There are pilots who chase profit. There are pilots who chase war.
Rhaegoth does neither.
He moves through the systems of New Eden like a presence rather than a man—unannounced, unrecorded, and often unnoticed until it is already too late. His ships are rarely seen on open channels, his voice absent from local comms. Where others leave chatter, he leaves silence.
He does not roam New Eden aimlessly. Every system entered is observed. Every anomaly scanned. Every movement cataloged. To Rhaegoth, space is not empty—it is a living map of behavior, patterns, and mistakes waiting to be understood.
He does not hunt the strong. He does not hunt the weak.
He hunts the unaware.
Methodology of the Hunt
Rhaegoth does not engage in reckless combat. He does not rush targets, nor does he rely on brute force. His approach is patient, deliberate, and unsettlingly precise.
He enters systems quietly, often cloaked, and remains still. He watches traffic. Warp patterns. Habits. He identifies those who grow comfortable—those who believe themselves alone.
Only then does he move.
His preferred method is not confrontation, but inevitability.
Targets rarely understand what has happened. A scan resolves. A signature disappears. A ship vanishes from space. By the time awareness sets in, the outcome has already been decided.
There is no warning. There is no escalation. Only the result.
Rhaegoth adheres to a personal code:
He does not speak in local channels. He does not reveal intent. He does not chase chaos.
He observes first. Always.
Engagement is a conclusion, not a reaction.
Rhaegoth is not a mercenary. Not a soldier. And while CONCORD would insist he is a pirate, Rhaegoth considers the distinction largely administrative.