Asura's Wrath/Tear Jerker

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


For a game that could be called I'm F*&%in' Angry: The Game, Asura's Wrath sure likes to take your heart and twist it into knots. Use spoiler tags if necessary.


  • This screenshot of Asura holding his dead wife bridal style in his arms is just heart wrenching to look at. But it also helps fuel his rage as well.
    • What makes it worse is that he's screaming her name, with a look of absolute sorrow, we've seen Asura mad beyond believe, but we've never seen him sad up until now. Makes the rage he feels all the more justified.
  • In the fight against Augus, near the end of the battle on the moon, when Augus is flinging Asura from the moon to the earth with his extendo-sword, Augus is trying a Not So Different on Asura, when it doesn't stick, and Asura gets impaled on the sword, Augus asks why he and Asura or different, and right after that we get a short flash of Asura's daughter, Mithra, looking at the screen. In that brief second you see a young woman, looking downright helpless. Just goes to show that 12,000 years of betrayal by the Seven Deities is not fun.
  • Episode 12: Gods of death. That poor girl...
    • Made even worse by the fact that the Baby she was taking care of Died with her, and in the japanese version, Tomoyo Mitani's vocal version of In Your Belief makes the scene all the more tragically painful.
    • During this sequence I just stared blankly at the screen. Then when Asura started to thrash, so angry he couldn't even articulate a scream I could feel the rage myself. This scene was so powerful in conveying the sheer rage that Asura was feeling. I then promised to destroy them all, there would be no survivors.
      • And to truly strike the nail in the coffin. During the credits the camera focuses on one soul that is safe to assume it's the girl's, and it's only made worse when you realize that for all of her defiance and Asura's efforts, she'll be just another soul used to power Mantra.
    • The real hammerblow is just the way that Asura is screaming while in Berserker Form. He's not simply angry or enraged, he's consuming by this horrible mixture of grieving agony and pure, undiluted hatred. Beforehand, you've seen him hurting, and you've seen him angry, but not both at the same time to such a horrible degree that he can't even think straight.
  • Episode 15's recap with Yasha feeling doubts for his cause after seeing a human father crying over his dead son's corpse.
  • Episode 21 settles the rivalry between Yasha and Asura in a heartbreaking way. Quite suddenly, Yasha (with his mask again) starts fighting Asura, who is both mad and confused as to why he's doing so. The fighting escalates and Yasha is on the losing end. The climax comes as the two run to each other ready throw punches at one another as the scene plays in Deliberately Monochrome, Silence Is Golden, and Bullet Time, even the reaction command for the punch. Yasha lets out a small smirk, Asura sees it, his eyes widen, and he stops himself at the last moment, command and all, before he connects the blow. Yasha's face mask breaks, his bandages reveal he has a gaping hole in his chest, and all he has is a serene expression with his body frozen in an extended punch. His last words were "Go... Save Mithra... and the world."
  • The final ending of the game. Just... the final ending...

Mithra: Why do you have to act so recklessly!
Asura: I...I couldn't bear to see you suffer!
Mithra: (In tears) Stupid.
Asura: No more crying.
Asura: My wrath.....is finally...gone.

  • In Episode 8, Asura finishes most of Kalrow's minions and is smacking one of the last ones repeatedly in the face, with his Burst gauge filling up with every hit. Then, he hears sobbing behind him, and he turns to see the nameless girl repeatedly beating one of the other soldiers' corpses with a rock over and over again in angry frustration after seeing what they did to her village. Just looking at her makes Asura's entire Burst meter empty as something finally does show up to quell his rage. He stops the girl and tells her that he understands how she feels.