Begin the day with a fresh look and a camera in your hand. The Demogorgon has come, and once inside his lair, he intends to kidnap you and bring you to his domain. This “Starry Night”-inspired screenprint of our favorite creature from Stranger Things can be found on a t-shirt from the Stranger Things series. Fans of the show Stranger Things and art, in general, need to have this shirt in their wardrobe.
Demogorgon Description.
Demogorgon Starry Night Style Poster Shirt Stranger Things Information.
Brand | Drama Shirt |
Care Guidelines |
|
Origin | Printed in the United States |
Sizes | Sizes ranging from Small to 5XL (Sizes vary on styles) |
Colors | Printed Using a Vast Choice of Colors |
Material | 100% Cotton |
Style | There are T-Shirts, V-necks, Hoodies, Tank Tops, Long Sleeve Tees, Sweatshirts, and more. |
Facts about Demogorgon That you may not know.
Stranger Things revealed the Demogorgon first. The towering, plant-like creature was from the Upside Down, an other dimension accessible via portals, and ravenous for practically everything. The faceless creature opens like a flower before eating or attacking. It’s nocturnal but can live throughout the day.
The Demogorgon’s talents help it search and locate adversaries. It can teleport between the Upside Down and Earth. It can track someone with only a few droplets of blood if they leave a trail or are close. The beast can endure gunshots and is very powerful. It regenerates after a time.
Tricky. They haven’t disclosed whether the creature emerged from the Upside Down or mutated from anything else. Demogorgons lay eggs and can multiply, so there may be more than we observe. Scientists may have produced it, but how is unknown.
The Demogorgon isn’t real, but it has existed before. The show’s monster is titled after Dungeons & Dragons’ Prince of Demons. The monster’s two heads each have specific powers to defeat adversaries. Its tentacles rot opponents on touch. In mythology, the Demogorgon is a Hell monster. The Demogorgon’s origin is debated in Greek mythology and Christian theology. The name is a misinterpretation of Demiurge, a god-like monster believed to have created the cosmos.