Bendy and The Ink Machine : Repainted

Beast
Beast was a demon summoned by Joey Drew to bring his cartoon characters to life. He’s responsible for the animation studio’s degradation over the years until its inevitable downfall. He’s responsible for the creation of most ink creatures and monsters that roam the halls, though very little people know of his existence.
Profile
Appearence
Beast is a long, vaguely humanoid shaped demon. His entire body is black and constantly dripping with ink. His face is round with two axe-shaped horns protruding from the sides of his head. His eyes are wide and expressive, black sclera with white pie-cut pupils. His mouth is large, wide toothy grin, his teeth sharp, white triangular shapes similar to a shark’s. His shoulders are large and pointy, curved upwards alongside a broad chest. Long rubberhose arms erupt from the sides of his body, thickening into large hands with sharp fingertips. From his waist down, Beast’s body is an impossibly long tube of ink that he stretches and moves with as he pleases, either wrapping himself around things or emerging from puddles and rivers of ink.
Personality
Beast borders on a Saturday morning cartoon villain; he’s the usual mischievous, selfish, but when left to his own devices, true evil and deceptiveness slips out of him. He’s a brute possessive creature, enjoying the feeling of having something or someone as his personal toy or playground. He enjoys causing chaos and hurting people for the fun it brought him, seeing people in genuine, life-changing misery, while the consequences of it all were far below what Beast would have to deal with. Even so, he gets bored easily, so Beast tends to up his antics to more dangerous levels; making more monsters, more traps, making the fallen animation studio more and more of a dangerous playground.
Story
During the animation studio’s first troubles, when Henry departed from the studio sometime in 1930, Joey Drew was left to his own devices and questionable work ethics for the next few years. Dead-set on bringing his cartoons to life one way or another, he decided to lean into his beliefs and play God to make his dreams come true.
Once his mind was set, Joey, behind the backs of everyone in his staff, decided to summon a demon into the studio. With that, he summoned Beast. At his presence, Joey Drew attempted to make a deal with the demon to bring his cartoon characters to life. Beast agreed, but under two conditions. He tasked Joey Drew to build a machine to give the demon something to work with to bring the characters to life, and the souls of everyone in the studio as a payment. Without so much as thinking about him employees, Joey accepted the deal.
In the next few years, Joey created ties with the GENT Corporation, who he later contracted to build this machine. Also as agreed, all the souls of the workers at Joey Drew studios were contracted over to Beast who, despite owning their spirits, let the bodies remain none the wiser to it while they kept working at the studio. With the power of the Ink Machine and the demon’s own doings, Beast brought all Joey’s cartoon characters to life: Bendy, Boris and Alice served as walking, breathing mascots for the studio. Beast was kept a secret from the staff and anyone who came into the studio, only being introduced as a "god" that some workers had to give offerings to.
However, after a few good batches of silly cartoon characters, the toons that came out of the machine started emerging malformed and corrupted; violent monsters that looked like horror mockeries of the loving cartoons they’d been based on. At the same time, more and more people started to disappear from the studio. Beast, having a little too much fun with the playground and souls he was given, started collecting his payments and turning people into monsters through the machine, letting these creatures run loose in the hallways of the studio to scare the workers. Blinded by playing God, Mr.Drew failed to react in time to stop Beast from plunging the already financially weakened studio into the ground, cementing it as a playground to terrorise the souls still trapped inside.
After creating the Ink Demon, a bastardised copy of the Bendy cartoon, Beast took more of a backseat viewing spot as he watched his creations wreak havoc in the now damned studio. He preferred to go after people who still held out hope that maybe, one day, they'd be saved. Decades into the horrors, another child of the ink emerged from its pools, roaming the halls, hoping to find someone they longed to see again. This immediately took Beast's attention, the demon amused by the other's hope and persistence.
Relationships
Isaac "Mr.Flex"
Beast and Isaac have beef similar to archnemeses in a Saturday morning cartoon. The demon despises the ink creature, the two bringing out the more immature sides of each other. But as soon as the demon found who Isaac was looking for in the studio, Beast started only seeing him as a nuisance; some hopeless romantic looking for his girl. One that could be poked fun and annoyed, but still a nuisance. Once he finds out where Isaac and his precious little thing are hiding, it'll be over for them.
Daisy
Simple little toy, but hard to get a hold of. As much as Beast hates Isaac, Daisy is the easiest one to go after. She's much smaller and frail, though much more agile than the other hulking ink creature. She can slip out of sight and escape the demon's grasp for weeks on end, making her someone Beast yearns to catch one day. Plus, whenever he wants to get to Isaac, using the girl he loves so much as bait always works.
Trivia
- Beast was created shortly before Chapter 2 came out. At that point, the fandom was left to imagine what the game's plot was going to be. Take this character as an au character.
- Beast was heavily inspired by the Storm Blot from Epic Mickey, the game's main villain. They both share traits like a vaguely demonic look, body made of ink or a dark goopy substance and "phantom" appearence, as in not having any legs but some stretched out lower half.