Xaiden Lust is an available match in MeChat and the counterpart of Norrix Diablos.
Profile[]
I might be a creature of the night, but my charm is anything but dark.
Appearance[]
Xaiden has glowing red eyes, dark red hair, a red skin tone, horns, and a tail.
Storyline[]
When you meet Xaiden on MeChat, he seems to have waited for you to swipe right on him, which really helps your plans.
He is no normal man looking for a hookup, he is something much more dangerous and your mission is, to rid the world of him before more innocent people fall victim to him.
In your profession of being a demon hunter, you lull him with flirtation and lure him to your apartment.
An easy job to kill him!
But what happens, if he uses some 'enhancing' potions and suddenly is adamant, that he is in love with you?
Trivia[]
- Xaiden is an Incubus Flying Wyvern.
- Flying wyverns are large, bipedal monsters that have two wings, who are known for their mastery of flight.
- An incubus (plural: incubi) is a demon that enters the dreams of woman and engages in sexual activity in order to have a child. It is classified as a male counterpart of the female succubus, who engaged in sexual activity with men. Like the succubi, incubi wore out their partners with constant sex and would even kill them.
- The Incubus is just as beautiful and desired as his female counter part the succubus.
- The origin of this sex demon takes place in Mesopotamia, where the first incubus, Lilu, existed. Lilu is a male counterpart of Lilith, who was a succubus.
- The incubus and succubus are actually the same. They swap genders at specific points. For example, they would become succubi whenever they required semen, their life source. They would then become incubi and use that semen to impregnate women.
- Many believe that incubi are bisexual but that would strictly contradict their purpose of impregnation. But some people believe that when the Incubi slept with another male he would absorb his seed and use it as his own.
- In Islam and Arabian folklore, the incubus is known as the Hadun الحضون al-Hadun lit. the incubator usually uncountable) and Kaboos (Arabic: الكابوس al-Kabūs, lit. incubus "colloquial for bad-dreams" plural كوابيس Kawābīs anglicised as Kawaabees) the only difference from Judeo-Christian that incubi is being a type or a class of the jinn.