Difference between revisions of "Rabies"

From The Coppermind
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created)
 
 
(7 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{character
 
{{character
|nation-raw=[[Wikipedia: United States|United States of America]]
 
|universe=''Standalone''
 
|books=[[Dreamer]]
 
 
|died=''Unknown''
 
|died=''Unknown''
 
|powers=Possession of the living, [[Bolting]]
 
|powers=Possession of the living, [[Bolting]]
|species-raw=[[Poltergeist]] (formerly human)
+
|'species=[[Poltergeist]] (formerly human)
  +
|'residence=[[Wikipedia: New York City|New York City]]
 
|'nation=[[Wikipedia: United States|United States of America]]
 
|earth=Dreamer
  +
|first appeared=[[Dreamer]]
 
}}
 
}}
   
'''Rabies''' is a [[Poltergeist|poltergeist]], the spirit of a dead man who must possess the bodies of living people. She is part of a group of gamer poltergeists, including [[Dreamer (character)|Dreamer]], that play games like "capture the flag" and "cops and robbers," using living bodies like "lives" in a video game.{{book ref|dreamer}}
+
'''Rabies''' is a [[Poltergeist|poltergeist]], the spirit of a dead man who must possess the bodies of living people. He is part of a group of gamer poltergeists, including [[Dreamer (character)|Dreamer]], that play games like "capture the flag" and "cops and robbers," using living bodies like "lives" in a video game.{{book ref|dreamer}} He is known to have taken over at least two bodies including a person killed by Phi and a man with thick arms.
  +
  +
== Appearance & Personality ==
  +
  +
In his unembodied form, Rabies is completely invisible to the living. To other poltergeists he appears as a glowing field seeping over surfaces. When in possession of a living body, he looks and sounds like the person he is possessing, including their accent and some of their mannerisms. In this state he can be recognized by other poltergeists as one of their kind due to a bright yellow-colored glow visible around his form.{{book ref|dreamer}}
  +
  +
== Attributes and Abilities ==
  +
As a poltergeist, Rabies must possess the body of a living person in order to maintain consciousness. When possessing a body, he gains full control over the person and can even access certain skills for a limited time. If the body he is possessing is killed, he is forcefully ejected and becomes a mindless, primal unembodied spirit, desperate for warmth until he finds and takes over a new body. He can also [[Bolting|Bolt]] from one body to another if he makes physical contact with the new body.{{book ref|dreamer}}
  +
  +
== History ==
  +
Rabies met fellow poltergeists [[Dreamer (character)|Dreamer]], [[Phi]], [[Icer]], [[Longshot]], and [[TheGannon]], who all love to play games. As a group, they got together often to play games by possessing the living and using their bodies disposably, as if they were players inhabiting the persona of a video game character.
  +
  +
During one such game, Rabies was playing cops and robbers in Manhattan against Phi, on a team with the other four poltergeists in their group. Rabies was assigned to hunt Phi on the streets with Dreamer and Icer. At some point in the game, Rabies' second body was killed by Phi, leaving him out of contact with the rest of the group. After Dreamer tackled Phi off the building where Longshot was hiding, Rabies managed to take Phi's next body into custody, winning the game for his team. After the game was over, he remarked on the chaos and damage that they had caused, and suggested that they leave.{{book ref|dreamer}}
   
 
== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==
 
<references />
 
<references />
{{stub}}
+
{{complete}}
 
{{Dreamer}}
 
{{Dreamer}}

Latest revision as of 18:59, 4 May 2024

Rabies
Died Unknown
Powers Possession of the living, Bolting
Species Poltergeist (formerly human)
Residence New York City
Nationality United States of America
Homeworld Earth (Dreamer)
First Appeared Dreamer

Rabies is a poltergeist, the spirit of a dead man who must possess the bodies of living people. He is part of a group of gamer poltergeists, including Dreamer, that play games like "capture the flag" and "cops and robbers," using living bodies like "lives" in a video game.[1] He is known to have taken over at least two bodies including a person killed by Phi and a man with thick arms.

Appearance & Personality[edit]

In his unembodied form, Rabies is completely invisible to the living. To other poltergeists he appears as a glowing field seeping over surfaces. When in possession of a living body, he looks and sounds like the person he is possessing, including their accent and some of their mannerisms. In this state he can be recognized by other poltergeists as one of their kind due to a bright yellow-colored glow visible around his form.[1]

Attributes and Abilities[edit]

As a poltergeist, Rabies must possess the body of a living person in order to maintain consciousness. When possessing a body, he gains full control over the person and can even access certain skills for a limited time. If the body he is possessing is killed, he is forcefully ejected and becomes a mindless, primal unembodied spirit, desperate for warmth until he finds and takes over a new body. He can also Bolt from one body to another if he makes physical contact with the new body.[1]

History[edit]

Rabies met fellow poltergeists Dreamer, Phi, Icer, Longshot, and TheGannon, who all love to play games. As a group, they got together often to play games by possessing the living and using their bodies disposably, as if they were players inhabiting the persona of a video game character.

During one such game, Rabies was playing cops and robbers in Manhattan against Phi, on a team with the other four poltergeists in their group. Rabies was assigned to hunt Phi on the streets with Dreamer and Icer. At some point in the game, Rabies' second body was killed by Phi, leaving him out of contact with the rest of the group. After Dreamer tackled Phi off the building where Longshot was hiding, Rabies managed to take Phi's next body into custody, winning the game for his team. After the game was over, he remarked on the chaos and damage that they had caused, and suggested that they leave.[1]

Notes[edit]

This page is probably complete!
This page contains most of the knowledge we have on the subject at this time.
It has yet to be reviewed.