Liver

Liver (Pathologic 2)=

A liver is an item in Pathologic 2. It can be harvested through corpses and is used in both trade with Var and the Fellow Traveler, and can also be used in painkiller creation.

Quotes
"A human liver."

- Haruspex's Hover details.

"A body is not to be cut open. It's only allowed for menkhu—wise men who know where a body wants to give—and butchers, who accept sin. The word for butcher, "yargachin," also means "surgeon.""

- Haruspex's Touch details.

Pathologic 2 Alpha Quotes
"A human liver."

- Haruspex's Hover details.

"Cutting open any bodies, including human, is taboo in our town. According to the "Baur Meges" steppe myth, the wholeness, harmony, and finiteness of the body are sacred. Only a person who possesses knowledge has the caste right to break this wholeness. Such people are allowed to work as doctors, butchers, or tattoo makers."

- Haruspex's Touch details.

Infected Liver (Pathologic 2)=

An Infected Liver is an item in Pathologic 2. It can be harvested through infected corpses and is used in trade with the Fellow Traveler, and can also be used in antibiotics creation.

Quotes
"A sick human liver."

- Haruspex's Hover details.

"A body is not to be cut open. It's only allowed for menkhu - wise men who know where a body wants to give - and butchers, who accept sin. The word for butcher, "yaragachin", also means "surgeon.""

- Haruspex's Touch details.

Liver (Pathologic)=

A liver is an item in Pathologic.

"Extracting organs from a human body is seen as a horrible blasphemy in the local tribal community. Only the menkhu are allowed to do this because they have an ancestral right to cut living bodies. However, some gatherers and also the Hunchback from the Atrium district would be willing to trade for something this rare..."

Infected Liver (Pathologic)=

An Infected Liver is an item in Pathologic.

"Menkhu know how to prepare healing potions by treating organs with twyrine infusions. In this liver, harmful microorganisms are probably winning a fight against antibodies. The composition is constantly changing. A lot depends on the stage of infection."