Oh, she was fantastic, the only thing keeping me from replaying hat game in general is the fact that it doesn't have an ending, and that drives me crazy as much as I love Obsidian. As for OT: I would say a certain character in one of the best games ever, Steambot Chronicles, AKA Bumpy Trot. I won't give it away but it was a good reveal.Samtemdo8 said:So not one mention of Kreia from Star Wars KOTOR II?
The most complex female character ever written who people's opinions range from the most well written and brilliant character, to full of herself, pretentious **** and Chris Avellone's voice box.
She was Lust in both and she is an excellent villain in the 2003 series where she gets depth but is bland in Brotherhood/manga. Speaking of the 2003 series, the main villain is female and quite good as well.DoPo said:Full Metal Alchemist the lady from the group of deadly sins. If I remember correctly, she was a different one in the first and Brotherhood - Lust in one and...Wrath in the other? At any rate - a villain.
You've already been corrected on her being Lust in both, but you're thinking about Pride/WrathDoPo said:Full Metal Alchemist the lady from the group of deadly sins. If I remember correctly, she was a different one in the first and Brotherhood - Lust in one and...Wrath in the other? At any rate - a villain.
CrimsonBlaze said:I'm surprised that no one has mentioned The Boss from Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater.
Not to be confused with Big Boss, The Boss was his mentor and a complicated character that is easily one of the best portrayals of a great female villain in video games.
That's because no~one knows very much about the Lady of Pain, Sigil's enigmatic... something. No~one knows what race she is, or where she came from. Speculation seems to be that Sigil is either her domain, or her prison. She's more powerful than all the gods of all the Prime Material worlds -- at least enough that no deity can get into Sigil. She can maintain all kinds of portals to and from Sigil and the rest of the Multiverse -- seemingly changing their locations, destinations, and even opening and closing them at a whim. Those who cross her purposes -- and a cutter never knows what those purposes are -- might find themselves wandering for eternity in a dimensional maze, seemingly crafted out of a spatially-linked pseudo-Sigil, devoid of life. Or flayed to death, which is described as "feeling like thousands of knives form under your skin and explode outward in a blossom of blood." Worshipping her as a goddess will get you flayed. Standing in her way when she walks down the streets of Sigil will get you flayed. ~Looking at her~ will get you flayed -- though people who've seen her reflection describe her as having a face like a steel mask wreathed in blades.The Almighty Aardvark said:Planescape Torment? You've got Ravel and the Lady of Pain. Unfortunately I haven't finished the game so I don't know much about the Lady of Pain. But Ravel? She's, at the very least, creepy as fuck
What was wrong with Kuvira towards the end?Full Metal Bolshevik said:Kuvira WAS a good villain until the final episodes where it ruined the character. Seriously it annoyed me to no end.
A few from anime:
I like Medusa from Soul Eater, an anime which I find mediocre at best.
Road Kamelot from D Gray Man
Ga-Rei-Zero, Yomi was pretty good villain.
More a gray character than an outright villain but Lady Eboshi from Mononoke Hime was great.
Fair point. I think I might have conflated the killing of her children with the murder of her brother Absyrtus, who according to some variations of the myth was killed and dismembered to delay her father from giving him a proper burial and thus cover their escape.LifeCharacter said:Okay, I guess I'll accept the latter challenge, sort of. Mostly because the version of events you laid out seems to be a bit misrepresentative. Medea kills Jason's new wife out of spite and to get back at Jason, yes, but killing her father was an accident and killing her children was most certainly not some extra knife to drive into Jason. Medea kills her children because she believes that is the best for them at this point. They're the children of a "barbarian" woman who are all but considered illegitimate because you can't really marry barbarian women, meaning that a very likely outcome is them simply being sold into slavery, especially after she kills the king and his daughter. And, while Medea could take them with her to Athens, they would still legally be Jason's children and he would be able to follow her and take them. And, while it's not the most convincing thing for a modern audience, but she does receive the blessings of the gods in the end for her (Classically heroic) actions when her sun god grandpa sends her a chariot drawn by dragons.Asita said:Oh, and going classical...Medea. You know the old "death is too good for them" bit? Medea decided that about Jason. Mind you, Jason gave her ample reason to hate his rotten guts, but her idea of revenge is to kill his new wife, his new father in law, and her own children and leaving Jason alive to suffer the pain of losing them before absconding with their corpses to deny him the closure of burying them. I challenge anyone not to empathize with her anger, but so too do I challenge the idea that she isn't a villainous protagonist.
FTFY. But yes, Azula, is the only female villain I've yet to see who I've truly hated and wanted to see punished for what she did.mecegirl said:How aboutAzusaAzula from Avatar the Last airbender?