Lou Ravage !free! -
| Category | Details | |----------|---------| | | Faded flannel or grease-stained tank top, worn leather vest, steel-toe boots, and a ball cap from a defunct local team. | | Vehicle | A heavily modified 1970s Peterbilt 359 or a late-80s Ford Bronco with a winch. | | Weapons | A 12-gauge pump shotgun, a 4-foot tire iron, a .45 ACP revolver (no safety, no frills). | | Accessory | A battered Zippo lighter (his father's) and a dog tag from a war he never talks about. | 4. The Classic "Ravage Plot" (Story Structure) If you are writing a Lou Ravage story, follow this 5-step formula:
The first guard didn't even see him. Just a shadow, then the taste of rust. Lou dragged the body behind a dumpster. lou ravage
Lou quietly learns who runs the operation—usually a corrupt banker, a foreign cartel liaison, or a rogue company executive. | Category | Details | |----------|---------| | |
1. Who Is Lou Ravage? Lou Ravage is the name that embodies the "blue-collar berserker." He is not a spy, not a cop, but often a trucker, a miner, a demolition expert, or a retired military mechanic. His defining trait is pragmatic brutality . | | Accessory | A battered Zippo lighter
Lou rolls into a dying town (or stops at a remote diner). He witnesses a strongarm shakedown, a kidnapping, or a murder cover-up.
The local villain tries to buy Lou off or threatens him. Lou refuses. They rough him up or destroy his truck (fatal mistake).
Lou systematically dismantles the villain's assets: burning supply depots, sabotaging trucks, feeding info to the one honest reporter left.




