Fate/Zero/Headscratchers

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
< Fate‎ | Zero


A page for the questions that Fate/Zero viewers want to get out. WARNING - There are many unmarked spoilers ALL over this page.

Saber's Wound and Avalon

  • Saber struggling with her right hand that cannot heal. Kiritsugu has Avalon. We know Avalon can undo Gae Buidhe's curse. Why didn't Kiritsugu just return Avalon to Saber, even if only for a short moment, to remove her handicap? It's not a hard guess that Avalon's ability as a healing noble phantasm exceeds Gae Buidhe's ability as a spear to cause wounds that cannot heal.
    • He's the Combat Pragmatist incarnate. Saber is powerful enough to survive even with the wound, and if she dies he can still technically win the war. If he gives it back to her, even for a little, someone else (Kotomine probably) could attack and take him out (even though nobody else knows about it, Kiritsugu is not the type to take chances, no matter how slim - it explicitly states that he's the hitman-style of killer because he's a coward). Besides, Avalon's healing ability vs effects (like curses) is unknown (Shirou was captured by Illya's mystic eyes, for example) - in the middle of a war is not the place to test it.
      • Where does it say that Avalon can heal Gae Buidhe? Gae Buidhe is supposed to be a curse on the soul (pretty much like Void Avesta's effect). How was it described...? "Instead of doing damage, it lowers the maximum HP." Even when Saber told Irisviel to heal the gaping hole in her hand, Iri couldn't, because "she was already at full health."
      • There's also that it was being used to keep Iri from becoming a drooling grail cup, and it's pretty much easy to see that Kiritsugu likes Iri a lot more than Saber. There's also the "Servant-is-just-a-tool" thing, and that Kiritsugu's plan was to just take out the Masters in the first place. To him, Saber was easily expendable, even though she was a valuable commodity.

Berserker's Skills even with Madness

  • Fate/stay night's Berserker was unable to fight skillfully due to his madness (which is about the only weakness he had), so why is the Black Knight's skill seemingly unhampered by the Mad Enhancement? Is there any reason for this other than the fact that the Knight isn't an unkillable demigod and thus, plot-wise, needed his skills to be a credible threat?
    • Yes, the Black Knight possesses an ability called "Immortal Arms Mastery" which allows him to make full use of his combat techniques no matter what kind of mental restriction he is under. The explanation being that he trained his abilities to such a peak that they became natural instincts to him. As for why he can automatically use any weapon as his noble phantasm... that ability is his noble phantasm. Anyway, Nasuverse is all about having rules and then subverting the crap out of them for the most ridiculous Game Breaker advantages you can get.
    • Also, his Mad Enhancement is a lower rank the FSN's Berserker. He has more of his mind in him as it is.
      • On top of that, Berserker was also being driven mad manually by Ilya for most of it.

Kariya's Fate

  • I know that this isn't the place for a big what-if discussion, but this is more of a question as to whether or not the variable's affecting Kariya actually COULD have been averted and maybe even overcome differently, and he could have been better off in the war. (First, cards on the table):
    • Kariya was forced into rushed training for a year with exposure to the Crest Worms, rather than slower training over a longer period like Sakura, hence his body deteriorated so much. (In fact, they flat out said that as he was even before he summoned Berserker, he had at best a month left to live, and the HGW was going to take 2 weeks.)
    • Kariya summoned his servant in the Berserker class (per Zouken's instructions), which was said to have been the single WORST possible class to summon his servant in, especially given his mind and body's already poor condition.
    • Kariya was more cryptic with how he talked about the Matou's magic to Tokiomi and Aoi than he should have been.
  • Thus the question is... Would Kariya have been in better condition if he had been training with the worms for more than a single year? Would it have really made much of a difference if he had summoned his servant as literally ANY other class than berserker or was the strain of any servant enough to hasten his death no matter what? Why/how come he was being so cryptic about the Matou's magic, rather than bluntly saying "You gave Sakura to a madman and now she's being raped daily by WORMS!" it's said that over the course of the war, his brain was being damaged more and more so he couldn't even think complex thoughts, yet he could still be super cryptic about the Matou magic and Sakura?
  • For that matter, what stopped Kariya from sicking Berserker on Zouken as soon as he summoned him and just freeing Sakura that way OR just using Berserker to get himself and Sakura as far from the Matou household as he could?

