However, because of the rigorous training schedule that Germer gave him, he quickly advanced within a couple of months. Ryner started out having no combat abilities and no knowledge of magic other than the “formulae” he could see because of his Alpha Stigma. She started training him along with two other children, Pia and Peria. Training with Germer SPOILER WARNING :Īccording to TDYD’s Volume 3’s chapter “The Genius Does Not Sleep” and TDYD Volume 4’s chapter “Germer-The Last Lesson” after Ryner was removed by the military from the bandit village, he was placed with Germer Kleisrole. This is the first time Ryner realizes he’s a monster because of his Alpha Stigma. However, the other villagers look at him like he’s a monster-not acknowledging that he had just saved everyone. Ryner is really happy that he was able to use his power to protect everyone he cared about. Seeing this, Ryner activates his Alpha Stigma, chasing away the soldiers and saving everyone. When his soldiers are about to take Quill, Deel attacks them and is instantly eradicated when the soldiers use the spell “Kurenai”. One day, a Roland noble named Alrome comes to the village. He starts living and working there.Īlthough life is very rough, Ryner is happy because he has friends. Talrome takes him to his home in the bandit village. He has no memory of anything except his name. 7 Intermissionīased on volume 4 of DYD, Ryner’s first concrete memory is waking up on a battlefield. After all, he loved being read to each night by Dad and Mom.” ( DYD Vol. Before he knew it, he was able to read their contents by himself. Hearing those stories at night, and then after rising in the morning, he'd have those stories read again and again. The story of the demon, demon king, monster, as it was called, who possessed power that surpassed human knowledge. The story of the knight who single-handedly defeated a great army. The story of the hero who saved the world. Each and every night, Dad and Mom promised that they would read to him from it. But what he loved most was a picture book full of the world's fairy tales. He had three main prized possessions: “A sewn teddy bear twice his size. He hated the darkness, but he was always confident that his father could take care of anything scary. When he was a little boy, Ryner lived with his father Lieral and his mother Iluna. He was born of the Noble House of Lieutolu, but because of a pact made with “The Goddesses (女神 Megami)," a collective legendary power of existences that devours everything, he lost his memories of his childhood, including his real name and the names of his birth parents. Ryner Lute's real name is Feruna Lieutolu ( フェルナ・リュートルー, Feruna Ryūtorū ). After encouragement by Ferris during his temporary departure from Roland, Ryner gains a will to live while accepting the fact that he is a monster, a fact that he has been avoiding.He is a demon god.īackground Earliest Memory SPOILER WARNING : He has, however, formed strong attachments to both Keifer and Ferris. He has caused multiple girls throughout his life to fall in love with him, though he is reluctant to love again after his first love sacrificed herself to save him. Ryner has a tendency to distance himself from others because he does not wish to cause harm and grief to them due to his eyes and vice versa. He is know as the "Deadliest Magician of Roland". He possess the Alpha Stigma, a power who gives him the ability to analyze and copy any magic he see used. Ryner is the Protagonist of the show and of the DYD and DDYD novels. 3.7 Roland Empire Royal Military Academy. and while Galactic Heroes provides many breathless climaxes, Twelve Kingdoms has but one and then the series concludes abruptly and incommplete. Neither show can be adequately judged on their opening episode, either and Twelve Kingdoms doesn't really begin to get going until its second arc. The two programs, essentially, owe an obvious debt to classic Chinese novels such as Romance of the Three Kingdoms, and consciously aspire to be genre epics that incorporate either the sense of rise and fall of nations (in Galactic Heroes' case) and the Chinese philosophy of governance (the example of Twelve Kingdoms). Surprisingly enough, both series have large casts involved in some fairly complicated plotting - far moreso in Legend of the Galactic Heroes where everything is part of its great overarching narrative, although Twelve Kingdoms attempts something similar with its third arc - combined with some serious discussions and analysis of the notion of leadership and statehood. What does a fantasy series based around a young girl transported to a strange Chinese-style world have in common with an epic space opera about a generational struggle between a democracy and a Germanic empire?
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |