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What is the worst way to die in an /out/ fashion? Bonus points for historically recorded examples.
1. Paralyzed Wolf Attack - you fall down an unseen embankment while solo hiking and break your back, paralyzing you from the neck down. As night fall approaches, you are chanced upon by a pack of wolves. All you can do is try to shoo them away, as they eat you alive.
2. Wolf Berserkers - You are attacked by a pack of wolves, and despite having a rifle, search and rescue finds your shredded clothing and empty rifle, complete with signs of using the rifle as a blunt object/club after you'd run out of ammunition. No body found.
>March 16, 1923 Karl Lynn world war veteran and one of the best known trappers and mushers in the north country is believed to have lost his life in a fight with a pack of timber wolves, two hunters reported here today. They said they thought his body had been devoured by the pack after he had killed six of the wolves. Shreds of clothing and a gun, identified as belonging to Lynn, surrounded by the carcasses of six wolves, were found by the hunters near Cree Lake, 20 miles north of Île-à-la-Crosse, but the hunter's body was lacking. Lynn was an expert rifleman and during the war served as a sniper. Body not recovered.
1. Paralyzed Wolf Attack - you fall down an unseen embankment while solo hiking and break your back, paralyzing you from the neck down. As night fall approaches, you are chanced upon by a pack of wolves. All you can do is try to shoo them away, as they eat you alive.
2. Wolf Berserkers - You are attacked by a pack of wolves, and despite having a rifle, search and rescue finds your shredded clothing and empty rifle, complete with signs of using the rifle as a blunt object/club after you'd run out of ammunition. No body found.
>March 16, 1923 Karl Lynn world war veteran and one of the best known trappers and mushers in the north country is believed to have lost his life in a fight with a pack of timber wolves, two hunters reported here today. They said they thought his body had been devoured by the pack after he had killed six of the wolves. Shreds of clothing and a gun, identified as belonging to Lynn, surrounded by the carcasses of six wolves, were found by the hunters near Cree Lake, 20 miles north of Île-à-la-Crosse, but the hunter's body was lacking. Lynn was an expert rifleman and during the war served as a sniper. Body not recovered.