

Infectors seem to have a preference for corpses which have existing head wounds, possibly because this spares them having to crack the skull themselves Unitologists aboard the USG Ishimura were seen to have "prepared" their bodies for the creatures by boring a hole in the center of their foreheads. In any room with the remains of crew members, these are the beasts that should be taken down quickly before you get overrun with newly created Necromorphs. This is done by enveloping the host in its wings, extending the proboscis from the spinal cavity, and then stabbing it into the skull to inject a yellow fluid stored in an internal bladder. The proboscis, which is made from mutated bone, muscle, and spinal tissue is the delivery mechanism for the pure Necromorph tissue used to infect new hosts. The jaw collapses within the body and the rest of the head breaks and twists into its proboscis and feelers with the spine providing support and attachment points for articulation (movement). įormed from a human torso and legs, the Infector's wings are formed by a flap of skin from the chest and then fused between the former host's bent and broken legs. It seems fully reanimated." -An Aegis VII Colony doctor describing the creation of an Infector by the Marker signal. Shit, the, um, leg just bent backwards and-uh, okay, now the other one just snapped back at the knee as well. The flesh is peeling away and, uh, merging with the flesh from the chest re-Fuck! Sorry. The bladder is filling with a liquid, some of which can be seen spilling from his-the creature's proboscis. There seems to be a central organ now resembling a massive bladder. So the, erm, internal organs have reorganized themselves.

Expanding outwards as the, uh, internal organs, muscle, and bone are bent inwards.

feelers? The chest is splitting along the center now. Overview " Okay, now there's, uh, the esophagus is bulging and the jaw is collapsing.
