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Kukuweaq | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Kukuweaq was a giant, ten-legged polar bear in Inuit tradition. The legends goes that once a man killed a walrus and kept it all to himself. His neighbor, who had many children to feed, went out hunting when he came across the Kukuweaq's den. He stabbed it in the eye and was eventually able to kill it after a bit of a chase. The man shared the kill with his entire village, which taught the selfish neighbor an important message, apparently. The legend has very little to do with the Kukuweaq; all it does is get killed and eaten. It did not even need to have ten legs or even be all that big to make the story have any more meaning. Future Development: Kukuweaq has almost no description other than being a ten-legged polar bear. Moreso, it has no special powers that would give it an impressive array of techniques. I suspect that the artist could one day draw a cub form for Kukuweaq, though. Content-type: text/html
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