The real killer of DBD is:
Unsanitary working conditions.
Seriously, the employees' uniforms are soaked in blood, the hooks need to be thrown into a vat of acid, and they don't even wipe down the hooks between bookings. Hope you enjoy TB because this hook that's hooked 20 million people before you is going straight into your lungs. Not to mention the wild animals running around.
anyways thanks for listening to my official OSHA complaint about the entity
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question for the lore: Do the survivors' bodies "reset" each time they return to the campfire, keeping them the same age and health state for eternity, or do all the survivors have hep c from the hooks at this point?
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If not then somebody needs to get me their dermatologist. Getting stabbed for a living and still having that beautiful, pearly ,scratch-free RuPaul skin.
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Supposedly their body remains the same but their mind is affected since it's said eventually survivors will 'die' and become soulless husks in the void or become killers themselves
Something to that effect at least. Blight was a survivor who turned into a killer for example
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I didn't remember that part about Blight. Doesn't the lore say he was just in an opium den and got sucked in?
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This is memory 1748 from Tome 1 'The alchemist' which was revealed to be the Blight:
He feels the hunger. Not for food or drink. Not for talk or fun. For a flower. A single flower. For serum. He knows The Entity is watching him. He knows it. Feels it inside his bones. He doesn't want to be snatched for another trial. To suffer or cause suffering. And to what end? The great horrible mystery of it all. He wants to understand this place. He does. But he senses that to know… to really know would drive him… mad. Madness. That's what this place is. The embodiment of madness. He doesn't want to be pulled into another trial. He wants to return home. He must return home. That's why he was studying the serum. It gave him insight. Insight to what? He doesn't remember.
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Huh. I'm guessing that the "To suffer or cause suffering," part is the literary clue here, and just based on parallel structure rules it would insinuate that hew Ould be the one to suffer or cause suffering, but it could also just be in reference to the trials and who's in them, not Talbot specifically.
Anyways I don't read the tomes so I'm kind of lacking in context. Guess I better start.
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