Quick autistic aside: there's only one documented instance of diseased blankets being considered for use against indians: the seige of Fort Pitt, fully 80 years before smallpox epidemics gutted several tribes.
The blankets were a desperate ploy by the English to break the seige before the indians slaughtered the entire fort, as they had already done to other forts in the area.
The blankets didn't work as intended because respiratory diseases don't spread that way.
To be fair- predator vs plains indian could be cool; plains indians were natural warriors- but they had to fag it up by making it a woman.
Natural warriors with rocks and arrows who would have zero chance against a predator.
Or the Europeans.
Or, blankets? Apparently?
Quick autistic aside: there's only one documented instance of diseased blankets being considered for use against indians: the seige of Fort Pitt, fully 80 years before smallpox epidemics gutted several tribes.
The blankets were a desperate ploy by the English to break the seige before the indians slaughtered the entire fort, as they had already done to other forts in the area.
The blankets didn't work as intended because respiratory diseases don't spread that way.