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Hunter
May 21, 2026 at 07:23 AM
Hedged prior-game Ranger backstory as established earlier
Hunter is the primary antagonist of Metro 2039. He is a figure drawn from the Metro series' existing lore, described by 4A Games as a legendary Spartan who has been recast here as a villain. By 2039, Hunter has transformed himself into the Fuhrer of the Novoreich, the authoritarian regime that now controls the Moscow Metro.
Hunter is a name that carries weight in Metro lore. In earlier Metro stories he was established as a fearsome and legendary soldier, and details of that earlier background belong to those prior entries rather than to confirmed Metro 2039 canon. What this game confirms is his reappearance as an antagonist, a significant shift in his arc that raises the question of how a celebrated warrior came to lead a fascist-styled regime.
The specific events that led Hunter to his position as Fuhrer have not been disclosed in pre-release materials. 4A Games has framed his transformation as central to the story's themes of how power, trauma, and ideology can corrupt even those who were once heroic.
Under Hunter's leadership, the Novoreich has achieved what no prior faction in the Metro managed: unifying the fractured, independent station communities across the Metro network under a single authoritarian order. Hunter employs propaganda and fear as instruments of control, and presents himself and his regime as the rightful rulers of what remains of human civilization beneath Moscow.
His title of Fuhrer signals the deliberately fascist character of the regime he has built, invoking historical archetypes of totalitarian leadership. Where the legendary soldier he was once known as stood for survival, Hunter's version of order is built on domination.
The precise nature of any personal history between The Stranger and Hunter has not been revealed before launch. Their confrontation forms the central conflict of Metro 2039: a recluse forced back into the tunnels against a tyrant who now rules them.