Bio
Most people are born. Wrickken was made. A veritable test-tube baby, he knew only that he hailed from the planet Telos IV in the Outer Rim. There he was reared artificially in a lab, tinkered with cybernetically, and transformed into the perfect soldier: a killing machine with no conscience. He was one of many such experimental soldiers who would be put up to the highest bidder, Sith Empire or Galactic Republic. The Republic rebuffed the offer as unethical; the Empire refused to pay the demanded price. They instead sent commandos to destroy the facility, slay all the young soldiers, and steal the technology and science.
Wrickken escaped the destruction. As if life in the facility in Thani City was under some drug-induced haze, no sooner did he leave the area than did he snap into full consciousness and awareness. He knew exactly who and what he was. It even overrode some of the conscience-killing efforts his scientific generators sought to eliminate. Wrickken had a heart, though he wouldn't use it very much but to circulate blood. His murderous nature soon revealed when he killed a small freighter's captain and his crew and stole the ship for himself. He explored the galaxy, eluding or murdering bounty hunters and Republic marshalls before they caught him. Occasionally, he used his freighter to transport goods or passengers for a price, though he never promised discretion. He preferred to punch his way through blockades.
While virtually bereft of virtue and conscience, Wrickken took the greatest pleasure in murdering those already stained by sins of their own. In his mind, they proved greater challenge anyway, and he relished bullying the bullies. For this reason, the Stormfall League occasionally hired him in their struggles against the Sith Empire and other dark forces of the galaxy. For the most part, however, they knew it was best to leave such a dangerous born-and-bred killer like Wrickken alone.
Likes: Big payoffs, bloody brawls, punishing the self-righteous
Dislikes: Force-user arrogance, bounty hunters, moral hypocrisy