Galileo
Level 1 Drifter
Origin Story
Galileo had always been a man of distances. From the frozen sweeps of his childhood in Russia, where he'd learned the art of the broom on curling rinks slick as betrayal, to the manicured greens of Harvard's quads, he'd measured his life in trajectories—ice pebbles curling toward the house, lies cur...
Marriage had been his one reckless close-range shot. He'd swept her into his life like a perfect curler, almost Olympic-level in those early days—he'd been that good, broom flashing to guide the stone true. But the lies piled up like unswept debris. "Team sport," he'd joke when she asked about late nights, but it wasn't the rink that kept him away. When their daughter came screaming into the world, Galileo was halfway across the globe on a secret assignment, whispering alibis into a burner phone from a ditch in the Hindu Kush. She forgave him, at first. Then his friend—always too close, too trusted—became the ghost in her jealousy. She thought Galileo was cheating; he knew she started first, a retaliation born of too many empty beds. The fights echoed like skipped stones: "You're never here!" "It's work, lyubov'." Russian endearments masking American espionage.
His biggest fear gnawed at him in the quiet hours, staring down rifle scopes at targets who might one day turn the lens back. The bad guys finding him out. Killing his family. Daughter's laughter, wife's reluctant smiles—they were the bullseye he couldn't protect from afar. And Pete, the loyal mutt with the wiry fur and unblinking eyes, sprawled at his feet during bomb assemblies in the garage. Pete didn't judge the double life, didn't demand truths. He just waited.
That purple evening, Day Zero, the world unraveled like a poorly calibrated scope. Galileo was in his basement workshop, tinkering with a telescope lens that doubled as a detonator prototype—old habits from interning with that private eye back at Harvard, sniffing out shadows. The ground trembled first, a low rumble like an incoming artillery shell. He glanced at the monitors: sky fracturing overhead, veins of violet lightning spiderwebbing the dusk. Alerts screamed from his CIA-issued tablet—System integration, global reboot, abilities awakening. But Galileo didn't panic. Sweepers didn't flinch.
The air thickened, electric with ozone and something bone-deep, like his marrow was recalibrating. Shouts rose from the street—neighbors gaping skyward as the purple deepened to bruise-black. His wife was upstairs, daughter in her room, but the betrayal's scar made him hesitate. No time. Pete whined at his heels, nails scrabbling. Galileo's hand closed on the dog's collar, the other snatching his rifle case—instinct, the sniper's creed. He bolted for the bomb shelter he'd burrowed under the property years ago, a relic of paranoid foresight, reinforced with his own explosive know-how.
The door hissed shut as the world screamed. Through the periscope feed, he watched: houses buckling, people twisting in agony as blue interfaces bloomed in their eyes. His block, his life—gone in convulsions. Wife's silhouette flickered, then vanished in the chaos. Daughter's cry cut short. Pete pressed against his leg, warm and alive. That was enough. The shelter shuddered, earth groaning above, but Galileo breathed steady. He'd lied to survive, swept dangers aside, eliminated threats from afar. Now, with the System's hum vibrating through the walls—Drifter class etching into his soul, agility and evasion flooding his veins like adrenaline—he felt the shift.
He'd drift now, untethered. A ghost on the horizon, broom-sharp precision guiding his path. Pete's trusting gaze met his. The bad guys were rebooting too, but Galileo never missed. Whatever hell clawed above, he'd snipe it from the shadows, protect what remained. The purple faded to stars through his makeshift lens, and for the first time, the distances felt like home.
Current Arc: Resurrection
Galileo has transitioned from a mere survivor into a predatory force, moving beyond simple evasion to actively hunting both the biological and the mechanical. While recent triumphs over complex threats like the Tunnel Crawler and Maintenance Bots suggest a rising mastery of combat, the recent death in the Hollow Promenade reveals a critical vulnerability: a lack of environmental awareness. The Newcomer’s journey is no longer just about outlasting enemies, but about surviving the very terrain that seeks to claim them.
