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Please sign the waiver.
~ The Dealer's first words to the Player.
Are you ready?
~ The Dealer before taking his turn.
Long last, we arrive at the final showdown. No more defibrillators. No more blood transfusions. Now, me and you, we are dancing on the edge of life and death. Four items each. You know the drill.
~ The Dealer entering the final round.

The Dealer is the main antagonist of the 2023 tabletop horror game Buckshot Roulette. Seemingly void of any real name or identity, the Dealer resembles a creepy floating head with two hands, and a toothy smile that shifts into a scowl or pained expression upon getting shot.

Biography[]

Past[]

God's Release Form

God's General Release of Liability Form

It is hinted that at some point in the Dealer's past, he won against God in Buckshot Roulette. The evidence of this comes from the bloody General Release of Liability, a document the Dealer has all players sign before they play his game so that he is not legally responsible for their deaths if they die, with the name God in the name box. This is further implied if the player dies in the final round against the Dealer, as losing will send the player to a barren and broken afterlife, one without God to keep it in check.

On the other hand, it is also possible that the afterlife was always this way and that the blood on the document is the Dealer's, but whether or not this is correct is unknown. This is because neither God's blood colour or the afterlife's original state are known.

Present[]

When the player first encounters the Dealer after leaving the bathroom and entering his office, the Dealer makes the player sign a General Release of Liability. Once they do, the monitor on the side flickers to life, showing that their game will go on for three rounds, the third round being highlighted by a skull, representing the final round.

The first round is relatively easy for both players, as you can not "die" due to you and the Dealer being hooked up to defibrillators in case either of them get unlucky and shoot themselves or each other with buckshot. However, once the first round is over, the Dealer will implement "items" into the next round. These items are taken from a magic item box, and can vary from beer cans, which allows the drinker to rack the shotgun in order to get rid of the current shell, handcuffs, which prevents the opponent from making a move, cigarettes, which gives the smoker more health points, a magnifying glass, which grants the user to view into the shotgun and check the current shell, and a hand saw, which doubles the shotgun's damage given that the shell is a live one and not a blank. After defeating the Dealer a second time, the two enter the death round, which is where the Dealer turns off the defibrillators, and tells the player to get ready.

In the final round, the Dealer either wins and the player dies, or loses and dies himself. If the Dealer wins, the player is sent to the Dealer's barren purgatory afterlife, full of black spikes and a long metal gate. If the player wins, the Dealer is killed by the shotgun (either getting shot by the player or himself), and the player is seen driving away from the nightclub in which the Buckshot Roulette game was held, a briefcase of cash and the Dealer's shotgun in the passenger seat beside them.

Whether or not the Dealer truly died is left ambiguous. His rather calm demeanour and methodical, practiced movements suggest that he did not die, but was rather left incapacitated or unwilling to continue. The glowing red orbs or eyes that momentarily appear before the player receives the briefcase in the good ending also hint to his possible survival.

His calm demeanour may also hint to him truly being dead, as the Dealer seems to value the rules and thrills of Buckshot Roulette over everything else; and since a game of Buckshot Roulette, especially in its final round, can only (officially) end when one player is dead, it is also possible that the Dealer truly died. Furthermore, the Dealer's final monologue before the third round also implies his death in the good ending, as he claims that he and the player are both "dancing on the edge of life and death."

On account of the evidence provided, it is most likely that the Dealer died in the good ending of Buckshot Roulette, as the evidence supports him wanting to play his game to the fullest, consequences included.

Double or Nothing[]

As of Buckshot Roulette's 1.1 update, a new game mode called Double or Nothing was added in. This game mode is activated by taking the pills in the bathroom before going to see the Dealer. In this game mode, after beating the Dealer for a third time, you have the option to either give up or go for double. Going for double resets the matches, but you will double the money if you win again. However, it should be worth noting that there is no skull above the third round in this game mode, implying that beating the Dealer in the Double or Nothing game mode does not kill him, unlike in the good ending of the game.

Personality[]

The Dealer is an ominous and quietly maniacal gambler. He is polite, well-spoken, and mostly straight to the point in his interactions with others, based on how he treats the player. Smiling at the start of the first round, he appears to greatly enjoy his game of shotgun-based Russian roulette (which he excels at immensely, perhaps even having defeated God), either out of sadism or enjoyment of the extreme thrill.

Despite his apparent ruthlessness, the Dealer is professional and honorable, making sure the player signs a contract before playing Buckshot Roulette, explaining the game rules to them, and coldly abiding by the rules himself without cheating or even exploiting his heavily implied otherworldly or demonic nature. He seems to value human life enough that he will have his doctor revive the player should they die (before having reached the non-life-support stage, at which revival becomes forbidden).

Looking around his room, it is possible to see many old, vintage/retro-style machines being used for various purposes, often one per machine. A few examples would be the contract signing device, the defibrillation arms, the table item spots (which flip out from within the table), the case-giving machine and, of course, the wire cutting computer. It appears that the Dealer has a great deal of affection for technology, respecting its various utilities.

Gallery[]

Trivia[]

  • The Dealer values the honesty of his Buckshot Roulette game more than he does his own life, as seen by the fact that he has the ability to see what round is in the chamber without the use of the magnifying glass item (as he breaks it before "using" it). Despite being able to know if the round inside the gun is a live round or not, he sticks to the honesty of the game and only allows himself to use this power if he has a magnifying glass item.
    • This is one of the many reasons he is considered an "honourable" villain.
      • Another example of him being "honourable", is the fact that he always willingly puts on the handcuffs, rather than having the player cuff him instead. It shows how he values the rules of the game more than his own life.
  • If the player attempts to use the name "God", the game will not continue until they put in a different name, possibly proving that the Dealer killed God and the player cannot use their name again. The game will also not work if the player attempts to call themselves "Dealer".
  • The Dealer's General Release of Liability Form template used in game is based on an actual Release of Liability waiver, taken from a legal templates website. It can be found here. The key difference is that Point 5 of the original release form was deleted (replaced by the Dealer's abnormally large "Enter Name" slot), areas of the first paragraph in the original release form are blacked out by the Dealer, and the title of the waiver has been drastically sized up.
    • Ironically, Point 5 of the original Release of Liability waiver template states that both parties had the right to review the details of the form with an attorney, and that they "read and fully understand" the details of the waiver. In game, the Dealer only tells you to sign the waiver, without asking you to read the contract over.
    • Furthermore, when looking at the original Release of Liability waiver template, we can see that the part that the Dealer has blacked out is the name and address of someone from the form in the template. This detail was most likely included to remove any possible canonical name or residence for the Dealer. For those curious, the name listed on the original Release of Liability waiver template is "Josh J Tarver", which could potentially be the Dealer's real name in game. However, it is also entirely possible that this name has no relation to the Dealer, and was blacked out by the game developer for this reason.
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