El Origen De Los Guardianes Link

One by one, the Guardians begin to fade. The Easter Bunny loses his color. North’s sleigh stalls. The world grows grey. In a devastating sequence, a single child, Jamie (the last believer on Earth), asks his mother, “Is the Easter Bunny real?” and she hesitates. For a moment, all is lost.

Their only hope lies in an outsider: a rebellious, carefree spirit named Jack Frost, who has been invisible to humanity for over three hundred years. Jack Frost is the heart of the origin story. Unlike the other Guardians, Jack has no memory of his past life. He awoke centuries ago at the bottom of a frozen lake, clutching a crooked wooden staff, with no name, no family, and no purpose other than to create snow days, frost on windows, and icy mischief. He craves nothing more than to be seen, touched, and believed in. But he is a loner—a winter sprite who laughs to hide his loneliness. El Origen de los Guardianes

I. The Premise: Beyond the Fairy Tale In the vast, unseen geography of our world lies a second dimension—a realm shaped not by atoms and gravity, but by belief. Here, the immortal embodiments of childhood reside: the Tooth Fairy (Diente de Leche), the Sandman (Sueñero), the Easter Bunny (Conejo de Pascua), and the ageless spirit of winter, Jack Frost (Jack Escarcha). They are not merely mascots of holidays; they are guardians, tasked by the lunar deity known as the Man in the Moon (El Hombre en la Luna) with a singular, sacred mission: to protect the wonder, dreams, and hopes of children everywhere. One by one, the Guardians begin to fade

But Jack Frost, having finally recovered his memory (he sees a vision of his sister calling his name—his real name—across the ice), realizes his true power: he is the Guardian of Fun . Joy is the antithesis of fear. The world grows grey