When his blindfold was removed, a sickly man showed him a mass grave filled with hundreds of bodies. The realisation struck him quite literally-with a steel pipe to the back of his head during a trip to Mangalore. Though his callous brilliance seemed unflappable, he was ignorant to the enemies his questionable work had amassed. There were no official reports on the subject, and Talbot refused to blame himself for what could only be exaggerated war stories. In feral states, they massacred villages, impaling the populace on bayonets, leaving them hanging from trees. Though most side effects were minor, there were rumours that a small number of soldiers went mad. There, off the coast of India, prisoners from the Opium War became his unwilling subjects, leading to a drug that allowed soldiers to withstand incredible amounts of pain. He was rewarded with a secret laboratory beneath a prison camp on Dyer Island. In time, he completed one of his greatest achievements: a chemical that could increase a worker’s productivity while reducing their need for rest. His willingness to push the limits secured him a position with the British East India Company, and within seven years he was made head chemist. He attended the London School of Medicine and excelled despite several reprimands. Into his adult years, his ambition developed as quickly as his questionable methods. There was something magical in how a single flower could so drastically affect him. When he recovered, it wasn't fear that gripped him, but fascination. For days, he laid in bed dripping with sweat, purging any food that touched his stomach. What began as a child's curiosity nearly turned deadly after experimenting with a patch of poisonous foxglove. As a boy, he was a popular child-bright, charismatic, and unafraid to challenge authority-yet despite his social graces he was fiercely independent, spending much of his time exploring the sprawling fields near his town alone. This was the credo of Talbot Grimes, a Scottish chemist whose unrestrained ambition took him to towering heights. To understand the human condition, one must rise above it. His personal Perks, Dragon's Grip, Hex: Blood Favor, and Hex: Undying allow him to impose powerful effects on Generators, Totems, and Pallets. The Blight is an unpredictable Killer, able to rush forward in a burst of speed and carom off obstacles to injure Survivors using his power, Blighted Corruption. The Entity have the same changes happen each year with this event.Alt. It represents how Talbot is trying to gain control over his mind and how he is trying to escape the monster that is the Blight, but he is deeply buried and need help if he have a chance to be pulled out from the Blight.īlight form change to True Blight because the serum in Blight veins reacts during the Entity yearly blight and it turn him into True Blight, but he goes back to being normal Blight after event end like how it is with Pustulas. The pit of corpses is Talbot trying to escape the Entity, the flower that made him fall is an allusion to the addiction he developed which make him fall. Talbot lives through the pain he has brought, he suffers from his guilt, and the ruin brought by his ambition. The 2nd is a mental thing and it shows what's going on as the serum is taking over his mind slowly but surely, turning him into a feral monster. The 1st one is Blight using the serum to escape the Entity after the Entity throw him in void.
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