Fed-Kun's army
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- Jan 29, 2023
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- 63
I completely forgot though
little help?
Verdel was introduced in manga Vol. 2 Chapter 6.1
https://mangadex.org/chapter/0c1d0524-52cf-4a30-8e8a-b19655b1fa3c/1
I completely forgot though
little help?
Well. And don't take this as me criticizing you or saying you don't already know this, but your statement made me feel like discussing this publicly.I honestly thought it was obvious. Fact aside that his miasma is literally turning the people into monsters who lose their morality, as was described in previous chapter where they didn't see or felt anything wrong with people being skinned in the streets, even just looking at the latest chapter, him using the face of his friend to stab the unrelated (afair) paladin in the back wouldn't make him a decent guy in my books. Tho I concede that the ideas of morality among the readers wildly vary.
I read your whole statement and agree with most of it though I feel like you really drifted into a philosophical/ theoretical direction. As for the MC being an anti-hero, I'd say it is very much a gray area as IMO the anti-hero usually still has a goal in my mind that could be considered good but employs immoral methods, which I find hard to apply to the MC. He's like a beast in a sense that reacts instinctively and might just transform into a plaque to the universe he inhabits later on. His creatures (which reflect on him) show almost no morality as they go off on murder sprees or use excessive violence and corrupt other people / countries.Well. And don't take this as me criticizing you or saying you don't already know this, but your statement made me feel like discussing this publicly.
That's the general premise of an anti-hero.
While the character is still the Hero, and he still does good towards a group of people, his actions can be questionable or lean into what we can objectively or subjectively consider evil.
Like the difference between Batman with a strict no kill policy but utilizing terror on criminals to protect the innocent versus the Punisher who straight up murders and kills criminals on the spot. Both have actions taken to save the general populace, but with different shades of dark, one much darker than the other, one far more hopeful than the other, with the Punisher being far more Grim Dark, and Batman being more Hopeful Good.
And now I'm going to shove most of my post into a spoiler because... Wow I wrote a lot.
In this case, you could consider the MC here propagating his culture that could be viewed as barbaric and evil in the eyes of other cultures. For example, if there was a peaceful culture out there that was living off the land, in harmony with each other, happily and without war with neighbors. But they skinned cats and dogs alive and ritualistically ate the animals while they were boiling alive. You would consider that horrific, despite the rest of their culture being peaceful because of a different view of values of life.
Hell, you don't even need to go so far as to consider entire different cultures across different nations, you can look at differing ideologies. For example, a die hard Vegan would consider me, someone who is a meat lover, a horrific murdering monster. Even if I restricted it solely to just drinking milk, they would consider that torturing an animal for produce. You could argue that the issue is that they are on the extreme edge of Lawful or Good alignment, but then their actions could also lead to what is considered evil or dogmatic.
Now, of course, we can also end up delving into discussions between relative good and evil on a subjective level versus objective good and evil actions, which becomes harder as while we are capable of creating an objective standard, these standards can still be open to being painted in different ways. For example the aforementioned differing values of life between me a meat eater and a vegan could both admit that we value life, but how do we value life becomes the question. Do we set a standard of lives which have more value than others or an absolutist view that all lives are equal, which may suggest that even the grass living has the same equal value as you living, meaning that just stepping outside on the grass makes you a mass murderer. Now that is an absolutely absurd stance to take, but it is within the sliding scale of how someone Values Life.
Now spread that to a bunch of different topics, like how do we value Justice. Everyone seems to agree that Justice is an objective value that is shared, but how we view what is and isn't justice is the matter. And from there we need to determine a general objective standard that is held to a combined society typically through shared values that are shared for any number of reasons. Now, since if we don't focus this on a purely fantastical made up scenario like specifically talking about the story, this can delve into the real world that gets much messier, so let's look at it because this does involve the concept of Justice.
The setting is that the king has been attacked, attempted assassination from a foreign hostile country who determined that your culture is not just incompatible to theirs, but also to be destroyed, and therefore by extension your entire country and all the lives within are to die, which touches on the previous query of how do you determine the value of life on an objective and subjective standard. At what point are contemptible actions determined as justified or even just straight up just and correct and an act of Justice. In a dream world, Talk no Jutsu would always fix everything, but worlds with better world building and complexities that makes a world breathing and living typically also means that Talk no Jutsu becomes far less effective without the means of enacting some sort of quid pro quo or mutual benefit that outweighs the value that they view to your complete destruction.
It's why these sort of stories often ends up causing a lot of debate on evil and good, because there are a ton of factors to consider, a ton of different sliding scales of things. Recontextualization, cultural differences, general results that offsets or forgives past or future transgressions, adjusting scales on what we perceive as just or can logic as being the correct action. Far more complex than a scenario where a hero wants to save his lover whose sacrifice would save the world, where outside of the emotions and subjective view and romantic idea that a world should save all who lives within it is often not met with the harsh reality that there are costs to these decisions.
Sorry that I kinda went all over the place, but it really did just get the mind flowing.
thats my headcanon from now onHmm did he do something like create 2 "characters", make them both Paladins, and give them both the name "Unknown"? Then proceeds to play mind games, by having one kill the other; then, swap the dead body with the other paladin that got killed, just to completely screw with any attempt to properly analyze the situation, via divination?
Thanks a lot!Verdel was introduced in manga Vol. 2 Chapter 6.1
There should be little doubt that the MC is evil (it's literally in the title, in the civilization description, in the fact that he's repeating it over and over, and of course the fact that this is a 4X, which usually requires the destruction of any other civilization.As for the MC being an anti-hero, I'd say it is very much a gray area as IMO the anti-hero usually still has a goal in my mind that could be considered good but employs immoral methods, which I find hard to apply to the MC.
Yeah well. It's why I prefaced it by saying I just felt like discussing things and it wasn't a direct reply in the first place.I read your whole statement and agree with most of it though I feel like you really drifted into a philosophical/ theoretical direction. As for the MC being an anti-hero, I'd say it is very much a gray area as IMO the anti-hero usually still has a goal in my mind that could be considered good but employs immoral methods, which I find hard to apply to the MC. He's like a beast in a sense that reacts instinctively and might just transform into a plaque to the universe he inhabits later on. His creatures (which reflect on him) show almost no morality as they go off on murder sprees or use excessive violence and corrupt other people / countries.
Anyways I initially called him evil mostly because I find the shallow support / cheering of certain readers off-putting because their inherent self-righteousness which just doesn't fit when the MC and his intentions lack said righteousness. Furthermore it speaks volumes about those who are offended by me calling him evil despite that being an accurate statement even if you just look at the setting itself.