Resident Evil Wiki
Resident Evil Wiki
m (Robot: Change redirected category Viral Agents to Viral agents)
Line 7: Line 7:
 
"[[Stairway of the Sun]]", was first discovered by Westerners in the 19th century, and the virus that was extracted from it would become the base from which the [[Umbrella Corporation]]'s most successful Bio Organic Weapons research would stem several decades later.<ref name="Tricell">''[[Resident Evil 5]]'', [[Tricell (file)|Tricell]]</ref>
 
"[[Stairway of the Sun]]", was first discovered by Westerners in the 19th century, and the virus that was extracted from it would become the base from which the [[Umbrella Corporation]]'s most successful Bio Organic Weapons research would stem several decades later.<ref name="Tricell">''[[Resident Evil 5]]'', [[Tricell (file)|Tricell]]</ref>
   
Derived from the "Stairway of the Sun" flower, it was rediscovered in the Kijuju region of West Africa on [[1966#December 4th|December 4, 1966]]<ref name="Brandon1">''Resident Evil 5'', [[From Chief Researcher Brandon's Journal - No. 1]]</ref><ref name="Marcus1">''Resident Evil Zero'', [[Marcus' Diary 1]]</ref> by Lord [[Oswell E. Spencer]]; Doctor [[James Marcus]]<ref name="Brandon1"/> and his student [[Brandon Bailey]],<ref name="Brandon1"/> after three months of searching,<ref name="Brandon1"/> in an attempt to prove the validity of [[Henry Travis]], a man who mentioned the flower over a century previous and was promtly discredited.<ref name="Tricell"/> Naming the virus within it "Progenitor", Dr. Marcus made preparations to leave Africa with a sample to begin his research immediately.<ref name="Brandon1"/><ref name="Marcus1"/>
+
The first Western account of the virus dates back to the work of [[Henry Travis]], a man who mentioned the flower over a century previous and was promtly discredited as part of a financial move by his brother to prevent anyone else capitalising on the findings.<ref name="Tricell"/> The next search for the virus began in the 1960s, initially by Lords [[Oswell E. Spencer]] and [[Edward Ashford]] in [[1962]], who learned of the virus through Travis' works.<ref>{{Cite book|title=biohazard 0 KAITAISHINSHO|publisher=Enterbrain|page=219|accessdate=2013-09-22|language=Japanese}}</ref><ref group="excerpt">''Excerpt from ''biohazard 0 KAITAISHINSHO'', page 219'':<br/>"アシュフォード家五代目当主エドワード、 友人のオズウェル・E・スペンサーとともに始祖ウィルスの捜索を開始。"</ref> It was rediscovered in the Kijuju region of West Africa on [[1966#December 4th|December 4, 1966]]<ref name="Brandon1">''Resident Evil 5'', [[From Chief Researcher Brandon's Journal - No. 1]]</ref><ref name="Marcus1">''Resident Evil Zero'', [[Marcus' Diary 1]]</ref> during an expedition led by Lord Spencer and Doctor [[James Marcus]]<ref name="Brandon1"/> (his student [[Brandon Bailey]], being among them)<ref name="Brandon1"/> after three months of searching.<ref name="Brandon1"/> Naming the virus within it "Progenitor", Dr. Marcus made preparations to leave Africa with a sample to begin his research immediately.<ref name="Brandon1"/><ref name="Marcus1"/>
   
 
Unfortunately for Marcus, the mass-cultivated flowers were found to not produce the virus and it was concluded by Bailey that local environmental factors were necessary for its cultivation.<ref name="Brandon1"/>
 
Unfortunately for Marcus, the mass-cultivated flowers were found to not produce the virus and it was concluded by Bailey that local environmental factors were necessary for its cultivation.<ref name="Brandon1"/>

Revision as of 17:51, 22 September 2013

The Progenitor virus was an ancient West African virus which was the basis of the bio-terrorist agent known as the t-Virus. It was a highly potent non-carcinogenic (Cancer-causing) mutagen, that became central in the Ndipaya culture.[1]

History of Progenitor research

Discovery

Snapshot20090312174517

Stairway of the Sun

"Stairway of the Sun", was first discovered by Westerners in the 19th century, and the virus that was extracted from it would become the base from which the Umbrella Corporation's most successful Bio Organic Weapons research would stem several decades later.[2]

The first Western account of the virus dates back to the work of Henry Travis, a man who mentioned the flower over a century previous and was promtly discredited as part of a financial move by his brother to prevent anyone else capitalising on the findings.[2] The next search for the virus began in the 1960s, initially by Lords Oswell E. Spencer and Edward Ashford in 1962, who learned of the virus through Travis' works.[3][excerpt 1] It was rediscovered in the Kijuju region of West Africa on December 4, 1966[4][5] during an expedition led by Lord Spencer and Doctor James Marcus[4] (his student Brandon Bailey, being among them)[4] after three months of searching.[4] Naming the virus within it "Progenitor", Dr. Marcus made preparations to leave Africa with a sample to begin his research immediately.[4][5]

Unfortunately for Marcus, the mass-cultivated flowers were found to not produce the virus and it was concluded by Bailey that local environmental factors were necessary for its cultivation.[4]

Umbrella

Despite months of cultivations using varying factors (different soil; temperature; water and light-exposure), the trigger for the virus' production could not be found.[4] Despite the lack of any real development, Spencer began making plans to set up a company in March 1967; while Bailey saw it as pointless without any progression with the virus,[4] Marcus went along with it for as long as it didn't interfere with his research.[5]

In November, Spencer began to show his true colours. After his private mansion in the Arklay Mountains was built to hide his Laboratory, he had the building's architect, George Trevor; his wife Jessica and daughter Lisa used as part of his research into the Progenitor virus. Only Lisa survived.[6]

A number of events, both good and bad, occured in 1968: firstly, the African expedition began to push the Ndipaya out of their ancient, ruined city in order to locate the Sun Garden.[7] In July, Umbrella co-founder Edward Ashford became the first Westerner to perish from exposure to the virus.[6] The next month, with the Sun Garden secured, Marcus and Bailey set up a research station within the cave before Marcus was called-up by Spencer to administrate the Umbrella Research Center, where Spencer continued to investigate the virus.[5][7] With the African outpost established in September of that year, Dr. Bailey began exporting newly-cultivated samples straight to Marcus.[7]

Birth of Tyrant

In January 1978, James Marcus combined the Progenitor virus with leech DNA, creating the Tyrant virus.[5] In 1988, Dr. Marcus' two most valued (and, ironically, most trusted) assistants, William Birkin and Albert Wesker, would then assassinate Marcus at the order of his partner and fellow co-founder, Lord Spencer. The two would continue his research from within the secluded Arklay Laboratory.[8] Here, under Spencer's supervision, Dr. Birkin continued to experiment on Lisa; these experiments led to the creation of the G-virus at a much later point in time, discovered by mixing the Type-B Progenitor virus and the countless viral experiments made on Lisa and the NE-α Type parasite, injected into her body.[8]

Path to Godhood

In 2006, Lord Spencer in his waning years, met with Albert Wesker to discuss his plans for world domination through Umbrella's rebirth.[citation needed] Having grown arrogant as leader of the now disestablished corporation and his knowledge of B.O.W.s, Spencer felt it was his right - and only his right - to become a god among men.[citation needed] In his hubris, Spencer revealed that Wesker was the product of an experimental hybridization between humans and the Progenitor virus.[citation needed] There were multiple "Wesker Children", children of intellectuals, hand picked and programmed with Spencer's values, but only two, Albert Wesker and Alex Wesker survived and flourished.[citation needed] Upon discovering this, Wesker brutally murdered the decrepit president of Umbrella, and decided to use the power of Progenitor for his own gain by using it in the development of the powerful virus known as "Uroboros".[citation needed]

Variation

As the Progenitor Virus lays at the heart of international bio-weapons development, its original genetic material has been artificially-altered in many ways to suit the researchers' needs. In 1967, the virus was known to exist in two distinct strains - Types 'A' and 'B'.[9]

The Type-A strain was tested on Jessica Trevor on November 10, 1967.[9] The virus failed to fuse with her DNA and she was later killed.[9] It should be noted that she did not simply die from Progenitor, which were the fates of Marcus' human "test-subjects".[9] Furthermore, she managed to live for three days, and with a reasonably good-condition brain.[9] Her mind was not fully intact, however, describing drifting into unconciousness and memory loss in a letter.[9]

The Type-B strain was also tested on Jessica's daughter, Lisa on the same day.[9] This strain of the virus succeeded in fusing with her DNA, albeit with a delayed reaction.[9] Her brain - either due to the virus strain or her young age of 12 - was significantly affected by the virus, killing an imposter impersonating her mother five days later and losing the ability to write by November 17.[9] By December 4, all she can write was "I mis yuo".[9]

Over the years, Dr. James Marcus continued to alter the virus, eventually being satisfied with a mutation caused by exposure to leech DNA. This variant of the virus was of course "t", though at the time it was not considered such a 'distinct' virus in name as it became in the 21st century.

Further notes

Resi4790screen003

Supernatural enemy from RE 3.5

  • In an earlier development version of Resident Evil 4, Leon was to be infected with the Progenitor virus, encountering bizarre apparitions as part of his infection. One of these such apparitions was noticably similar to the worm-like creations of the Uroboros virus.
  • Early on in the series, the virus was known as the "Clay Virus", with the t-Virus being the "ε-type" strain. The concept of the "Clay virus" was the brainchild of Kenichi Iwao.[10] The initial concept remains in the series, though additions to the lore in later games have since designated many of these types as components of the t-Virus program, rather than independent variants. Information on the virus was released in the INSIDE OF BIO-HAZARD guidebook and its Directors Cut re-release. An accurate translation of this information can be found on Project Umbrella .

Sources

  1. Resident Evil 5, Ndipaya Tribe
  2. 2.0 2.1 Resident Evil 5, Tricell
  3. (in Japanese) biohazard 0 KAITAISHINSHO. Enterbrain. p. 219. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 Resident Evil 5, From Chief Researcher Brandon's Journal - No. 1
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Resident Evil Zero, Marcus' Diary 1
  6. 6.0 6.1 Resident Evil 5, History of RESIDENT EVIL
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Resident Evil 5, From Chief Researcher Brandon's Journal - No. 2
  8. 8.0 8.1 Wesker's Report II
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 9.7 9.8 9.9 Resident Evil, Family Picture & Notes
  10. Hideki Kamiya Twitter post, 2011-06-22


Cite error: <ref> tags exist for a group named "excerpt", but no corresponding <references group="excerpt"/> tag was found