real Life 
  • 4chan's Anonymous is a gigantic group of anonymous people, connected only by their anonymous identity, that, when angered, can seriously screw up a person's reputation. Or sanity. Most likely both.
    We are Anonymous. We are Legion. We do not forgive. We do not forget. Expect us.
  • The Situationalist International, Animal Liberation Front and The Invisible Party (Swedish Anarchist group) have used legion-like rhethoric.
  • The fans of the Dutch football team Feyenoord are referred to as "The Legion". They even use this in songs (We are the Legion, and we will become champion). It scans a lot better in the original Dutch, mind you.
  • Although trees can't talk in the typical way, clonal Aspen colonies that share a common root system are the living embodiment of this trope. The most famous example, Pando, is composed of 43,000 standing trees and is over 80,000 years old.
  • People with tulpas or imaginary friends, as well as people with Dissociative Identity Disorder, will sometimes refer to themselves as "we" or even "this system."
  • Thanks to the ability to use complex language and cooperate with the use of it, homo sapiens are pretty much legion compared to the other hominids.
  • Ants and other social insects generally have some form of hive mind, thanks to which they are legion.
  • There's also the idea of Biocentrism, which is that all life, including humans, are parts of the same consciousness. This way consciousness creates the cosmos, and not the other way around. We are all a way for the cosmos to know itself.

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