The Suckers (Kalaallisut: Qivittoq; Spanish: Follón; Nahuatl: Chicaucayotl; Canadian French: Warulf) are the rioters who always wear Guy Fawkes masks across the Americas, ranging from cold areas of Greenland to wind-pushed straits of Argentina. These are survivors who have been attacked by the Abstergo's Sigma Team since November 1997, led by Alan Rikkin, the CEO of the fourth faction.
The continents of the Americas discovered how to blend in with the background in December 1997. Three survivors gathered around a kitchen table in a Kentucky rental home that was covered in maps, ripped newspapers, Hunter insignia, and piles of inexpensive white masks with black painted smiles. They refused to ingest Abstergo's poison, which is why they named themselves Suckers rather than because they obeyed it.
The first leader, Farhan bin Gunung, an Indonesian member of the Assassin Brotherhood who had lost the only person he had ever loved during the Great Purge, was seated in the middle of the table. Stacy Naga, a Filipino member of the Templar ally whose family had been murdered by Sigma Team, stood next to him. Jamie binti Chenglau, a Monster Hunter or Hidden Savior who had survived the murder of her lover and family in 1997, was seated across from them.
In one room, there were three factions: three types of grief and three arguments against giving up. Stacy slid a Templar dagger across her palm and said, "They believe the Americas belong to them." Jamie adjusted the strap of her rifle and said, "Then we'll get the continent back." They weren't romantic about it; they were exhausted, angry, and already establishing a network. Farhan spread the map open across the table and whispered, "Abstergo's broken, that doesn't mean they are dead."
The three did not remain in Kentucky, where they had started. They traveled all the way to Greenland via Detroit, Chicago, New York, Mexico City, Havana, Guatemala, Panama, Bogota, Buenos Aires, and Vancouver. They left behind a hand-painted Guy Fawkes mask in every city, and the people started imitating it. In order to identify themselves as anti-Abstergo, students, dockworkers, soldiers, clergy, refugees, hunters, shamans, street gangs, and even politicians began donning variations of it. The Suckers originated as a network of collective disobedience, a rejection that spanned the entire continent rather than a single army.
They quickly faced their first significant test when a captive Sigma Team member was hauled out of an Abstergo truck and taken into a safehouse in Kentucky. "They told us that you were terrorists," he spat, mocking them despite being strapped to a chair. The soldier laughed cruelly and added, "You think masks and prayers will save you, Abstergo will erase all religions on Earth!" Farhan leaned forward and shouted, "They warned you wrong!"
Jamie's demeanor shifted as the room fell silent. She felt angry rather than scared or shocked. She took a hesitant step forward and pressed a Templar blade to the soldier's throat. She muttered, "Say it again," as the soldier began to laugh once more. Jamie cut him off with a single, swift motion. Farhan closed his eyes for a moment, and the guard went silent. Stacy stated, "Now he understands," and after Jamie cleaned the blade, she said, "He doesn't understand anymore."
With regional names, the Sucker movement expanded. Resistance groups in Greenland were known as Qivittoq, after the reclusive nomads who fled society in sorrow and shame. They were referred to as Loup Garou or Warulf in Canada. They were known as Chikaukayotl in Mexico. The cells were referred to as Follon across non-Mexican Latin America. They were known as warruh in the Falkland Islands, after the extinct island canids that local oral histories recall. The movement's message remained constant regardless of where it ended up: Abstergo could not possess grief, the dead, or the future.
Before quite awhile, the three realized they weren't alone. Assassins escaping purges, Templar defectors repulsed by Abstergo's brutality in cloning, Hidden Saviors or Hunters, indigenous defenders, wildlife wardens, cryptid witnesses, and common folks who had just witnessed too much started to join them. By the end of the month, the Suckers had grown into a hemisphere-wide shadow coalition. They collaborated with Inuit defenders and Greenlandic Qivittoq in the north. They guarded secret Fomorian and other racing routes in Canada. They protected underground temples and monster sanctuaries in Mexico and Central America. They encountered resistance from the locals and animal scouts as they passed through towns in the Andes. They kept an eye out for Abstergo naval maneuvers and clone cargo ships in the Falklands and along the southern coasts.
Hunter channels sent reports to Francisco Muller and Nilan Punzalan-Pradep in South Africa. Both of them realized what was going on as soon as they heard the names of the regional cells. In silence, Nilan leaned over the map projection and said, "Farhan's building something big." Francisco nodded and said, "Good, Abstergo needs enemies that don't break." Nilan folded his arms and responded once more, "They'll be allies." Francisco looked up and said, "They already are." Both men were aware that the Suckers were flawed, that some were too angry to be safe, that some trusted masks more than people, and that they were fighting the right war, and in 1997.
