I just came back to say that this is really disturbing.Urgh76 said:Any good villain should have this kind of trait, where you can emphasize with why their position sounds like a good idea.
I've been extremely conflicted over Griffith from Berserk.
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Berserk is a world filled with war and all the fun things that go along with it. Griffith lead a group called the Band of the Hawk that our main character Guts and others have a huge bond with. Griffith's main goal is to get a kingdom for himself. Along the way war happens as war happens, and a ton of people fall on Griffith's behalf.
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Shit happens, Griffith is captured. After a full year they're able to go and get him back, but he's been tortured severely all this while. His tongue was removed, the tendons in his arms and legs were cut so he could never walk again on his own, and other things.
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As they're bringing Griffith back to the rest of the gang, stuff happens and an item in the world called a Behelit activates, enveloping everyone in this other dimension. It resounded with Griffith, and demonic beings tell him that his body could be reborn as an incredible power. He has to make a sacrifice however, and that sacrifice is the rest of his men, the entire Band of the Hawk.
He agrees, and the entire band except for two people thanks to an intervention are mercilessly slaughtered. Now this is terrible, but he'd reasoned it out this way:
Griffith was already standing on a mountain of corpses to reach his dream. The entire time he'd been fighting to achieve his dream kingdom, an immeasurable amount of his friends and allies had laid down their life in order to help him reach it. All of those sacrifices and effort would seem like they'd have gone to waste if he didn't accept. That or he might have thought "What's a few more sacrifices?" Everyone technically already lived for the sake of that dream, so if their lives served to further it, then...?
He's done a ton of bad shit in causing suffering to literally all of his friends until he was reborn. After his rebirth though, I've seen nothing but 'good deeds' from him so far. So whether or not those sacrifices were inexcusable is the main question.
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Griffith is a good villain.
Never read or watched any Berserk, but sounds to me like it's more of an "everything is miserable" kind of story rather than a good vs evil one. I guess this is how I would take it, anyway.