Who is Loren?

A ColdHiddenBlade character sheet


Assassins Creed 3 (only)

Known as: The Tagger Thief

Name: Loren Smith

Creation sentence: The Street-art Sourpuss

Age: 21, born in the modern era

Family: Only a mother, her father had gone missing when she was nine

Romance: Haytham and Connor

Nationality: Australia

Sexuality: Straight

Side: Assassins, Master Assassin

Eye colour: Green

Hair: Auburn with a side fringe and grows just past her shoulder blades, naturally straight but always has in a platted bun so it turns wavy

Skin: Light tan

Height: 5.7 ft/1.70 m

Fitness: fit with some muscle, average curves

Weapons: Hidden blade, Tomahawk, pistol and a short sword

Battle skill: Formable with combinations of weapons, she likes to mix the use of the hidden blade in with over bladed weapons or a pistol. She knows how to handle herself in a large group of enemies but her specialty is stealth, which was why she was used often as a 'thief' for the modern day assassins

Personality: Obnoxious, short tempered, sarcastic, sick sense of humour, willing to crack a few lighter humoured jokes, finds many things that almost kill her as 'fun', she is polite to her superiors and villagers, loves those she cares for, VERY confidant

Clothing: Starts off in jeans, boots and a long-sleeved black shirt. Clothes change to a hoodless grey version similar of Achilles Original robes and Connor's robes. Inside is black and she has a black over cloak with a hood, black boots with black leather 'stockings'

History: Born in an Australian Assassin Farm deep inside the Daintree rainforest, she grew up learning how to climb trees, cliff faces and fight. She was well known in the Farm for sneaking out of the area to practice climbing, drawing and hunting, and also wrestling crocodiles. She became an expert in stealth and street art over the years and became a master assassin at the age of 20 who did intricate tags bagging out the Templars when she did a successful job. She went missing after a successful mission and woke up in the 17th century