Hunt: Showdown 1896 - Souls of a Feather
This DLC contains two Hunters, two Weapons, and one Consumable:
- Scourge: Morrigan (Hunter)
- Scourge: Midian (Hunter)
- Wing's Wake (Slate Riposte)
- Heart's Dowry (Haymaker)
- Cagebreaker (Sticky Bomb)
Scourge: Morrigan
Morrigan finally knew herself from the moment her reflection stared back from the Beak’s eyes. The wealth and riches she sought could be hers—power could be hers. No more hunger, pain, or seclusion, not if she was willing to take, keep, and bleed.
Scourge: Midian
Midian always knew his pain was meaningless. “Abomination” he was called, so an abomination he became—one that thrived, and one that wielded might. Scrapbeak had shown this path, and he knew that betrayal lay at its end.
Wing’s Wake
Each lover holds a Winfield 1893 Slate Riposte stained with the blood of the other. The bladed beak was used to stab other servants of Scrapbeak in the back, and the shotguns are now wielded to both protect and betray.
Heart’s Dowry
A game played by this pair is to each give their prized LeMat Mark II UpperMat as a gift to new acquaintances. Though unusual for any Hunter to part with vital firearms, neither has yet failed to pry it from an acquaintance’s death grip.
Cagebreaker
To defeat beasts larger, stronger, and fiercer than their brood, the fiery force of this Sticky Bomb has been crucial to Morrigan and Midian. It is devilry in human hands—hands lost deep in crimson darkness.
The word Scrapbeak was christened by a final, agonizing breath. It was a desperate plea to save others from the beast's trap, but instead, it inspired curiosity.
A daring trio followed Scrapbeak’s lure, but did not find fear—they saw only power. Awestruck, they sacrificed the beast’s own servant before swearing their fealty. In the sunken, hungered eyes of that power, however, they were nothing. Thus, the trio quickly grew malcontented. No sacrifice—of others or the self—could make a change, leading all three to walk different paths:
One sharpened their sickle and set their eyes on Scrapbeak.
One looked beyond Scrapbeak, seeking favor with greater powers.
One loaded her pistol with two bullets and pruned the trio.
Cruel, conniving, and cowardly, the surviving acolyte was not satisfied with a nest unto herself. She had made the pledge to power only to find herself powerless, so she began amassing her own followers. After all, New Orleans had no shortage of sniveling ants vying to subjugate others.
Yet the foolish acolyte never imagined her followers could be more traitorous than she. Two disciples found love for the blackest parts of each other’s souls, and picked through the ranks with surgical precision, collecting what they wanted from carcasses until their talons stabbed the spine of the acolyte herself. She was ill-suited to honor Scrapbeak, aspiring to power that she was too fearful to take. The lovers’ bodies were temples, houses for the veneration of that which made Scrapbeak, in whose name the couple were fearful of nothing, not even their master.
A master that would change with the tides, but their love for each other and their lust for unnatural power were unshakable.
For together they had overthrown all who stood in their way, and together they plotted the demise of the one they worshipped. Desperate as they were to cling to power, they would either be supplanted by more traitors, or their dreams of becoming Gods would be fulfilled. Morrigan and Midian—bound in body, soul, and damnation.
- Scourge: Morrigan (Hunter)
- Scourge: Midian (Hunter)
- Wing's Wake (Slate Riposte)
- Heart's Dowry (Haymaker)
- Cagebreaker (Sticky Bomb)
Scourge: Morrigan
Morrigan finally knew herself from the moment her reflection stared back from the Beak’s eyes. The wealth and riches she sought could be hers—power could be hers. No more hunger, pain, or seclusion, not if she was willing to take, keep, and bleed.
Scourge: Midian
Midian always knew his pain was meaningless. “Abomination” he was called, so an abomination he became—one that thrived, and one that wielded might. Scrapbeak had shown this path, and he knew that betrayal lay at its end.
Wing’s Wake
Each lover holds a Winfield 1893 Slate Riposte stained with the blood of the other. The bladed beak was used to stab other servants of Scrapbeak in the back, and the shotguns are now wielded to both protect and betray.
Heart’s Dowry
A game played by this pair is to each give their prized LeMat Mark II UpperMat as a gift to new acquaintances. Though unusual for any Hunter to part with vital firearms, neither has yet failed to pry it from an acquaintance’s death grip.
Cagebreaker
To defeat beasts larger, stronger, and fiercer than their brood, the fiery force of this Sticky Bomb has been crucial to Morrigan and Midian. It is devilry in human hands—hands lost deep in crimson darkness.
The word Scrapbeak was christened by a final, agonizing breath. It was a desperate plea to save others from the beast's trap, but instead, it inspired curiosity.
A daring trio followed Scrapbeak’s lure, but did not find fear—they saw only power. Awestruck, they sacrificed the beast’s own servant before swearing their fealty. In the sunken, hungered eyes of that power, however, they were nothing. Thus, the trio quickly grew malcontented. No sacrifice—of others or the self—could make a change, leading all three to walk different paths:
One sharpened their sickle and set their eyes on Scrapbeak.
One looked beyond Scrapbeak, seeking favor with greater powers.
One loaded her pistol with two bullets and pruned the trio.
Cruel, conniving, and cowardly, the surviving acolyte was not satisfied with a nest unto herself. She had made the pledge to power only to find herself powerless, so she began amassing her own followers. After all, New Orleans had no shortage of sniveling ants vying to subjugate others.
Yet the foolish acolyte never imagined her followers could be more traitorous than she. Two disciples found love for the blackest parts of each other’s souls, and picked through the ranks with surgical precision, collecting what they wanted from carcasses until their talons stabbed the spine of the acolyte herself. She was ill-suited to honor Scrapbeak, aspiring to power that she was too fearful to take. The lovers’ bodies were temples, houses for the veneration of that which made Scrapbeak, in whose name the couple were fearful of nothing, not even their master.
A master that would change with the tides, but their love for each other and their lust for unnatural power were unshakable.
For together they had overthrown all who stood in their way, and together they plotted the demise of the one they worshipped. Desperate as they were to cling to power, they would either be supplanted by more traitors, or their dreams of becoming Gods would be fulfilled. Morrigan and Midian—bound in body, soul, and damnation.
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