The formation of fungal plates on the heads of clickers are adapted to keep the host alive and offer protection to the brain. In response to their blindness, clickers develop a form of crude echolocation by producing rapid clicking and croaking sounds, which has earned the infected their namesake. Most notably, the eyes of clickers have been pushed out of the sockets due to advanced fungal growth, leaving the host completely blind. The skin is covered in mold and scaly fungal growths, which can be seen glowing in the dark. By this point, whatever clothes the host may have been wearing are mostly tattered and destroyed. Clickers appear less human than runners and stalkers, with faces that are completely skewed and scarred by fungus developed from their infected brains, often only leaving behind a maw of jagged teeth.
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August 2023
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