![]() ![]() She begins hunting down the less humane children of her vampire father, organized as the Cult of Kagan in his honor, decimating them one by one, decade for decade, until only a handful of them remain … Anti-Heroes Betrayed of her revenge, Rayne instead turns her anger towards her many siblings. Seeing how he probably won’t make it out of the situation alive, anyway – his intestines are torn out and strapped around his neck – Trumain blows up himself, Kagan and the Vesper Shard with a grenade. (No, we never heard of him before.) She finds the two competing to get hold of an artifact called the Vesper Shard, and Kagan of course got the upper hand. But the vampire lord has held captive one Sir Trumain, who apparently raised Rayne like a father after her family was killed by Kagan. Shown is only the final scene where Rayne confronts Kagan, seemingly a Nazi-collaborator. ![]() While the ending in the first game made it seem like players would go for Rayne’s father Kagan to enact her revenge, in the end the hunt takes place off-screen. Rayne in the meantime has made a bigger leap in time, as now the game is set in a vaguely modern day/near future setting. After the success of BloodRayne, it didn’t take long for TRI and Majesco to deliver a sequel. ![]()
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