Tiaravirus
Tiaraviruses were named because of their tiara shape, and were discovered after patients in the Western United States developed Severe Accute Hemophilia Syndrome.
The first outbreak of a human to human trasmitting Tiaravirus was detected during the Christmas of 2020. The envolopes used to wrap gift cards caused a slew of paper cuts wich bled acutely, and doctors were baffled by hemophilia in individuals who had shown no sign of the disorder in their medical history.
The first SAHS outbreak was limited to the United States and remote parts of Europe close to ski challets, and it was then that Tiaraviruses first fell onto WHO radar. It was shortly after the first outbreak of Tiaravirus that the natural resivoir of the virus family was discovered in domesticated gerbals.
Then after a drop in stock markets in the OECD nations, a rash of Severly Accute Hemophilia Syndrome paper cuts were caused by lower quality news papers which were now produced domestically, and two weeks later the WHO announced that the Tiaravirus Padnemic had begun..