Roster
Minions
The Lost’s minions include homeless wielding baseball bats and other
simple weapons, but these enemies have not been officially named.
Current HQ: Unknown
Turf: Unknown
Levels: 1-?
Villain Finder
·Technology Heroes: Visit
Caitlin Murray at the Freedom Corps headquarters and begin taking missions. Eventually, Murray will assign a mission that involves investigating a villain group that
has been kidnapping the city's homeless and turning them into rampaging mutants.
Tactics
·Unknown
Combat Recommendations
·None at this time
Rewards
·Unknown
History
“In the aftermath of the Rikti Invasion, Paragon
City lay devastated at every level. A super-powered war had raged through the city
streets and caused massive destruction, pain, death, and loss. Today the rebuilding continues at a record pace, and much of
the city has returned to something resembling pre-invasion existence. Or at least it seems so on the surface. The Paragon
City economy had descended to depths unseen since the Great Depression and unemployment
rose to close to 20%. With most of the city's cash going to costly repairs and the reestablishment of basic infrastructure,
there was little left for social services. What Federal money there was for such programs could scarcely alleviate the problem.
“The city's heroes did not overlook the rising jobless and homeless rates.
Hero organizations opened their doors and turned their training halls into soup kitchens and homeless shelters. Heroes accustomed
to using their strength and speed to smash villainy found their powers equally valuable when it came to building new, affordable
housing. Tens of thousands who would otherwise have spent hungry nights sleeping on park benches made it through the crisis
and eventually found work, thanks to the efforts of Paragon City's
heroes.
“Unfortunately, it proved impossible for even the combined efforts of
heroes, city government, and local community charities to provide succor to everyone who needed it. Even more unfortunately,
there were other, less civic-minded groups out there waiting to capitalize on the situation. A variety of evil-minded organizations
took advantage of those in desperate straits, a fact that explains the sudden swelling in membership of villain groups like
the Freakshow and the Fifth Column, as well as the steady supply of experimental subjects rumored to have disappeared behind
the walls of Crey Industries research facilities. And then there were those poor souls who just got lost.
“Paragon City's
ancient labyrinthine subway and sewer systems had long been a refuge for those with nowhere else to go. During the invasion
‘those with nowhere else to go’ also included the Rikti. The extra-dimensional invaders made their staging areas
beneath the city, carving out caves or using the existing sewer and subway tunnels for their own purposes. Much of the war
was fought in these underground chambers, and to this day Rikti still lurk in the dark depths. Naturally enough, the city
has sealed off the old subway tunnels entirely and embarked on a constant battle to keep the sewer lines working. Although
well marked as incredibly dangerous, numerous homeless people have returned to the underground in spite of the danger. For
those who have nothing left in the surface world to comfort them, it sometimes proves difficult to abandon the safe places
of old.
“There is no accurate way of counting how many of those who went underground
were lost to the horrors below and how many just wanted to disappear of their own accord. Most of what's publicly known about
this chthonic world comes from the reportage of a single, intrepid social worker named Shannon Price. Ms. Price was once a
minor hero known as Starlight, and she had fought with distinction during the war. A long time advocate for the homeless,
Price hung up her tights for good once peace had returned and focused all of her energies on trying to make Paragon
City a safer, healthier place for its poorest citizens.
“Through her volunteer work, Price became quite close with much of the
homeless community and was soon tapped in to all their circulated rumors and stories. She heard repeated tales of people going
down into the underground and disappearing for weeks or months. This, she knew, was not surprising. She'd fought in those
tunnels and knew how dangerous they still were. What was interesting was that these lost folk would then turn up again sometime
later, often different than they'd been before. They were brusque and almost business-like, always moving with a purpose and
never stopping to chat with old friends. They stuck together in tight cliques, and were rumored to have moved beyond simple
foraging to armed robbery and other crimes.
“Price decided to investigate further, and calling in a few favors from
her Dawn Patrol friends, she managed to wrangle an interview with one of these "mole people" (as other homeless called the
underground dwellers) who had been captured during a bank robbery. Although at first silent and defiant, the prisoner became
more and more anxious and unsure with each hour he spent separated from his cohorts. He began to babble incoherently of magic
mists and green gods. He claimed that he was part of a new underworld order, a troupe of the touched, that he referred to
as The Lost. Price could not make much sense of any of this, but when routine blood tests showed that some sort of mutagenic
chemical was present in the man's blood, it became obvious that there was more to this problem than met the eye.
“Together with a her old friend Quint "The Fist" Velasquez from the Dawn
Patrol, Price once again donned her costume and set off into the sewers, looking for some answers. It was three months before
she was seen again, this time without Quint at her side. The Dawn Patrol sent several more teams into the sewers to search
for the missing heroes, but they found no trace of them or their fate. When Shannon Price appeared once more, it was crawling
up through a manhole in the middle of rush hour traffic. She was rushed to the hospital, since she had obviously suffered
a great deal of punishment and pain during her absence.
“The intrepid social worker never achieved a mental state that one could
call sane or even lucid. Lab tests showed that she had the same mysterious mutagen in her blood that investigators had found
in captured members of The Lost. When questioned, she readily spouted forth a largely unintelligible tale. Dawn Patrol investigators
were able to eke out a few solid facts from the garbled narrative. According to Price, The Lost seems to be a loosely organized
confederation of the mentally ill, street people, and anyone else who has become desperate enough to find their way underground.
“The group has a transforming effect upon it members, not only by providing
leadership and a purpose, but by actually changing their bodies. This was obviously the work of the mutagen found in Price's
blood stream, although how exactly it got there is unclear. She spoke of a group of elders, or leaders who bestowed the changes
upon the Lost. Price referred to these leaders only as The Lost, implying that perhaps they were the actual "Lost" and that
their new followers had taken the name from themselves. Price was at her most deranged when describing these mysterious figures,
referring to them alternately as "gods," "demons," and "artifexes." Beyond these rather colorful appellations, she offered
no real clue as to The Lost's true nature. Analysis of the mutagen in her blood provided little other valuable insight, except
the chemical composition of it defied every effort to pinpoint its origin.
“Since Price's doomed expedition, The Lost have begun to make their presence
felt in the city. No one knows for sure just who they are or where they came from (other than underground), but everyone agrees
that they are a tremendous threat. At first it was just organized bands of seemingly normal homeless individuals. Then, larger,
decidedly less human-looking creatures were spotted terrorizing parts of the city. In addition to perpetrating crimes like
robbery and murder, the Lost also engage in frequent kidnapping. Apparently they increase their own ranks by snatching poor
citizens from the streets and transforming them into monsters. Every time a prisoner is captured he or she claims to be one
of The Lost and refuses to speak until, within a few hours, utter madness sinks in and the prisoner becomes totally unintelligible.
“Recently, the Dawn Patrol managed to capture one of the more terrifying
humanoid creatures that had started showing their faces above ground. This particular hulking beast attacked a Dawn Patrol
headquarters, along with a cadre of only slightly less fearsome members of The Lost. The "champion" who seemed to be leading
the attack was killed, and his autopsy revealed some shocking information. Although his DNA, dental patterns, and fingerprints
had all been mangled by the mutagen, together they provided enough information to identify the beast as having once been Quint
Velasquez. The former hero who had accompanied Price on her initial exploration hadn't been as "lucky" as his comrade. She
had escaped with her body, if not her mind. He had lost them both.”
The Lost can be recognized by their tendency to use scavenged items as weapons
and it is not uncommon to see members of the Lost carrying garbage can lids or wearing stop signs as armor. The lieutenant
Leader Joe even straps on car tires for shoulder pads and his helmet consists of a gutted television.