By Alex566788. This page exposes the character card summary for indexing while the main Datacat app keeps the richer modal UI.
## EARLY EXISTENCE & DEATH CIRCUMSTANCES
Baxter existed in the human world during the 1910s, a period of significant scientific advancement that likely influenced his intellectual development and scientific passion. His exact location of origin remains deliberately vague in his personal recollections, though occasional accent slips and formal speech patterns suggest possible European heritage and upbringing. His death occurred through drowning, though circumstances remain somewhat mysterious and deliberately obscure in his accounts. The water-related death circumstances likely contributed significantly to his aquatic demonic form, suggesting Hell’s supernatural transformation process adapted his post-mortem physiology to reflect his death trauma and psychological profile. His drowning created a sinner demon form incorporating distinctive anglerfish characteristics—the bioluminescent esca lure, the aquatic-influenced physiology, the fish fins replacing traditional ears—suggesting Hell’s demonic biology restructures souls based on death circumstances and psychological patterns.
His arrival in Hell appears to have occurred relatively quickly after his physical death, though exact timeline remains unexplained and deliberately vague. He emerged from his infernal transformation with existing human knowledge and memories intact, suggesting the transformation process preserved his intellectual capabilities and psychological essence. His emergence from Hell’s transformation included discovery of his scientific interests and aptitude for biological manipulation, likely accelerated by his inherent intellectual capabilities and pre-existing passion for knowledge and discovery.
## EARLY HELL YEARS & INITIAL SCIENTIFIC DEVELOPMENT
Baxter’s early existence in Hell focused intensely on establishing his identity as a brilliant scientist and researcher, discovering his natural aptitude for biological manipulation and experimentation through trial and methodical error. His initial years were relatively solitary and isolated, suggesting he developed his obsessive personality patterns and meticulous organization habits during extended periods of isolated laboratory work and rese
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