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=== Bestiary entry ===
 
=== Bestiary entry ===
: ''Now finish your soup, or a berserker'll come and swallow ye whole.<br />– Skellige mother scolding a child.''
+
: ''Now finish your soup, or a berserker'll come and swallow ye whole.<br>– Skellige mother scolding a child.''
 
: ''Skellige legends speak of men known as berserkers who transform into bears when overwhelmed by battle rage. In doing so, they lose all self-awareness and are driven by a bloodlust which they must satiate in order to return to human form. Few believe these blood-curdling tales, however, not even in Skellige, where the inhabitants usually treat even the least probable legends with the utmost gravity. This indicates either that berserkers are in fact mere figments of mead-sodden imaginations, or else that they have learned to hide their abilities from the rest of the islanders.''
 
: ''Skellige legends speak of men known as berserkers who transform into bears when overwhelmed by battle rage. In doing so, they lose all self-awareness and are driven by a bloodlust which they must satiate in order to return to human form. Few believe these blood-curdling tales, however, not even in Skellige, where the inhabitants usually treat even the least probable legends with the utmost gravity. This indicates either that berserkers are in fact mere figments of mead-sodden imaginations, or else that they have learned to hide their abilities from the rest of the islanders.''
 
: ''The skalds' ballads indicate a berserker transformed in the heat of battle cannot be distinguised from a true-born bear. Only minute anatomical details - such as the shape of their tongues and teeth - reveal their secret. Descriptions of their fighting prowess paint them as invulnerable to pain and able to heal any wound received almost at once.''
 
: ''The skalds' ballads indicate a berserker transformed in the heat of battle cannot be distinguised from a true-born bear. Only minute anatomical details - such as the shape of their tongues and teeth - reveal their secret. Descriptions of their fighting prowess paint them as invulnerable to pain and able to heal any wound received almost at once.''

Revision as of 21:40, 23 August 2019

Disambig icon This article is about humans able to transform into bears. For the organization, see Vildkaarl. For The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings skill, see Berserker (skill).

Werebears,[1] on Skellige known as berserkers,[2] are therianthropes who transform into bears or half-bears. As other such creatures, they are hardly hurt by steel but very vulnerable to silver.

Such as in case of other kinds therianthropy, the "arctanthropy" might be aquired either as a result of a curse or inherited from werebear parents. As in these other kinds, it is likely that a bite from a werebear does not result in the victim becoming a werebear as well.[1][3][4] However, on the Skellige Isles, a group of Svalblod worshippers called Vildkaarls invented another, "controlable" way of becoming a berserker. After a complicated ritual involving psilocybe mushrooms and what seemed to be allowing wild bears to eat the cultists alive, the fierce warriors used to rise and spill blood in the name of their god.

The bloodlust of Svalblod worshippers and their leader, jarl Knut the Callous, ultimately led the Islanders to banish the cult and destroy the sacred sites of the werebear god.[2][5]

Werebears are exceptionally strong, even tougher and more relentless than real bears.[2] It is possible that they enjoy the company of ursines, such as werewolves stick to canines, werecats to felids and wererats to murids.[3][4]

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt

Reading The Bear Legend provides a bestiary entry.

Bestiary entry

Now finish your soup, or a berserker'll come and swallow ye whole.
– Skellige mother scolding a child.
Skellige legends speak of men known as berserkers who transform into bears when overwhelmed by battle rage. In doing so, they lose all self-awareness and are driven by a bloodlust which they must satiate in order to return to human form. Few believe these blood-curdling tales, however, not even in Skellige, where the inhabitants usually treat even the least probable legends with the utmost gravity. This indicates either that berserkers are in fact mere figments of mead-sodden imaginations, or else that they have learned to hide their abilities from the rest of the islanders.
The skalds' ballads indicate a berserker transformed in the heat of battle cannot be distinguised from a true-born bear. Only minute anatomical details - such as the shape of their tongues and teeth - reveal their secret. Descriptions of their fighting prowess paint them as invulnerable to pain and able to heal any wound received almost at once.
If these men-turned-bears truly do exist, one can suppose that, like werewolves and lycanthropes, they are particularly vulnerable to oils that harm cursed creatured. But if we are to give credence to ancient songs about these creatures' deeds, about the mass murders and massacres they have committed, we can only hope that no witcher will have to test this hypothesis.

Combat tactics

A berserker starts out as a human, when filled with the rage of battle, it transforms into a berserker (a form of bear). While in human form steel swords along with Hanged Man's Venom will work well against them, as well as any tactics learned while fighting other humans. However, once they are transformed into their bear form, a silver sword, that has been tainted with Cursed oil, will work best.

Beyond the anatomical differences, a berserker's bear form should be treated just like fighting a true-born Bear, save that these bears are much tougher, more relentless and harder to kill. If you have spent time improving your Igni sign, the melt Armor enhancement will come in real handy here. If you have this available, make sure to activate it prior to dealing with a berserker.

Associated quest

Videos

Gallery

Footnotes

  1. So far, Andrzej Sapkowski tended to use real world Greek names for his werecreatures, such as lycanthrope for a werewolf and therianthrope as a term encompassing all such beasts. Arctanthrope is a Greek term for a werebear, but hasn't appeared in the books yet.

References