Due to the marine nature of T-Abyss, humans infected with the virus develop certain traits shared by various forms of ocean life. The subject's flesh turns moist and spongy, the muscle tissue becomes much more malleable and the skeleton softens until it becomes flexible. The infectees' heads alter to sport a set of lobster-like mandibles and the eyes shrivel away, forcing the Ooze to rely on smell to track prey. A slit appears in the infectees' necks, from which a large, tube-shaped tongue will emerge. Ooze use these bizarre organs to drain blood from their prey.
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