Unfortunately, this school has a troubled history during the Usurper's reign in Nilfgaard, he tried to recruit the Viper School into Nilfgaard's military forces, and when they naturally refused, he destroyed their keep. Viper School witchers are known for their use of stealth and subterfuge in monster hunts, and for the use of dual blades like a viper's fangs. Like the Manticore School, the Viper School is located near Nilfgaard, though these witchers make their home in the Tir Tochair mountains. This school is home to one Letho of Gulet, the king-slaying assassin of The Witcher 2. RELATED: Netflix's Witcher Series Helped Boost Witcher 3 Sales by Crazy Amount And seeing as none of the Witcher schools are canon to the original books, scraps of in-game lore are all that players have to go off of. The School of the Crane is supposed to have its setup along the Continent's eastern coast, though little else about it is mentioned in the lore of the Witcher games. Even more unique for witchers, they generally prefer to ply their trade without armor altogether-unless they're engaging in combat underwater, in which case they'll use a protective suit specially designed for use in water and a rope (basically, the primitive fantasy version of diving gear). Witchers from this school have an especially unique signature: they specialize in fighting aquatic and airborne monsters, and their weapons of choice are the sword, and surprisingly, a rudimentary sort of gun. Plenty of people don't even know that a School of the Crane exists since there's not much documentation of it in any of the Witcher games. These witchers are still very much despised in The Witcher 3, since following the destruction of their home base, cat witchers began to sell their services as bloodthirsty mercenaries out of traveling caravans. The School of the Cat's reputation was tarnished so much that finally the local kingdoms rallied together and forced them from their fortress, scattering the surviving members. It doesn't help that supposedly, the Cat School further augmented the witcher mutations used to transform students into witchers the school's changes were said to strengthen the witcher's emotions rather than suppress them, making for an uncommonly volatile and violent variety of witcher. As a result, these witchers are more known for their work as assassins than for killing monsters. That hatred is based on the fact that, sometime in the school's history, witchers of the cat decided not to honor the policy political neutrality adhered to by all other schools. Naturally, each school had its own techniques and unique methods for killing monsters.įor Witcher 3 players who have a problem with the way Geralt is often reviled and treated with suspicion, that's nothing compared to the hatred most people have for witchers from the School of the Cat. However, the Order failed to impress the rulers who founded it, and so its members dissolved the organization and split off into different groups that would become witcher schools. The idea behind creating witchers is pretty much the same as it is in the Continent's present-day: to engineer warriors who could take down the legendary monsters that normal soldiers were helpless to stop. The practice of mutating witchers and training them to kill monsters began in the 10th century, first commissioned by many of the Continent's kings (and their court mages) who were trying to create an order of magic-using knights. Before witchers adopted a more fragmented existence, when the concept of witchers was first put into practice, there was only one faction: the Order of Witchers. The original Witcher "school" wasn't actually a school at all. RELATED: The Witcher 3: All Gwent Hero Card Characters Explained The Order of Witchers There's a long, storied, and violent history accompanying the rise and steady decline of the witchers' race, and each faction has its own specializations, techniques, and stylized medallions identifying the school every witcher trained with. Witcher schools aren't canon to Andrzej Sapkowski's original Witcher books, but they're very much canon in the games-so, at the very least, it'd help those fans who play The Witcher games to know about each of the eight Witcher schools. Though many of the schools are mentioned in passing, there's actually some fascinating lore available in the more obscure codex entries of the games. While playing The Witcher games, it's made abundantly clear that Geralt's School of the Wolf is not the only witcher school out there on the Continent.
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