Tenebrium isn’t a solid, it's a looping, flowing current of energy particles suspended in a vacuum-sealed, zero-gravity chamber.
It coils and twists in midair like plasma threads caught in a slow-motion whirlpool, constantly moving, constantly reshaping. The way it behaves feels deliberate like it's following rules we don’t understand.
Movement
It doesn’t drift or fall. It pulses, spirals, and folds in on itself, forming temporary knots and strange 3D light patterns. Some folds seem to be in two places at once. It’s like watching a projection of something higher-dimensional, just barely visible in our reality.
Container Design
Tenebrium is held in a reinforced vacuum chamber with superconductive magnetic coils. Magnetic field lines show up faintly, guiding its motion. The chamber might be cylindrical or multifaceted—partially transparent, showing off odd distortions near the surface, like light dragging behind itself or space bending slightly out of shape.

Overall Feel
Tenebrium looks unstable. It feels just barely contained—like it’s pushing against the limits of the universe. Not alive, but not inert either. Like staring into a machine that runs on physics we haven’t discovered yet.



