Sandbox:Machu Picchu
| This page is a sandbox. Sandboxed pages are unfinished and not yet approved. Information found here may be unpolished or unverified. |

Machu Picchu, or referred as the "Lost City of Incas", is the famous Peruvian citadel built around the 15th century. Even though the Incas were wiped out by European smallpox, the 7th wonder of the world remains untouched and protected by Peru's National Government. Although both Machu Picchu and Peru in general don't receive much attention from the Godzilla franchise, it still retains some popularity from the fanbase since the national structure got to be a part of the famous Monsterverse.
History
Monsterverse
Godzilla: King of the Monsters
The Titan, Quetzalcoatl lied dormant in the Andes Mountains in Machu Picchu before being awoken by King Ghidorah to attack humanity. After escaping Outpost 57 and was shown heading northwest on a map on Monarch's USS Argo, Quetzalcoatl was pacified by the Orca's signal at Fenway Park by Madison Russell.
Comics
- Godzilla: Rulers of Earth #19–21 (2014–2015) [mentioned in #21]
Godzilla: Rulers of Earth

Godzilla and Megaguirus fought against each other from Brazil to Peru, then landing in Machu Picchu. Suddenly, an unidentified flying object landed above the two kaiju and opened up to release the Trilopods. The aliens began to attack the beasts as Alpha Trilopods absorbed DNA from both monsters. Godzilla managed to slain a large number of Trilopods but a Beta and an Alpha merged together to create a Megaguirus-like Trilopod. After Godzilla executed the Trilopods, the God of Destruction started a brawl against the Megaguirus-like Trilopod and murdered the fleeing Megaguirus. After trading blows against each other, The mutated Trilopod flew away and took Godzilla with it.
Books
Godzilla vs. Kong: The Official Movie Novelization
Godzilla arrived at Outpost 57 to check on Quetzalcoatl before continuing his way to Apex Cybernetics' Pensacola facility.
Trivia
To be added
References
This is a list of references for Machu Picchu. These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]
Comments
Showing 7 comments. When commenting, please remain respectful of other users, stay on topic, and avoid role-playing and excessive punctuation. Comments which violate these guidelines may be removed by administrators.