- Details
- Written by: Matt DeReno
- Category: Bingham's Notebook
MAGIC EYES ONLY
Filed Under: Artifacts, Evium Technology, Majestic Twelve, Psychological Warfare
Related Figures: Dr. Malcolm Kane, Mortimer Vanterpool, Project Sovereign Eagle
First Major Appearance:Call of the Minotaur: The Midas Files — Book Two
Spoiler Advisory: This entry contains lore details connected to Call of the Minotaur.
Read more: Bingham's Notebook: Magic Eyes Only—Malcolm's Coin
- Details
- Written by: Matt DeReno
- Category: Bingham's Notebook
What connects alien cover-ups, classified government secrets, Cold War paranoia, and decades of UFO conspiracy theories? For many UFO enthusiasts, the answer is Majestic 12, often shortened to MJ-12.
Read more: Bingham's Notebook: The History of The Majestic 12 (MJ-12)
- Details
- Written by: Matt DeReno
- Category: Bingham's Notebook
Welcome back to Bingham’s Notebook, where we explore the hidden corners of the world surrounding The Midas Files.
This week, we’re looking at a shadowy organization that may help explain some of the more esoteric aspects of Dr. Lawrence Bingham’s research: the Order of the Crescent Star.
Read more: Bingham's Notebook: Inventing The Order Of The Crescent Star
- Details
- Written by: Matt DeReno
- Category: Bingham's Notebook
Welcome back to Bingham’s Notebook, where we explore the hidden corners of The Midas Files.
For this entry, I wanted to take a closer look at Mortimer Vanterpool, one of the strangest and most dangerous figures in The Midas Protocol. This may not be the flashiest topic for longtime readers, but clarifying Vanterpool’s abilities helps me understand how he works as a character — and how best to use him as the series continues.
Read more: Bingham's Notebook: Mortimer Vanterpool’s Powers Explained
- Details
- Written by: Matt DeReno
- Category: Bingham's Notebook
As I worked through the world of The Midas Files, I found myself creating characters whose traits sometimes echoed real political figures. Not direct copies. Not hidden biographies. More like creative composites — fictional people shaped by recognizable fragments of history, personality, ideology, and public image.