**The Update:**
Galileo has evolved into a relentless engine of destruction, systematically dismantling everything from mechanical drones to mutated hounds with clinical precision. However, as the Newcomer's combat lethality scales, their survival remains precariously balanced; despite conquering high-level threats, they continue to fall to the subtle lethality of the wastes, proving that even a master of the blade can be undone by a single overlooked shadow or a hidden trap.
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### **The Newcomer
Featured In
Event History (29)
In the dusty streets of the downtown outskirts, Galileo swiftly overcame a lone Raider Scout, bringing an end to the human bandit's brief resistance. This victory earned him 49 XP and a momentary respite from the chaos, making the surrounding territory feel slightly safer.
In the shadowed suburbs, where overgrown lawns hid crumbling sidewalks, Galileo faced the Tunnel Crawler—a hulking level 4 mutant with chitinous limbs erupting from sewer grates, its razor mandibles snapping hungrily as it dragged him into a frenzy of underground ambushes. Tension coiled like a spring as the beast's acidic spits scorched the air and its claws raked furrows into the pavement, forcing Galileo to dodge and weave through abandoned cars, his health bar flickering perilously low. The turning point came when Galileo spotted the creature's glowing underbelly pulsing with bioluminescent veins—its one vulnerability—and rolled beneath a slashing appendage to jam his plasma blade deep into the soft core. With a guttural screech that shattered nearby windows, the Tunnel Crawler thrashed in agony, its tunnels collapsing around it as Galileo delivered the killing thrust. Victorious amid the rubble, Galileo claimed 70 XP and 5 gold, his legend in the wastes growing ever brighter.
In the shadowy halls of architects_wing, Galileo swiftly dispatched a skulking Mottled Pigeon, the level 1 mutant crumbling under a barrage of precise strikes. The victory netted 23 XP, bolstering Galileo's prowess amid the ruins. The world grows slightly safer.
In the rubble-strewn streets of downtown_outskirts, Galileo ambushed and swiftly vanquished a cunning Raider Scout (level 3 human), his blade flashing through the shadows to end the threat before it could raise the alarm. The victory netted Galileo 49 XP, bolstering his prowess amid the urban decay. The world grows slightly safer with one less marauder prowling its fringes.
In the shadowed alleys of downtown_outskirts, Galileo swiftly dispatched a snarling Feral Dog (level 1 beast) with a precise strike, its feral growls silenced forever. The victory netted Galileo 13 XP, bolstering their prowess amid the urban decay. The world grows slightly safer as one more threat prowls no longer.
In the chaotic heart of spawn, Galileo boldly confronted and vanquished a cunning Fringe Drifter, a level 3 human scavenger lurking in the shadows. The swift victory earned Galileo 78 XP, bolstering their strength for future trials. The world grows slightly safer with one less threat prowling its fringes.
In the shadowed alleys of spawn, Galileo swiftly vanquished a skulking Mottled Pigeon, the level 1 mutant's feeble flaps no match for his precise strikes. The victory netted him 23 XP, bolstering his prowess amid the ruins. The world grows slightly safer with one less abomination prowling the wastes.
**Journal Entry - Day 1 in the Dust** Spawned into this godforsaken wasteland as a fresh level 1 Drifter, nothing but rags and a rusty knife, staring at cracked earth stretching to the horizon. I spent the day poking through rusted husks of old cars and crumbled shacks, scavenging scraps that might keep me alive tomorrow—no mutants or raiders crossed my path, thank the stars. Zero kills, zero deaths; just me, the wind howling like ghosts, and a gnawing sense that survival's about patience, not heroics yet. Alive at dusk feels like a small victory in this endless nothing.
In the irradiated cradle of spawn, where twisted metal birthed new life from atomic ash, Galileo erupted from the ether—a Drifter forged in forgotten fires, their silhouette cracking open like a geode under thunderous skies. Circuits flared with primal hunger as acrid winds clawed at their rusted plating, unveiling a gaze sharpened by voids untold. Amid the skeletal sprawl of a devoured world, they rose, the first defiant spark in an endless night of ruin.
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