For this reason, Vigo needed a baby to possess to facilitate his rebirth. Although the slime granted Vigo power enough to manifest, he could not regain a physical form. The Psychomagnotheric ectoplasm boosted Vigo's powers, and enabled him to channel people's negative emotions needed for the manifestation of an army of angry spirits that soon started terrorizing New York City. Vigo drew power from the river of Psychomagnotheric Slime flowing through abandoned subway tunnels of the New York Pneumatic Railroad to a location underneath the Museum. The Vigo painting was moved from storage to the Restoration room in 304 at the Manhattan Museum of Art. True to his word, Vigo returned in modern day New York in 1989. It was later digitzed in the Occult Reference Net. It was a length of 18 pages from page 128 to 145. An entry about Vigo was recorded in chapter six of Magicians, Martyrs And Madmen by Leon Zundinger. I'll be back!" Vigo's ghost took up residence in his portrait that was created long before the events of his death. Just before his head died, he uttered this prophetic warning: "Death is but a door. He was poisoned, shot, stabbed, hung, stretched, disemboweled, drawn and quartered (to which Venkman commented "Ouch"). His people had led a rebellion and they tried and executed him in a manner that they saw fit for his rule. He eventually died at the age of 105 in 1610, but not because of his old age. He was also known as "Vigo the Cruel," "Vigo the Torturer," "Vigo the Despised," and "Vigo the Unholy." Peter Venkman jokingly adds "Vigo the Butch" to the list of aliases. Because of his evil ways he wasn't well liked by his subjects and he killed hundreds of them. He soon rose to power and ruled his home country with an iron fist, and the land itself was in a constant state of spiritual turmoil thanks to his despotic rule, which earned him an infamous name, the "Scourge of Carpathia." Vigo later conquered another land, the country of Moldavia in Romania which its people while still resenting the psychotic autocrat, gave him another notorious alias, the "Sorrow of Moldavia." It was said he was a powerful magician and a genius in many ways, as well as a tyrant, an autocrat, a lunatic and a genocidal madman. Vigo was born a prince in 1505 in the small Balkan kingdom of Carpathia. Ghostbusters: Sanctum of Slime video game, deemed a Tertiary Canon, follows Ghostbusters (1984) and Ghostbusters II. Vigo (from Dimension 50-S) in the IDW Comic Series, is a alternate version based on Ghostbusters: Sanctum of Slime. Vigo (prime) appears in the IDW Comic Series, a Secondary Canon, which follows Ghostbusters (1984) and Ghostbusters II, also includes some elements from Ghostbusters: The Video Game (Realistic Versions) and Ghostbusters: The Video Game (Stylized Versions) as well as being canon to Tobin's Spirit Guide (Insight Editions). In Ghostbusters: The Video Game (Realistic Versions), a Secondary Canon, Ghostbusters (1984) and Ghostbusters II pre-date the game, Ghostbusters: Afterlife conflicts with the game. Vigo in the Primary Canon is developed from Ghostbusters II.
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