Нашел по англицки, если поймешь, там он якобы попал в засаду, убить не смогли, заковали, а герои его освободили, когда он остался их прикрывать, то кто то сказал - его сила далеко за пределами возможностей демонов и у него свой путь мести.
There has been a sighting of what might be Draigo in the Warhammer Fantasyverse - specifically, in the fluff book for the Khaine splat of The End Times.
During Araloth's travels into the Realm of Chaos, to rescue Shallya from the mansion of Nurgle, the final traveling companion he picks up is a knight, a "giant of a man" whose armor "gleams like silver" and whose "speech is strange" (why does Kaldor decide to help Eldar?). Upon reaching the mansion of Nurgle, the knight sacrifices himself so the rest of the party can enter, explaining he has "made something of a name for himself since his arrival in the benighted realm" and so he is sure to draw their attention. More notably, when he makes his sacrificial charge, it's mentioned that he sweeps out his hand and blue fire explodes amongst the daemon's ranks. It's also been mentioned that the Warp connects Fantasy and 40k.
Worth mentioning that not only are Wood Elves the Spiritual Liege's favorite Fantasy faction, but this was one of the last things he wrote for Games Workshop before leaving the company. Take it as you will.
That said, if this is Draigo, he is certainly not the all-powerful Gary Sue of other depictions; when Araloth finds him, he has been chained down in a glade in Nurgle's garden, at one point he gets ambushed by a Beast of Nurgle (when it jumps out of a tree and lands on him), and rather than defeating the daemons he distracts, Araloth leaves the mansion to find his broken body impaled upon a spear. Yes, he's still alive, and the mad scholar the Wood Elf is traveling with (who may in fact be Richter Kleiss, the writer of the Liber Chaotica) explains that the knight is "beyond the power of the daemons" and will "take his own revenge in due course", but that is attributed to being "the way of things in the Realm of Chaos" rather than anything inherent to Draigo (if he is Draigo).
It's worth noting that the description would also fit a Stormcast Eternal of the Hallowed Knights chapter from Age of Sigmar, which was under development at the time and is technically the same setting. Though, the Sigmarine couldn't fire blue lightning out of his hands, nor was he "invincible."
In another story, whilst in the warp, Draigo sees a "world ruled over by a self-styled God-king, where magic flows through the very wind." He ultimately decides not to go there, thus proving himself far more intelligent than he has ever been given credit for.
Не помню, но там несколько героев вроде как пошли с хаоситами воевать и встретили огромного чувака в странных доспехах, он им помог напинать врагам, а когда они срочно эвакуировались, то чувак вроде как отстал, кто то из пати говорит - давайте вернемся поможем, а мудрый эльф из пати говорит - этого парня хаоситам все равно не победить, а его судьба далеко отсюда, в других мирах. Это в своих словах, там жирные намеки в описании этого вояки на то кто это такой. Я пару лет назад читал отрывки про самых-самых из вахи40к , так что сейчас хрен вспомню кто и где это писал.
Ну это как если бы во вселенной WH40к была бы планетка где обитают представители сразу всех рас(ну или почти всех, короче основных) и все они постоянно месятся друг с другом, ну как обычно в Вахе, а с Севера то и дело припирается очередной черный крестовый поход, ну как обычно. Одно время даже были версии что этот мир реально часть вселенной 40к и Зигмар\Сигмар, местная версия Императора, это один из примархов, но потом эта версия была официально опровергнута. К тому же в этом мире таки настал конец света, но в результате того что новая версия мира АоС зашел похуже, а к старому миру интерес возрос особенно после игр Тотал Вар, то создатели призадумались, уж не знаю чего надумают, но пока у них в планах дополнять лор старого мира до Армагедца, дальше поглядим. Так что по сути тоже самое, но сконцентрированное в пределах одной планеты, считай только тиранидов нет и ярковыраженой замены Тау, зато есть Рептилоиды-Ацтеки и просто дохера нежити всех мастей(вампиры, утопленники и местный вариант некронов).
Крут базару нет, но Драйго настоооолько крут, что окольными путями через варп сумел переместиться из вселенной WH40k во вселенную WH fantasy и даже там напинать хаоситам по жопе, ты хоть представляешь уровень его "пафосфорса" что он может выписывать такое.
There has been a sighting of what might be Draigo in the Warhammer Fantasyverse - specifically, in the fluff book for the Khaine splat of The End Times.
During Araloth's travels into the Realm of Chaos, to rescue Shallya from the mansion of Nurgle, the final traveling companion he picks up is a knight, a "giant of a man" whose armor "gleams like silver" and whose "speech is strange" (why does Kaldor decide to help Eldar?). Upon reaching the mansion of Nurgle, the knight sacrifices himself so the rest of the party can enter, explaining he has "made something of a name for himself since his arrival in the benighted realm" and so he is sure to draw their attention. More notably, when he makes his sacrificial charge, it's mentioned that he sweeps out his hand and blue fire explodes amongst the daemon's ranks. It's also been mentioned that the Warp connects Fantasy and 40k.
Worth mentioning that not only are Wood Elves the Spiritual Liege's favorite Fantasy faction, but this was one of the last things he wrote for Games Workshop before leaving the company. Take it as you will.
That said, if this is Draigo, he is certainly not the all-powerful Gary Sue of other depictions; when Araloth finds him, he has been chained down in a glade in Nurgle's garden, at one point he gets ambushed by a Beast of Nurgle (when it jumps out of a tree and lands on him), and rather than defeating the daemons he distracts, Araloth leaves the mansion to find his broken body impaled upon a spear. Yes, he's still alive, and the mad scholar the Wood Elf is traveling with (who may in fact be Richter Kleiss, the writer of the Liber Chaotica) explains that the knight is "beyond the power of the daemons" and will "take his own revenge in due course", but that is attributed to being "the way of things in the Realm of Chaos" rather than anything inherent to Draigo (if he is Draigo).
It's worth noting that the description would also fit a Stormcast Eternal of the Hallowed Knights chapter from Age of Sigmar, which was under development at the time and is technically the same setting. Though, the Sigmarine couldn't fire blue lightning out of his hands, nor was he "invincible."
In another story, whilst in the warp, Draigo sees a "world ruled over by a self-styled God-king, where magic flows through the very wind." He ultimately decides not to go there, thus proving himself far more intelligent than he has ever been given credit for.