STEAM_0:1:63157345 - Sean "faceless" Hanson
Lore:
after a Fire that left his face broken. he had gotten. a mask. but the mask made him look unfriendly. and deadly. and he was being branded a beast and monster. As a result, he showed to them. What a true beast and monster was.
A folktale was born in the harsh and merciless environment, (Belin) one that spoke of a man whose strength and endurance transcended all difficulties. He was dubbed "the beast."
the beast stood tall, his sharpened physique the result of countless hours spent in the prison's made up gym. His enormous muscles seemed to have a mind of their own, rippling with every movement, a mute statue to the devotion that had gotten him to this point.
The Myths of the beast began with a quiet talk in one of the prison's darkest corners. He was believed to have been the victim of a fatal injustice, falsely convicted of a crime he did not commit. His unshakeable faith in
His innocence was the fire that kept his strength burning. the beast had discovered the primal strength of the human spirit in the depths of his sorrow.
The guards recognized that keeping the beast confined was unlike any other problem, because he was more than just a prisoner, but a symbol of endurance.
the beast's strange origins are told in these stories. Some claimed he was an Olympic weightlifter, while others claimed he was a former Marine. The truth was significantly less dramatic, but no less striking. the beast was a modest man by trade, a carpenter, but a hero by circumstance.
So the legend of The beast, the muscular person in jail, lingered on as a reminder that even in the darkest of situations, there could be a ray of strength and resilience that shone brighter than any prison bars.
Lore:
after a Fire that left his face broken. he had gotten. a mask. but the mask made him look unfriendly. and deadly. and he was being branded a beast and monster. As a result, he showed to them. What a true beast and monster was.
A folktale was born in the harsh and merciless environment, (Belin) one that spoke of a man whose strength and endurance transcended all difficulties. He was dubbed "the beast."
the beast stood tall, his sharpened physique the result of countless hours spent in the prison's made up gym. His enormous muscles seemed to have a mind of their own, rippling with every movement, a mute statue to the devotion that had gotten him to this point.
The Myths of the beast began with a quiet talk in one of the prison's darkest corners. He was believed to have been the victim of a fatal injustice, falsely convicted of a crime he did not commit. His unshakeable faith in
His innocence was the fire that kept his strength burning. the beast had discovered the primal strength of the human spirit in the depths of his sorrow.
The guards recognized that keeping the beast confined was unlike any other problem, because he was more than just a prisoner, but a symbol of endurance.
the beast's strange origins are told in these stories. Some claimed he was an Olympic weightlifter, while others claimed he was a former Marine. The truth was significantly less dramatic, but no less striking. the beast was a modest man by trade, a carpenter, but a hero by circumstance.
So the legend of The beast, the muscular person in jail, lingered on as a reminder that even in the darkest of situations, there could be a ray of strength and resilience that shone brighter than any prison bars.