The early wars were local: skirmishes with slavers running organ laundries, reprisals on debt-collectors who harvested children’s augments for parts. When rival gangs and their proxies pushed surveillance towers into The Misery, the Voodoo Posse answered with seance servers and drum-synced mesh relays that ghosted patrol drones off-course. They organized courtyards into ward circles, trained lookouts to count siren Doppler in beats per minute, and turned funerals into fundraisers that bought medicine, ammo, and bandwidth. Community defense became governance. Governance became power.
From there, the Posse’s legend outran its alleys. Pilots whisper of “riding shadows” that swallow patrol cams; medics swear Posse couriers cross three checkpoints without leaving a heat trace. Corporate PR brands them cultists; residents call them family. The truth is simpler and harder: the Posse rules what the city abandoned, collecting tithes in credits, favors, and silence—spending them on food lines, clinics, and the occasional public miracle where a bully’s weapon locks up mid-swing and a laughing skull glyph grins from every screen.
This October drop hits the grid with the Voodoo Posse: Shanice “Bluefire” Morgan, Jahmal “Ghostlight” Thompson, and Kamilah “Dub Witch” Wright (multiple poses), plus heavy hitter Skull Hunter and the gun-topped Flash GT tactical truck. Round out your table with our new neon-asphalt gaming mats (72″×48″, 48″×48″, 36″×36″, 30″×44″, 24″×24″). Not mentioned about Welcome Packs, game rules and other exclusive stuff. All models arrive as cyberpunk STLs ready to print and slam into your Human Interface: Proxy War skirmishes.
Happy printing and playing
UNIT9