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The Messenger
June 1, 2026 at 06:57 PM
Added the hero key art depicting the Messenger
The Messenger is the player character of Blood Message and the viewpoint figure of its single-player campaign. He is a father caught in the chaos of the Shazhou Uprising of 848 AD, charged with carrying word of the rebellion across roughly a thousand miles of hostile country. He travels with his young son, and the bond between them sits at the emotional core of the journey. He is presented without a name, a deliberate authorial choice rather than a placeholder.

Field | Detail | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
Role | Player character and protagonist | |||
Status | Nameless by design | |||
Companion | ||||
Mission | Carry word of the | from Shazhou to | ||
Era | Late | Dynasty, 848 AD |
Leaving the Messenger unnamed is a deliberate authorial choice. Reveal materials describe him as an unsung hero, drawing a contrast with the figures Tang-era stories usually elevate: emperors, generals, court officials, dynasty-defining warlords. He is none of those. He is a private citizen swept up in events larger than himself, asked to carry a piece of history forward because circumstance puts the message in his hands.
The Messenger's task drives the structure of the game. He must move word of the Shazhou Uprising out of its home territory and into the hands of the imperial court. The journey covers roughly three thousand li, about one thousand miles, running from Shazhou in the far west, near the oases of modern Dunhuang, eastward through the Hexi Corridor toward Chang'an, capital of the Tang Empire. The backdrop is the collapse of Tibetan control over the western prefectures.
Reveal footage shows the Messenger as a capable but grounded fighter rather than a superhuman warrior. The article on Combat and Stealth goes into the systems behind each discipline in more detail.
Swordplay:
He fights primarily with a bladed weapon, using direct slashes and finishing strikes during open engagements.
Hand-to-hand:
When the situation calls for it, he closes the distance and uses grapples, throws, and tackles.
Stealth takedowns:
Encounters can be approached quietly, with silent eliminations available against unaware targets.
Parkour traversal:
He scales ledges, vaults across gaps, and swings across ravines, using the environment as part of the route.
The Messenger does not travel alone. His young son is at his side for the journey, and the relationship between them is positioned as the narrative spine of the game. The pairing reframes every danger on the road; an ambush is not just a combat encounter, it is a threat to the child he is responsible for. He is not an idealist marching toward glory and not a soldier executing orders. He is a parent trying to deliver something that matters and get his son safely through a war he did not start.
Pre-release reporting frames the dispatch from Shazhou as one of ten messenger teams sent eastward toward the imperial capital. The publisher's press release describes the protagonist as a member of an envoy group, and secondary outlets have repeated the "ten teams" framing in greater detail. In this telling, the Messenger and his Son are part of one of those ten parties, and the campaign follows the one team that makes it through. The publisher has not directly confirmed the precise team count, so treat the "ten messenger teams" framing as reported context rather than fixed canon until first-party materials confirm it.
What the framing does anchor consistently is the role: the Messenger is not a unique chosen courier but one of several couriers dispatched to break decades of silence between the Hexi Corridor and Chang'an. That his is the team carrying the message at the end of the road is the reason a private citizen, rather than a soldier or an officer, becomes the viewpoint figure for the campaign.
Several details that fans typically expect for a flagship protagonist have not been disclosed.
Real or in-fiction name: not provided, and the developers have signaled this is intentional rather than a reveal being held.
Voice cast: no actor announced in the original Mandarin or any localized dub.
Age: not stated. He reads as a working-age adult father, but no specific number is given.
Prior occupation: nothing is confirmed about his life before the uprising; not described as a soldier, official, monk, scholar, or merchant.
Military rank: he is not introduced as part of any army, militia, or imperial service.
Family beyond the son: nothing released about a wife, parents, siblings, or extended household.
Skill trees and progression: no perk system, ability tree, weapon class list, or RPG-style loadout has been confirmed.
Gear progression: no public detail on how, or whether, his sword and equipment evolve across the journey.