> you must be quite obsessed with me to have dug this website up.
> I'm very impressed. Take this as a reward.
> all this information doesn't come for free
> PLAY my game and you'll learn more about me
> SO YOU'RE STUDYING ME NOW?
> and they say i'm a stalker?
> allow me to introduce myself..
Edward Nashton was orphaned at a young age, one of many parentless children swept into Gotham’s sprawling social system. He was taken in by the very institution funded by Bruce Wayne—an act of philanthropy meant to honor the legacy of Gotham’s wealthiest orphan. But for Edward, it was a bitter irony. Living under the shadow of someone who had everything, while he had nothing, only fanned the embers of resentment that would later ignite into something far more dangerous.From an early age, Edward was an outlier. He first found solace in the church choir, losing himself in melody before his mind latched onto more cerebral pursuits—puzzles, riddles, patterns. He was brilliant but struggled in school, his intellect buried beneath undiagnosed autism and ADHD. The support he needed never came. Instead, he fought a daily battle against a world that neither understood nor accommodated him.Life in the orphanage was far from the comfortable sanctuary the public imagined. The manor, though grand, became a place of quiet suffering. Overcrowding led to financial strain; during brutal winters, the vast, drafty halls became unbearably cold. Edward witnessed loss too early, waking to the sobs of caretakers mourning another child taken by the frost. Some nights, he wished it had been him. Other nights, he envied the ones who had escaped this life entirely. His relationship with death became warped—both feared and oddly revered.He failed in many things, but riddles became his refuge. Every solved puzzle, every cracked code, was a rare moment of validation in a world that otherwise dismissed him. He carried puzzle books everywhere, an obsession that made him an easy target for bullies. They called him “Ed-weird,” a label that stuck.As he grew older, he scraped by as a delivery boy, working twice as hard as others just to survive. Unlike those born into privilege, no safety net waited to catch him. But while his existence was fraught with struggle, his mind remained sharp. He became fascinated with technology, cryptography, and wordplay, twisting language into clever riddles and hidden messages.Resentment festered in him, fueled by Gotham’s stark inequality. The rich lived untouched while people like him toiled in the shadows, unseen, unheard. When a group of reckless street racers nearly killed him in a hit-and-run, something inside Edward snapped. That night, he retaliated the only way he knew how—with precision and calculation. He planted an explosive on the car that had nearly ended him. As he watched it erupt into flames, he felt something stir within him.He liked getting revenge.With time, Edward grew more methodical. By day, he was a forensic accountant, uncovering financial fraud and tracking Gotham’s corrupt elite through the paper trails they thought were buried. By night, he honed his skills, piecing together the city’s ugliest truths. Then came The Batman.A force of reckoning. A symbol of fear. A man who delivered justice in the shadows, punishing those who had escaped consequence. Edward saw him not as a threat, but as proof of what was possible. Violence could be the answer.Inspired, he began shaping his own identity. He built riddles, assembled a costume, and followed the financial breadcrumbs that exposed Gotham’s elite for what they truly were—parasites feeding on the weak. The deeper he dug, the clearer his purpose became.Edward Nashton had never been a failure. He had never been wrong. The system was. The world was. Gotham’s powerful had built their thrones on secrets and lies, thinking themselves untouchable. But Edward would show them the truth:Power, when built on deception, is as fragile as a house of cards. And he was more than ready to watch it all collapse.
> how to find me...
>if you've found this website, then you truly are devoted to the cause..
> or maybe you're the batman.
> even better
Mental - Health - Analysis
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>This is an unfinished puzzle
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> looks like nothings here yet
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