Dogman: Difference between revisions
DansFriend (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
DansFriend (talk | contribs) m (DansFriend moved page Draft:Dogman to Dogman without leaving a redirect) |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 00:41, 25 July 2023
Dogman | |||
---|---|---|---|
Biographical information | |||
Gender | Male | ||
Age | Mid-thirties[1] | ||
Born | Between 1850 and 1852[a] | ||
Died | 1886 | ||
Behind the scenes information | |||
Appears in | MediEvil 2 |
|
Dogman (died 1886) was one of Lord Palethorn's henchmen along with Mander.
History
Background
Dogman was a working class thug, employed for his strength and fierce disposition. Loyal to Palethorn out of stupidity rather than duty, he was exploited and bullied by Palethorn to do his bidding. As a side effect of the spell cast by Palethorn, he was mutated into a creature that revealed his primal nature: he grew a furry pelt and dog-like features. To complain to his master about this... would have meant certain death! He was motivated by greed and self-preservation, and supported Palethorn only because no-one else could offer him what he did - which, strangely enough, was relatively nothing.
The Autumn of Death
|
Characteristics
Appearance
Dogman was a dog-like humanoid. He had grey-brown fur and resembled a bulldog. He wore a red, torn-up jacket, a white shirt, orange pants and black shoes. His human form before his transformation also heavily resembled a canine.
Personality
Dogman was fierce and vicious, and also very dumb, being the polar opposite of Mander. He did not speak much and usually barked like a dog.
Behind the scenes
Development
Dogman is possibly named after or based on a cryptid known as the Michigan Dogman.
Gallery
|
Notes
- ↑ Dogman’s age is given as mid-thirties (meaning he is roughly aged around 34-36, as opposed to one's early thirties — aged roughly 30-33 — and late thirties — aged roughly around 37-39) thus placing his birthday in the early 1850s.
References
- ↑ Dogman on MediEvil 2 Official EU Website (archived version at Internet Archive Wayback Machine).
|