Resistance cells sprang beneath destroyed towns and burning industrial zones as the fall of Abstergo authority expanded more quickly than governments could stop, from Canada to Mexico and throughout Central America toward Panama, Argentina, and Falkland Island. They all had the same emblem, which was a claw-marked, fractured Guy Fawkes mask. They were dubbed the Suckers by the world. These, referred to as "follón" in Spanish and "révolter" in French, are a movement rather than an army or a country. Masked resistance groups formed overnight.
The Suckers had evolved from three shattered survivors in Kentucky into a network of continental resistance by the end of December. Farhan, Stacy, and Jamie continued to be its focal points, but they were no longer the only founders, leaders, or siblings. This serves as a reminder that people who refused to kneel might still be found in the world, even after the Great Purge, Diana Spencer's passing, and Mother Teresa's murder. Alan Rikkin's surviving agents were already attempting to figure out how the Americas had escaped their grasp somewhere far away.
From Greenland to Falkland Island, they appeared throughout the Americas. As mechanics, students, nurses, hunters, immigrants, punk musicians, animal rescuers, and more, common people joined them. Certain Abstergo labs, clone storage facilities, trafficking hubs, and illicit data vaults were their targets. During a raid, a clone officer yelled, "You people are terrorists!" A masked woman responded, releasing prisoners to this adversary, "No. We're witnesses."
Zed was a Caucasian and Yoruba-Tibetan scholar with braided hair, worn hiking gear, and tired eyes hidden behind cracked glasses, he was Oxford graduate, Cryptozoologist, Former servant of Diana Spencer, and Conservationist ally; And secretly—a Sucker operative. A faded Guy Fawkes mask hung beside the steering wheel.
They wouldn't comprehend it for very long. Over 200 persons were killed in the coordinated terrorist vehicle bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania on August 7, 1998, which were carried out by Sigma Team before being slain by immigrants known as Suckers. The conflict had merely received a new name, and the use of masks was already becoming more common.
Northern North America
Greenlander Resistance Fighters 🇬🇱
(Greenlandic: Qivittoq, Danish: Modstandskæmpere)
Canadian Suckers 🇨🇦
(French: Loup Garou/résistance des ventouses du Canada)
Resistance Fighters of Quebec
American Suckers 🇺🇸
(Spanish: Follones de la estadounidense, French: Combattants de la résistance américaine)
Channel Island Multinational Resistance Fighters
Mexican Suckers 🇲🇽
(Nahuatl: Chikaukayotl, Spanish: Follones de Mexico)
Central North America
Bahamian Freedom Suckers 🇧🇸
Belizean Suckers 🇧🇿
(Spanish: Follones de Belice)
Resistant Communists of Cuba 🇨🇺
Caribbean Freedom Oppositions 🇬🇩
(Spanish: Follones de Caribe)
Guatemalan Freedom Oppositions 🇬🇹
Nasophilia 🇭🇹🇩🇴
(Spanish: Follones de Hispaniola, French: Résistants d'Hispaniola, Haitian Creole: konbatan rezistans nan Ispanyola)
Southern North America
Costa Rican Suckers/Follones de Costa Rica 🇨🇷
El Salvadorian Secret Brotherhood 🇸🇻
(Nawat: Tlaixnamikilistli tlen Tlamakaualistli, Spanish: Hermandad Secreta Salvadoreña)
Honduran Fighters/Follones de Honduras 🇭🇳
Nicaraguan Suckers 🇳🇮
Panamanian Suckers/Follones de Panama 🇵🇦
Northern North America
Colombian Suckers 🇨🇴
Guyanese Resistance Fighters 🇬🇾
Surinamese Sculks 🇸🇷
French Resistance Fighters of French Guiana 🇬🇫
Central North America
Bolivian Resistance Fighters 🇧🇴
Brazilian Resistance Fighters 🇧🇷
(Spanish: Follones de Brazil, Brazilian Portuguese: Oposições Brasileiras)
Indigenious Brazilian Fighters
Ecuadorian Resistance Fighters 🇪🇨
Galapagos Resistance
(Quechua: Isla Maqanakuq Runakuna)
Paraguayan Suckers 🇵🇾
(Guarani: Jepytaso)
Peruvian Suckers 🇵🇪
(Spanish: Combatientes de la Resistencia Peruana, Quechua: Piru suyumanta hark'akuy maqanakuq)
Southern North America
Argentinian Resistance Fighters 🇦🇷
(Spanish: Combatientes de la Resistencia Argentina, Guarani: jepytaso umi ñorairõhára de Argentina, Welsh: Ymladdwyr Gwrthsafiad yr Ariannin)
Chilean Resistance Fighters 🇨🇱
(Spanish: Combatientes de la Resistencia Chilena, Quechua: Chilimanta hark'akuy maqanakuqkuna)
Uruguayan Resistance Fighters 🇺🇾
Warruh (Falkland Islands) 🇫🇰