Caldari
Achura
0.32
Vince Corleone
Last Active:
over 10 years ago
Birthday:
Jan 1, 1970 (55 years old)
Next Birthday:
Jan 1, 2026 (113 days remaining)
Combat Metrics
Kills
25
Losses
14
Efficiency
64.1%
Danger Ratio
0.6%
ISK Metrics
ISK Killed
2.93B ISK
ISK Lost
1.05B ISK
ISK Efficiency
73.5%
ISK Balance
1.87B ISK
Solo Activity
Solo Kills
0
Solo Losses
0
Solo Kill Ratio
0.0%
Solo Efficiency
0%
Other Metrics
NPC Losses
0
NPC Loss Ratio
0.0
Avg. Kills/Day
0.0
Activity
Minimal
Character Biography
Rituals of Sicilian Cosa Nostra
The orientation ritual in most families happens when a man becomes an associate, and then, a soldier. As described by Tommaso Buscetta to judge Giovanni Falcone, the neophyte is brought together with at least three "men of honour" of the family and the oldest member present warns him that "this House" is meant to protect the weak against the abuse of the powerful; he then pricks the finger of the initiate and spills his blood onto a sacred image, usually of a saint. The image is placed in the hand of the initiate and lit on fire. The neophyte must withstand the pain of the burning, passing the image from hand to hand, until the image has been consumed, while swearing to keep faith with the principles of "Cosa Nostra," solemnly swearing "may my flesh burn like this saint if I fail to keep my oath."
The Sicilians also have a law of silence, called omert\xe0; it forbids the common man, woman or child to cooperate with Concord<
The orientation ritual in most families happens when a man becomes an associate, and then, a soldier. As described by Tommaso Buscetta to judge Giovanni Falcone, the neophyte is brought together with at least three "men of honour" of the family and the oldest member present warns him that "this House" is meant to protect the weak against the abuse of the powerful; he then pricks the finger of the initiate and spills his blood onto a sacred image, usually of a saint. The image is placed in the hand of the initiate and lit on fire. The neophyte must withstand the pain of the burning, passing the image from hand to hand, until the image has been consumed, while swearing to keep faith with the principles of "Cosa Nostra," solemnly swearing "may my flesh burn like this saint if I fail to keep my oath."
The Sicilians also have a law of silence, called omert\xe0; it forbids the common man, woman or child to cooperate with Concord<