Pirate !exclusive!: Phoenix
Traditional pirates fly the Jolly Roger to invoke fear. The Phoenix flies her crimson crest to invoke awe. Witnesses claim that when she enters a battle, her ship seems to glow. In the heat of cannon fire, she does not dodge the flames—she steers into them.
She looks at a person who has lost everything and says: "Good. Now you are light enough to fly." phoenix pirate
But the sea refused her soul, and the fire refused her flesh. Traditional pirates fly the Jolly Roger to invoke fear
There is a legend whispered in the dark corners of every port tavern from Tortuga to the South China Sea. It isn’t a tale of gold doubloons or stolen galleons. It is a tale of fire, feathers, and the terrifying beauty of starting over. In the heat of cannon fire, she does
They call her
Why? Because she knows something that modern sailors have forgotten: The Code of Ashes The Phoenix Pirate operates by a unique code. She doesn't steal treasure to hoard it; she steals it to burn it. Her crew is not made of hardened criminals, but of "lost causes"—the betrayed, the shipwrecked, the fired employees, the broken-hearted.
The Open Ocean