Anrir Aedik
1d ago
Apr 1, 2026(0y)
Apr 1, 2027(303d)
Combat
Kills0
Losses7
Efficiency0%
ISK
Destroyed0
Lost2.10b
ISK Eff.0%
Solo
Solo Kills0
Solo Ratio0%
Final Blows0
Points0
Other
NPC Losses0
NPC Loss Ratio0%
Avg Kills/Day0.00
ActivityInactive
Anrir Aedik
Last Active
1d ago
Birthday
Apr 1, 2026 (0 years old)
Next Birthday
Apr 1, 2027 (303 days)
Combat
Kills0
Losses7
Efficiency0%
Danger Ratio100%
ISK
Destroyed0
Lost2.10b
ISK Efficiency0%
Balance-2102751420
Solo
Solo Kills0
Solo Ratio0%
Final Blows0
Points0
Other
NPC Losses0
NPC Loss Ratio0%
Avg Kills/Day0.00
ActivityInactive
No data available
Bio
Blood & Tribe
Anrir Aedik is Brutor. He says it the way other men state a fact of physics — not as pride, exactly, but as foundation. The Brutor do not bend. They have been broken, scattered, chained, and branded, and still the Tribe endures, still the bloodline runs unbroken through a thousand years of Amarr occupation and the long ugly work of reclaiming what was taken. Aedik carries that history in his body the way the Brutor always have: tattooed into his skin from collarbone to temple, each mark a name, a battle, a debt outstanding.
He was born free. His grandmother was not. He has never once confused those two facts or allowed himself the comfort of treating the distance between them as closure.
On the Amarr
Let no one mistake Aedik for a man who hates carelessly. He has thought about the Amarr Empire with great care, for most of his adult life, and arrived at his position through rigorous consideration of the evidence: they are slavers. They have always been slavers. They wrap their chains in scripture and their branding irons in the language of divine mercy, and they have spent centuries convincing the rest of the cluster that this makes the chains something other than chains.
It does not. A collar blessed by a god is still a collar. A man praying while he beats an enslaved woman is still a man beating an enslaved woman. Aedik has no patience for the theological gymnastics that Amarr apologists — and there are always apologists, in every station bar from Jita to Amarr prime — use to soften this simple fact into something discussable over drinks.
"They call it Reclaiming. My people call it what it is. There is no polite word for it in Brutor and I have never gone looking for one."
He does not fly for Amarr contracts. He does not dock in Amarr stations if he can avoid it. When he cannot avoid it, he keeps his ship sealed, his crew aboard, and his time in system as short as mechanically possible. He has declined lucrative hauling work rather than move cargo that would end up in Holder hands. He will continue to do so. He considers it the minimum acceptable standard for a free Minmatar with a ship and a choice.
The BIG Lottery
Anrir Aedik is Brutor. He says it the way other men state a fact of physics — not as pride, exactly, but as foundation. The Brutor do not bend. They have been broken, scattered, chained, and branded, and still the Tribe endures, still the bloodline runs unbroken through a thousand years of Amarr occupation and the long ugly work of reclaiming what was taken. Aedik carries that history in his body the way the Brutor always have: tattooed into his skin from collarbone to temple, each mark a name, a battle, a debt outstanding.
He was born free. His grandmother was not. He has never once confused those two facts or allowed himself the comfort of treating the distance between them as closure.
On the Amarr
Let no one mistake Aedik for a man who hates carelessly. He has thought about the Amarr Empire with great care, for most of his adult life, and arrived at his position through rigorous consideration of the evidence: they are slavers. They have always been slavers. They wrap their chains in scripture and their branding irons in the language of divine mercy, and they have spent centuries convincing the rest of the cluster that this makes the chains something other than chains.
It does not. A collar blessed by a god is still a collar. A man praying while he beats an enslaved woman is still a man beating an enslaved woman. Aedik has no patience for the theological gymnastics that Amarr apologists — and there are always apologists, in every station bar from Jita to Amarr prime — use to soften this simple fact into something discussable over drinks.
"They call it Reclaiming. My people call it what it is. There is no polite word for it in Brutor and I have never gone looking for one."
He does not fly for Amarr contracts. He does not dock in Amarr stations if he can avoid it. When he cannot avoid it, he keeps his ship sealed, his crew aboard, and his time in system as short as mechanically possible. He has declined lucrative hauling work rather than move cargo that would end up in Holder hands. He will continue to do so. He considers it the minimum acceptable standard for a free Minmatar with a ship and a choice.
The BIG Lottery
Dashboard
Stats
Kills0
Losses7
Efficiency0%
ISK Destroyed0
ISK Lost2.10b
ISK Efficiency0%
Solo Kills0
Solo Losses5
NPC Losses0
Blob Factor0
Active TimezoneUSTZ
Final Blows0
Points0
Activity Heat Map (EVE Time)
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Intel Profile
PlaystyleSolo (0 kills)
Avg Fleet: - Bait (2x)