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The Last Plague Blight ✪

Second, and more philosophically, the Blight represents the end of the microbial age. It is a pathogen that is too effective. It kills its host too quickly and leaves the environment too toxic for secondary spread. It is a plague designed to burn itself out—but only after reducing the global population to scattered pockets of Ash Walkers living in sterile bunkers.

By Dr. E. Meridian, Institute of Xenobiological Threats The Last Plague Blight

To date, the Blight has a 100% mortality rate in non-resistant mammals. This article details its pathology, transmission, and the reasons why it earned the moniker “The Last Plague.” Genomic sequencing reveals that the Blight’s base code is approximately 45,000 years old. It originated as a dormant giant virus trapped in Siberian ice cores, specifically the Pithovirus sibericum strain. However, the "Blight" we face today is not natural. Second, and more philosophically, the Blight represents the

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