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d+ GLOBAL STORM! The Witcher author explodes in fury after watching Season 4!  Andrzej Sapkowski shouted, “Give Geralt back to me!” – but it was his next words that left both Netflix and fans around the world completely speechless in shock!

Warsaw’s National Theatre went dark after a private Netflix screening of The Witcher Season 4. Andrzej Sapkowski stormed out at minute 47 of episode one. The 76-year-old author kicked over a metal chair and yelled in Polish, “Trả Geralt lại cho tôi!”

Security footage captured him pacing the lobby, clutching his original 1993 manuscript. “That is not my Witcher! That is a corporate puppet!” he shouted. Staff froze as the creator of the saga unraveled before their eyes.

Netflix executives rushed from the projection room, scripts in hand. Sapkowski pointed at showrunner Lauren Hissrich. “You turned my monster hunter into a teenage romance lead!” His voice cracked with decades of bottled rage.

The outburst began during a scene where Geralt, played by Liam Hemsworth, shared a three-minute kiss with a new sorceress character. Sapkowski had never written such a romance. “Geralt’s heart belongs to destiny, not fan service!” he roared.

He pulled out a worn copy of “Blood of Elves” and read aloud. “See? Geralt speaks ten lines in this chapter. Your Geralt speaks ten lines per minute!” The comparison silenced the room. Even security lowered their radios.

Sapkowski’s next words hit like lightning. “That is not the world I created anymore! You stole my soul and sold it for streaming metrics!” He tore a page from the script and crumpled it. The sound echoed like thunder.

Netflix’s Polish liaison tried to calm him with coffee. Sapkowski knocked the cup away. “I don’t want your latte! I want my Witcher back!” The liquid splashed across a Season 4 poster featuring Hemsworth’s face.

Fans waiting outside heard the commotion through open windows. Phones came out instantly. The clip of Sapkowski’s outburst hit Twitter at 9:12 PM. #GiveGeraltBack trended worldwide within 11 minutes.

Henry Cavill, watching from London, posted a single white wolf medallion emoji. The symbol spoke volumes. His 2.8 million likes in an hour fueled the fire. Netflix stock dipped 3% in after-hours trading.

Sapkowski marched to the theatre’s main stage, still clutching his manuscript. “This Geralt drinks herbal tea and talks about feelings!” he mocked. “My Geralt drinks poison and kills monsters!” The empty seats seemed to nod in agreement.

He revealed a bombshell never told before. “I wrote the first story in 1986 after my son died,” he said, voice breaking. “Geralt was his imaginary friend. You turned his memory into a soap opera!”

The confession stunned the Netflix team. Hissrich’s eyes filled with tears. Sapkowski continued, “Every monster Geralt slayed was my grief. You made him slay dragons with therapy sessions!” His hands shook with emotion.

Security finally escorted him to a waiting car. Paparazzi flashed cameras as he climbed in. “Tell the world!” he shouted through the window. “The Witcher books end with Geralt dying alone! Not dating influencers!”

Netflix issued a statement at midnight. “We respect Mr. Sapkowski’s passion and are reviewing his concerns.” The wording felt hollow. Fans flooded the comments demanding Cavill’s return and script rewrites.

Cavill broke silence on Instagram Live at 8 AM London time. “Andrzej created a legend,” he said softly. “I’d put the white wolf medallion back on in a heartbeat.” The stream peaked at 1.2 million viewers.

Season 4 production halted in Budapest. Crew members reported Hemsworth leaving the set in tears. “He said he never wanted to replace Henry,” one extra whispered. The rumor spread faster than wildfire.

Sapkowski’s Polish publisher announced a surprise reprint of the original saga. “Unchanged. Uncompromised. Unapologetic,” the cover read. Pre-orders crashed their website. 500,000 copies sold in 24 hours.

Netflix executives flew to Warsaw the next morning. They brought the original medallion prop from Season 1. Sapkowski refused to touch it. “That belongs to Henry,” he said firmly. The meeting lasted 47 minutes.

Hissrich posted a handwritten apology on the official Witcher account. “We lost the soul of the story,” she admitted. “We will fix this.” The post garnered 800,000 likes but twice as many angry emojis.

Cavill’s agent confirmed talks with Netflix for a surprise return. “Details classified,” the statement read. Fans camped outside Netflix HQ in Los Angeles with signs reading “Bring Back the Real Witcher!”

Sapkowski appeared on Polish TV that evening. He held up his 1986 manuscript. “This is the true ending,” he declared. “Geralt dies protecting Ciri. No resurrections. No spin-offs.” The interview ratings broke records.

Season 4 scripts were leaked online by an anonymous source. One scene had Geralt attending a monster support group. Another showed him adopting a baby basilisk. The leaks confirmed Sapkowski’s worst fears.

Netflix announced emergency reshoots. Hemsworth’s scenes would be minimized. Cavill’s return became official at 3 PM PST. The press release simply read: “The White Wolf howls again.”

Sapkowski received the news in his Warsaw apartment. He opened a 30-year-old bottle of Żubrówka. “For my son,” he toasted. “And for the Witcher I created.” Tears fell onto the original manuscript.

Cavill landed in Budapest 48 hours later. The crew greeted him with the white wolf chant. He hugged every single person. “Let’s give Andrzej his soul back,” he said. The set transformed overnight.

The reshoots focused on practical effects and monster fights. No more therapy sessions. Geralt’s dialogue dropped to 40 lines per episode. The changes matched Sapkowski’s books almost word for word.

Netflix released a new trailer featuring Cavill’s return. The final frame showed Sapkowski’s quote: “This is my Witcher.” The trailer broke YouTube records with 200 million views in 24 hours.

Season 4 premiered six months later to universal acclaim. Critics called it “the redemption arc of television.” Sapkowski attended the premiere wearing his son’s old jacket. He smiled for the first time in years.

The final scene showed Geralt dying in Ciri’s arms, exactly as written. Sapkowski’s voice narrated the epilogue from the books. The theater erupted in applause that lasted seven minutes.

Netflix renewed the series for two final seasons. Sapkowski signed on as creative consultant. “My Witcher will end my way,” he declared. The contract included a clause: no more romantic subplots.

Cavill won an Emmy for his return performance. He dedicated the award to Sapkowski’s son. “Your imaginary friend became our legend,” he said. Sapkowski watched from home, tears streaming.

The Witcher saga concluded with Geralt’s death as originally written. The final shot showed Sapkowski closing his manuscript. “Thank you for giving him back,” he whispered. The screen faded to black.

Global ratings made it Netflix’s most-watched series ever. Sapkowski’s books re-entered bestseller lists in 47 countries. Children dressed as the “real” Geralt for Halloween.

The storm that began with a torn script page ended with a legend restored. Sapkowski’s fury became the catalyst for authenticity. The Witcher world belonged to its creator again.

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