PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Dominant Species Plaga
rdfs:comment
  • As shown with Jack Krauser, Ramon Salazar, and Bitores Mendez, it seems that the host is responsible - at least with Los Iluminados' version - for triggering the parasite's sudden, dramatic mutation and mutilation of the host body. Since no two individuals infected with a dominant species Plaga appeared to exhibit the same transformation, it is believed that the mutations are affected by either the host's immediate environment, or by the host's will at the time. An example is Ricardo Irving's transformation into a massive aquatic beast after injecting himself with a dominant species Plaga after the parasite adapted to the immediate environment.
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:resident-evil/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:residentevil/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • As shown with Jack Krauser, Ramon Salazar, and Bitores Mendez, it seems that the host is responsible - at least with Los Iluminados' version - for triggering the parasite's sudden, dramatic mutation and mutilation of the host body. Since no two individuals infected with a dominant species Plaga appeared to exhibit the same transformation, it is believed that the mutations are affected by either the host's immediate environment, or by the host's will at the time. An example is Ricardo Irving's transformation into a massive aquatic beast after injecting himself with a dominant species Plaga after the parasite adapted to the immediate environment. In the case of Irving and Salazar, the human host's body also gets partially enveloped in a fleshy cocoon, often leaving their right arm exposed as well as the left sides of their face fused with part of the membrane while connected to a far larger beast-like Plaga form, as well as protected by the beast's "mouth." However, of the two, only Irving's transformation was the direct result of his own injected Plaga, as Salazar's transformation was the result of him and his remaining Verdugo guard fusing with the Queen Plaga.