The AntAgonizer

Tanya Christoff AKA the AntAgonizer is a "supervillainess" located in the town of Canterbury Commons in 2277. She possesses control over giant ants and is fighting her nemesis, the Mechanist. She is dressed in an ant costume, comically emulating a supervillainess.

Background
Tanya Christoff was born in 2250. Tanya's family was killed by ants when she was young, and she has since taken on the belief that ants are superior to humans. She cites their instinctual willingness to work together to accomplish goals, unlike humans' desire to kill one another through warfare.

A terminal in Hubris Comics contains a letter to the editor mentioning the AntAgonizer as one of Grognak the Barbarian's villains. The letter expresses disappointment saying the villain "never developed fully". The AntAgonizer's background story matches the comic book and she was to appear in Grognak and the Ants of Agony, but the comic was thrown out due to bad writing.

Quests

 * The Superhuman Gambit: Uncle Roe offers a quest to stop the AntAgonizer's battle with the Mechanist.

Effects of player actions

 * Wrath of the AntAgonizer: If you side with the AntAgonizer during "The Superhuman Gambit", there is a random encounter later on in which you find the AntAgonizer and a group of her ants attacking a group of Wastelanders. The AntAgonizer is neutral towards you, but will turn hostile if you attack her ants.


 * You can convince her to stop harassing the town without passing the speech check. If you tell her that you know where she got the inspiration for her AntAgonizer identity, and you convince her that there may be a second chance for her, she will give you the AntAgonizer costume and leave. You will receive karma. If you manage to convince the AntAgonizer to give up her superhuman identity, she may be seen wandering the Wasteland near Megaton without her AntAgonizer costume.

Appearances
Tanya Christoff, The AntAgonizer only appears in Fallout 3.

Behind the scenes

 * In the Polish version of the game, she is called "Entomologia" (Entomology) as a reference to Entomologia Motylkowska, a character in comic books by Tadeusz Baranowski.