Warrior-Servant: Difference between revisions
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==Gallery== | ==Gallery== | ||
<gallery> | <gallery> | ||
File:H4_-_Warrior-Servants.jpg|A squad of | File:H4_-_Warrior-Servants.jpg|A squad of Promethean Warrior-Servants during the [[Human-Forerunner War]] | ||
File:H4-Terminal-WarriorServants.jpg|Warrior-Servants on Charum Hakkor | File:H4-Terminal-WarriorServants.jpg|Warrior-Servants on Charum Hakkor | ||
File:H4-Terminal-WarriorServant.jpg|A Warrior-Servant using an unidentified energy-based weapon | File:H4-Terminal-WarriorServant.jpg|A Warrior-Servant using an unidentified energy-based weapon |
Revision as of 14:59, November 4, 2016
Warrior-Servants | |
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Rate overview | |
Type: |
Caste / military organization |
Rate head: |
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Role: |
Defense of the ecumene |
Size: |
Trillions of Warriors[1] |
Subgroups: |
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Societal overview | |
Official language(s): |
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Official religion(s): |
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Official script(s): |
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Notable event(s): |
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Tier 1 | |
Historical overview | |
Affiliation: |
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Warrior-Servants, or Warriors, were the rate traditionally tasked with defense and warfare in the Forerunner ecumene.[2] In formal proceedings, the rate was also referred to as the Warrior-Servant Corps.[3] They stood second-lowest in the hierarchy of rates during the last millennia of Forerunner rule. The highest and most respected class of Warrior-Servants were known as the Prometheans. The rank of protector of the ecumene — commander of the Forerunner military — was historically held by a high-ranked Warrior-Servant, the most well-known being the Didact and his successor, the IsoDidact.[4]
Overview
While the Forerunners preferred to see themselves as being peaceful by nature, Warrior-Servants were ruthless in executing warfare against enemies of the ecumene, as they believed that defying the Forerunners was to show contempt toward the Mantle itself.[5] Although their services were vital in maintaining galactic harmony, most Forerunners viewed their purpose and practices as being contradictory to the principles of the Mantle. As such, other rates looked down on the Warrior-Servants, who mostly kept to themselves as a result.[6]
In battle, Warrior-Servants wore varying types of fighting suits—combat skins—the war sphinx being an example of a medium-sized suit.[7] Warrior armor was designed to optimize itself to counter enemy weaponry; this ability was capable of making their armor virtually invulnerable to repeated discharges from Forerunner infantry weapons.[8] The Warrior-Servants operated the Forerunners' most prominent battle fleets, comprising warships such as Fortress-class vessels, dreadnoughts, planet-breakers and picket cruisers. Warriors employed extensive drone support in the form of dedicated monitors and sentinels,[9] in addition to the ancillas of their battle armor and ships.[10] In fleet engagements, individual Warriors could be assigned control over up to a million automated weapon-ships.[11] Warrior forces were organized into large-scale legions which possessed a number of subordinate attack squadrons.[12]
As with the other rates, Warrior-Servant forms were shaped based on qualities deemed most useful in their role; to best suit fighting and warfare, Warriors were more powerfully built and more robust than the other rates.[13] While it was rarely necessary to engage in close-quarters combat in actual warfare, Warriors still possessed remarkable physical strength.[14] The augmented mental capacity of Warrior commanders allowed them to perceive reality in many separate reference-frames with alternating flows of time whilst sharing sensory input with their compatriots.[15]
In the event of death, Warrior fighting suits were programmed to retain their wearer's last personality impressions for future study.[16] It was also a common policy among Warriors to extract the memory impressions of their vanquished foes before executing them.[17] However, in the case of opponents they deemed worthy, it was considered more honorable to execute them outright.[18]
Warrior-Servants had their own system of unique hand signals and gestures. Raising one's hand and giving it a half-turn was the sign for "command received".[19] Marking a Y over one's forehead and the bridge of their nose signified an admission of shame and guilt,[20] while touching the sixth finger of one's left hand conveyed "vengeful sympathy".[21]
History
