Panthera tigris familiaris

Panthera tigris familiaris, also known as the great Indian tiger, is an extinct subspecies of tiger that lived in what is now India. It was about the size of a modern Siberian tiger yet as docile and shy as a modern cheetah unlike most tigers, so they most likely didn't attack any sapient species/beings very often. It resembled very much like a hybrid between today's Bengal tiger and today's Siberian tiger, but with a Bali tiger's shorter fur and coloration due to living in India's jungles. It probably went extinct due to climate change brought on as an effect of the last Ice Age ending causing some great stress on some species during the transition between the Pleistocene and the Holocene. Despite its extinction around 2,000 B.C., around 2,000 years earlier, some of these sick tigers from the heat were domesticated by Protomen and became today's domestic tigers.