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#REDIRECT [[Characters of Myst]]
{{Myst_fiction}}

'''The Stranger''' is how the [[player character]] of the [[Myst]] series of games is known in Myst canon.

When they created Myst and Riven, [[Cyan_Worlds|Cyan]]'s intent was for players to feel as though they were themselves ''there,'' exploring strange worlds and gleaning information about them. Keeping the game first-person rather than third-person was the essence of this immersion. Thus, the games' protagonist is an anonymous, gender-neutral entity with no given history, and players are free to imagine themselves as the protagonist.

However, as the Myst story evolved, fans became curious about the anonymous player character. Atrus's interactions with this figure were vital to the story, which itself was becoming more tightly interwoven with our world. D'ni was depicted as being under our Earth, and being accessible from real locations on Earth's surface. The events from the games were determined to be at specific points (the 18th and 19th centuries) in Earth history.

With the line between Myst canon and real life blurring, fans began to speculate about the character's "actual" identity and role in D'ni history. Until such time as the truth is learned about him or her, the player character is referred to -- in historical contexts -- as The Stranger.

==Story==

The Stranger's origin has long been assumed to be Earth, since even before there was any indication of such from the games. [[Uru: Ages Beyond Myst]], however, strongly implies that the assumption was correct, and that the Stranger is therefore a [[human]].

Somehow the Stranger discovered [[Atrus]]'s Myst Linking Book, which had fallen into the [[Star Fissure]] (as depicted in Myst's opening cinematic). He touched its [[Linking panel]] and Linked to [[Ages of Myst|Myst]]. His explorations led him to [[Atrus]], who was trapped in [[K'veer]] by his sons [[Sirrus and Achenar]], on [[12 December]] [[1806]] (according to official D'ni timelines). A month after freeing him, the Stranger Linked to [[Ages of Riven|Riven]] and freed Atrus's wife [[Katran|Catherine]] from [[Gehn]]. Atrus then let the Stranger fall into the [[Star Fissure]], on faith that it would return him home to [[Earth]].

About ten years later ([[1816]]) the Stranger met the couple again in [[Tomahna]], a place on Earth close to the Cleft, in what is now Eddy County, [[New Mexico]]. There he became involved in a grievance of a man named [[Saavedro]]. Saavedro, wronged by Atrus's sons, exacts revenge by stealing a precious linking book; the [[Releeshahn]] Age. The Stranger helped Atrus recover the Releeshahn book from Saavedro.

Another ten years later ([[1826]]), the Stranger returned to Tomahna and saved Atrus' daughter [[Yeesha]] from her brother [[Sirrus (Myst)|Sirrus]], who kidnapped her in order to pursue his plan for revenge. It is implied in [[Myst IV: Revelation]] that the Stranger visited Atrus and his family several times in between 1816 and 1826.

The player character of [[Myst V]] is not The Stranger. [[Uru: Ages Beyond Myst]] takes place in 2003, and Myst V takes place after Uru. If the Stranger is indeed a typical human, he or she would have died before either game took place. The URU storyline has revealed that the player character of Myst V was in fact Dr. Watson, former leader of the DRC. In the game, Atrus refers to the player character as "my old friend," but the Myst V strategy guide explains this as being a result of Atrus's age and senility.


== Clues to his identity ==
The identity of the Stranger is one of the best hidden mysteries in the Myst universe since it seems from the narrative that Cyan did not intend to develop the character; next to nothing is known about this person. As the Myst games have no dialogue --- only monologues from non-player characters --- we do not know whether the Stranger was asked about their origin or what reply they might have made.

We don't know even the Stranger's gender; references to the Stranger as a male are probably a result of English language custom rather than of actual information*. In one losing ending of ''Myst'', Atrus sounds as though he mutters to himself, "''He'' didn't bring the page!" referring to the player. If so, this is probably a slip-of-the-tongue by [[Rand Miller]] rather than a deliberately placed piece of information.

In the Myst hint guide there is a small paragraph about the game's backstory, with highly dubious and contradictory details about the Myst book's discovery. This description is considered non-canonical.

The game [[Uru: Ages Beyond Myst]] revealed that the Star Fissure's destination -- and thus the location where the Myst Linking Book fell -- is in [[Eddy County, New Mexico]]. As it has also been revealed that the Myst games take place in the early [[1800s]], many fans speculate that the Stranger was either a [[Spanish people|Spaniard]] ([[Mexican|Mexico]]), or an [[Amerindian]] native of the [[19th century]]. However, the Myst Book might well have changed hands after its original discovery before its first use.

[[Richard A. Watson]] has stated that Atrus spoke English with his grandmother before his descent into D'ni with Gehn and his journals were also written in English as a result of Anna's family having come originally from Europe, as mentioned in [[Myst: The Book of Atrus]]. Since the Stranger is able to read Atrus's journals on Myst Island, possibly the sole other datum we have about him is that he is able to speak and read English with some fluency.

The resurrection of [[Myst Online: Uru Live]] is the most likely outlet for further information on the Stranger.

The official strategy guide for [[Riven]], in addition to the straight walkthrough, has a sort of journal obviously kept by the Stranger as he makes his way through Riven. It gives some ideas into his identity and personality.
* He is good at mathematics, as he estimated how many possible combinations there are for the Color Marble Puzzle.
* He is maybe a drug user, as quoted in the strategy guide: "I've just had the most remarkable experience. It involved drugs, but that was the bad part." However,it is possible that the "drugs" are the anesthetic drugs he got in Tay (the rebel shoot at him a dart which make him sleep).
* Interestingly enough, he makes a reference to Alcatraz Prison, which conflicts with the official timeline since Alcatraz prison was not established until 1933 (assuming he did visit Riven in 1807).
* Another conflict is that he makes a reference to an [[Academy Award|Oscar]], something not introduced until 1928.
With the conflicts, it can be inferred that the journal portion of the strategy guide was implied for comedy and immersion from someone other than the Stranger.

==Legacy==
The philosophy of 'blank' and nameless player characters was present for many years before Myst, but Myst perhaps inspired its adoption in subsequent games. These games are usually set in the first-person, so the player can better adopt the character's position. Notable such games include many adventures (like the ''[[Zork]]'' games, and ''[[RAMA]]'') but games from other genres as well (''[[Star Trek: Klingon]]'', and even as far back as ''[[Doom]]''). Like in ''Myst'', the camera in these games never moves away from the player character's eyes (There is one exception, when using the elevators in the Great Shaft in Myst V, although the player is hidden from its view) , the character is never shown, his/her name is never mentioned, and (s)he never speaks; the characters speak to him/her as if they aren't expecting an answer or in such a way that anything they might say would not require a direct reply, and aren't surprised when (s)he isn't talking,

==See also==
* [[AFGNCAAP]]
*[[Silent protagonist]]s

{{Myst_franchise}}

[[Category:Myst characters]]

Latest revision as of 15:11, 20 January 2009

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