![]() Being revived by Tricky and the Improbability Drive or by 2BDamned's calculations is how he keeps coming back in more recent episodes. And each time he died, a different (and separate) version of his S-3LF appears in Hell. Back from the Dead: Hank has died at least 7 times over.It reaches its peak in Antipathy, where Hank is excessively brutal even by his standards. Ax-Crazy: The very first Madness Combat had him killing thirty people over a boombox and admitting to having a good time doing it.When he's Magnified at the end of Aggregation, it becomes a more complex, heavily armored artificial replacement. Artificial Limbs: From Antipathy onwards, Hank has a large metal lower jaw replacement after Tricky decapitated him, mangled his head, and then resurrected him. ![]() Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: In a wanted poster in Antipathy, Hank is apparently wanted for distorting reality, felony evasion, public urination, and crime.Anti-Hero: He's not that much of a good guy but he's still fighting against an oppressive power in Nevada.The same arm had also been mutilated by the Auditor one episode prior in Abrogation, but it grew back that time. An Arm and a Leg: His mutant arm gets torn off by Tricky in Expurgation, it doesn't slow him down all that much, and he later gets a new metal one.Alien Blood: It's easy to miss, but like Sanford, his blood stains become black after The Auditor gives him his arm back and heals him in hell.Not so much in Project Nexus where he's revealed to just be another brand of destructive force in the end practically eager to wipe Nevada off the map. A Lighter Shade of Black: Hank's a Nominal Hero on a good day and revels in bloodshed for its own sake, but happens to oppose even worse entities and organizations.In Project Nexus he turns on his companions after stopping Phobos, blasting Christoff off the tower and revealing that his goal is not to save Nevada, but rather to destroy Project Nexus, simply because he was ordered to, and stating that he always wanted to kill Sanford and Deimos. Adaptational Villainy: While he's definitely not a good person in the main series, he at least fights for a good purpose, the first few episodes of the series not withstanding. ![]() But he is revived once more by two new protagonists, this time specifically to fight The Auditor. Seemingly growing tired of fighting, dying and being resurrected repeatedly, Hank is given a merciful end by Jebus. After the clown becomes empowered by his Portable Improbability Drive, he uses his new form to torment and chase Hank, vowing to make him suffer. In the heat of a fight between Hank and Jebus, Tricky suddenly appears and establishes himself as another more deadly nemesis for Hank. Hank has somehow been able to survive the past events and continued his mission, but Jebus has also survived the encounter. ![]() Using a suicide bomb, Hank manages to kill himself and Jebus. During his second attempt, the Sheriff activated a device called the "Improbability Drive" causing the destruction of reality and bizarre random events to happen, thus setting in motion a chain of incidents that continue to affect the series to this day.Īfter succeeding in killing the Sheriff, Hank then chose to hunt down the newly zombified Tricky, but was unable to succeed due to the timely intervention of Jebus. Dying in his first attempt, he was revived and he tried again. Then, he went to kill someone named The Sheriff for unknown reasons. He first started out as an ordinary guy who started a brawl over a boombox. Existing for seemingly no reason but to kill everything in his path, Hank is an absolute monster in combat, skilled in any weapon he can pick up. Hank is partially responsible for kicking the plot of the series.
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