character-identities-guide


id: "character-identities-guide" slug: "character-identities-guide" order: 1 title: "The Incident at Galley House Character Identities — All Past and Present Characters" description: "Complete guide to identifying every numbered silhouette in The Incident at Galley House. Match character numbers to real names, animal codenames, and fates." keywords: ["The Incident at Galley House characters, character identities, animal codenames, silhouettes, who dies"] category: "characters" date: "2026-07-15" lastModified: "2026-07-16" image: "/images/hero.webp" video: ""

All Character Identities in The Incident at Galley House

Identifying the numbered silhouettes is one of the core challenges in The Incident at Galley House. Each past character appears as a shadowy figure with a number, and you must match each number to a real name and animal codename by analyzing memory scenes, voice acting, dialogue clues, and visual details. This guide provides every character identity along with strategies for making your own deductions.

Past Characters (1936)

These eleven individuals attended the fateful gathering at Galley House in 1936. Each is assigned a number and an animal codename used within the game's narrative.

Complete Past Character Table

NumberNameCodenameFate
1John HobbesLarkDeceased
2AnnieBadgerDeceased
3OswaldToadDeceased
4VictoriaRavenDeceased
5Edmund GalleyWeaselDeceased
6MarthaHedgehogDeceased
7Harry ThorntonCodDeceased
8Helen DauerN/ADeceased
9Eve DauerGooseAlive
10TonyN/ADeceased
11Damian PikePikeDeceased

The Galley Family Connection

Edmund Galley (Person 5, Weasel) is a member of the Galley family — the owners of Galley House. His presence at the gathering is significant because it ties the property and its history to the events of that night. The Galley family has a dark history that predates the 1936 incident, and understanding this background is essential for the meta-plot deduction.

The Dauer Sisters

Helen Dauer (Person 8) and Eve Dauer (Person 9, Goose) are sisters. Their relationship is one of the more emotionally complex elements in the story. Helen does not have an animal codename (listed as N/A), while Eve's codename is Goose. Eve is the only confirmed survivor of the incident, making her a crucial character for understanding what really happened.

The Missing Codenames

Person 8 (Helen Dauer) and Person 10 (Tony) do not have animal codenames in the game's system. This is intentional and relates to their roles within the story. Their lack of codenames is itself a clue about their connection to the events.

Hidden Characters

Person 12

Person 12 is a hidden character whose existence is not immediately apparent. You must discover their presence through specific memory scenes before you can identify them. Person 12's identity is tied to the meta-plot and represents one of the game's most significant revelations.

Person K

Person K (Katherine Beaumont, codename Deer) is another hidden character. Like Person 12, discovering Person K requires finding specific scenes that reference a character outside the numbered sequence. Katherine's story connects to the Galley family history and the broader supernatural elements of the game.

Rupert Galley (Fox)

Rupert Galley, codename Fox, is referenced in certain scenes but does not appear as a numbered silhouette in the main sequence. He is part of the Galley family history and his existence provides important context for Edmund Galley's motivations.

Present Characters (D&M)

The present-day characters are your colleagues at the D&M company. They provide context for the memory machine and the present-day investigation.

NameRole
ReyaPlayer Character — Junior Engineer operating the machine
Sam MoorsColleague — Assists with technical matters
Meg PattersonColleague — Provides research support
Laurence DunnSupervisor — Oversees the D&M investigation
ErvinColleague — Another team member at D&M
Mason GibbsColleague — Technical support
Pippa SmithColleague — Administrative and research
JacquelineLegal Counsel — Handles legal aspects of the investigation

How to Identify Silhouettes

Identifying characters is one of the most satisfying aspects of The Incident at Galley House. Here are the key strategies:

Voice Acting Clues

Each character has a distinct voice. After hearing a character speak in several scenes, you begin to recognize their voice patterns. When you encounter a numbered silhouette, listen carefully — the voice alone can often tell you who they are.

Dialogue References

Characters frequently refer to each other by name in conversation. If Person 3 says "Oswald, come here," you know Person 3 is talking to Oswald, but you also get clues about who Person 3 might be based on their relationship with Oswald.

Visual Details

Even though the silhouettes are shadowy, they have distinguishing features: height, build, clothing styles, and posture. A tall figure in formal attire is likely a different character than a short figure in casual dress. Portraits in the house also provide visual references.

Animal Codename Logic

The animal codenames are not random — they reflect personality traits or physical characteristics. "Lark" suggests someone observant or musical. "Badger" implies persistence. "Raven" evokes intelligence and darkness. "Weasel" suggests cunning. These associations can help you match codenames to characters before you have full confirmation.

The Deduction Board

Once you are confident about an identification, confirm it on the deduction board. The game will tell you if you are correct or incorrect. Wrong guesses do not penalize you, but they help you narrow down possibilities.

Character Relationships

Understanding the relationships between characters is essential for making deductions:

  • Hobbes and Martha appear to have a pre-existing relationship before the gathering
  • Victoria and Edmund have a complex power dynamic tied to the Galley family
  • Helen and Eve are sisters with a protective bond
  • Oswald and Damian have a confrontational relationship
  • Annie and Harry share domestic knowledge about the house

These relationships influence how characters interact in scenes and provide clues about their identities and motivations. For help with the broader deduction process, see the deduction guide. For the complete story context, visit story and lore.