Ten million years before the final days of the Forerunner civilization, the Warriors were the highest rate.[22] They were the ones responsible for rebelling against the Precursors and hunting them down to near-extinction.[23] Their status would gradually move lower over several millions of years, in part due to an increase in the political power of their Builder competitors and because the other rates viewed their field of work with distaste. This decrease of status would result in the name of their rate being suffixed with "-Servant", although on some occasions they were still referred to as "Warriors".[24]
Even though they eventually ranked second-lowest, the Warrior-Servants, particularly their highest and most respected Promethean class, still wielded remarkable political power and were in a prestigious social standing, serving in various roles in the Ecumene Council by the time of the human-Forerunner wars in 107,445 BCE.[25] After the conclusion of the war with humanity, the Prometheans, under the leadership of the Didact, were opposed to the Builders' plan to construct a new superweapon known as Halo.[26]
Though they managed to forestall the construction of the Halos for thousands of years, while preparing a defense of their own known as the shield worlds, the Didact and the Warrior-Servants eventually lost the political war as a result of Master Builder Faber's political maneuvering. When the Builders rose to supreme power within the Council circa 98,445 BCE, the Warrior-Servants were diminished as a rate, with their fleets and armies being systematically disbanded over the course of the next millennium as part of the Master Builder's scheme to secure the primacy of the Builder rate.[27] This would leave the ecumene ill-prepared for the return of the Flood. However, many Warriors chose to move to the Builder rate, becoming part of Builder Security.[28] The Didact and the Promethean commanders who had supported him were accorded harsh punishments, often execution, though many were offered the choice of self-imposed exile in "Warrior Keeps" known as Cryptums.[29]
Trillions of Warrior-Servants were killed in their ultimately futile efforts to contain the Flood during the three-century-long Forerunner-Flood war.[1] In the final years of the conflict, after the Master Builder was stripped of his power due to his crimes, the standing of the Warrior-Servants was elevated once again with the IsoDidact — an imprinted copy of the Didact — being placed in command of Forerunner defense.[30] Many former Warriors still remained in Builder Security, but their forces were combined with those of the Warrior-Servants in newly reconstituted forces led by the IsoDidact.[31]
Known Warriors
- The Confirmer
- The Examiner (later Builder Security)
- The Falchion
- The Grammarian
- The IsoDidact
- The Strategos
- The Ur-Didact
- Endurance-of-Will
- Glory of a Far Dawn
- Sharp-by-Striking (later Builder Security)
- Bitterness-of-the-Vanquished (later Builder Security)
- Sorrow-for-Lost-Voices
- Adequate-Observer
- Capital-Enforcer
- Sprightly-Runner
- Dutiful-Marcher
Gallery
A squad of Promethean Warrior-Servants during the Human-Forerunner War
List of appearances
- Halo: Cryptum (First appearance)
- Halo: Primordium
- Halo 4
- Halo: Silentium
- Halo: Rebirth
- Halo: Spartan Strike
- Halo 2: Anniversary (Mentioned only)
- Halo: Last Light (Mentioned only)
- Halo 5: Guardians
- Halo Mythos: A Guide to the Story of Halo
- Halo: Fractures
Sources
- ^ a b Halo Waypoint: Canon Fodder - Uncharted Waters
- ^ Halo Waypoint, Halo: Cryptum glossary
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 296
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 233
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 50
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 107
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 43
- ^ Halo: Escalation, Issue 10
- ^ Halo: Silentium, page 214
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 139
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 174
- ^ Halo: Silentium, pages 104-105
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 279
- ^ Halo: Silentium, page 86
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, pages 162, 316
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 137
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 188
- ^ Halo: Primordium, page 235
- ^ Halo: Silentium, page 24
- ^ Halo: Silentium, page 85
- ^ Halo: Silentium, page 83
- ^ Halo: Silentium, page 14
- ^ Halo: Silentium, page 251
- ^ Halo: Silentium, page 53
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 59
- ^ Halo: Silentium, pages 43-44
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 238-239
- ^ Halo: Silentium, page 47
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 182
- ^ Halo: Silentium, page 20
- ^ Halo: Silentium, page 197
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