Rider's Appearance

  • Kind of a minor thing, but...why does Rider have a beard? He lacks one in every historical depiction, and he's supposed to have issued in the custom of being clean-shaven.
    • Why is King Arthur a woman?
    • For the same reason that he is ten feet tall and rides around in a cart driven by the bulls of heaven.
      • Something weird happened during the summoning to cause him and Gilgamesh to switch bodies without noticing? I guess I could sort of imagine a blonde Alexander...
    • You've got historical representations, and how a legend actually was (if it even was at all). It's pretty much up to random which one will be matched with a Heroic Spirit. Which is to say, in the Nasuverse, rules are rules until they aren't.
      • Which actually makes sense in a way. When you read a story it usually isn't to see an average person. So I suspect that outside of the events of Fate/Stay Night, Fate/Zero, Tsukihime, etc.. the vast majority of the world obeys the rules. We're just looking at the few who can break them.
    • Adding to the list of 'minor things that Just Bug Tropers about Nasuverse hero appearances,' they couldn't at least give Fionn the hair that gave him his nickname? Granted, it's not a universal myth - some versions don't mention it - but seriously. If they wanted to avoid making him look too old with white/silver hair they could have just gone with blond.

Rider's name

  • An equally trivial question: why is Rider called "Iskander", the Arabic rendition of his name? Why not "Alexandros", or even Alexander?
    • They call him by both names. It's stated in the novel that his people called him according to their own language.

Lancer cancelling the curse without losing his weapon?

Natalya's End (Alternatives)

  • That interlude about Kiritsugu's backstory. I get the point of making sacrifices to ensure there will be no risk of further losses of life, but still, wasn't what he did a little too much? He had time to prepare, the plane would've taken an hour or so until it arrived. He could have called the police and told them a lie or something. Or hired mercenaries. Or hell, just rig the landing pad with remote-controlled explosives, then wait until Natalia was out and then blow the plane to hell. Besides, even if there were 300 of them, they were still just The Dead, i.e. Nasuverse zombies. MEODP nonwithstanding, two teenagers with knives could cut through them like a whirlwind. Even in a weakened state, Arcueid could annihilate them in seconds. Even alone, a fully-armed Kiritsugu shouldn't have THAT many problems with these zombies, especially with them not having many exits since they'd be on a plane. Normally, I wouldn't be bothered by this too much, but with someone like Kiritsugu who gives so much attention to detail and strategy, it just seems glaring.
    • The Dead are fully capable of things such as breaking through concrete so they could probably smash their way out of the plane given enough time. Arcuied at full power is one of the strongest beings in the setting so her annihilating them in a weakened state doesn't say much. If by two teenagers with knifes your refering to the Kara no Kyoukai reaniated corpses Shiki Ryougi needed her eyes to deal with them since they could continue after taking damge that would normally killa human. The Dead are the same but with the advantage that they probably have part of the curse of Restoration (a.k.a. vampire regenetation). The MEODP are the only reason Shiki Tohno was able to kill them so effectively, sure mundane means can kill tehm but it would take a lot more time. Also Kiritsugu knows that the church and magic association both seem to react to vampire outbreaks with purge everything he saw it first hand as a result of his fathers own experiments into vampirism. So if they think even a single Dead escaped and it's in an area they care about theres a possibility the town could wind up missing. Finally this was probably the act that drove him to become "someone who gives so much attention to detail and strategy" it was over a decade before the holy grail war after all.
    • Arcueid in her weakened state was incapable of fighting off a rape attempt from Shiki, and was thrashing a bunch of Dead a moment before. Just sayin'.
      • She probably wasn't resisting Shiki with as much force as she'd fight off the Dead. I always had the feeling that she didn't want to end up injuring him, so she kept a lid on her own power in that situation and was waiting for him to "calm down".
      • There is also the fact that none of your proposed "Alternatives" work. Call the police? And tell them what, precisely? That zombies have taken over the plane? Assuming that they don't dismiss it as a prank call, they are unlikely to send enough people down there to contain The Dead until they've lost at least a couple of dozen guys. Even if they do take it at face level, because of magic or some such, the Masquerade would have been blown wide open, in which case the Mage's association is liable to declare exterminatus on the entire airport. Hiring mercenaries? From where? Using what? Even if he did manage to get an army of mercenaries on the tarmac before the plane lands, it's still going to end up breaking the masquerade, and result in the exact same scenario happening, only this time you have a bunch of trigger happy killing machines running around shooting at everything. It'd be lucky if this doesn't end up being an international incident in that case. Also, "just rig the landing pad with remote-controlled explosives, then wait until Natalia was out and then blow the plane to hell"" At that point in time, Natalia is stuck inside a narrow, pressurized tube together with 300 super-fast, super strong zombies and a Dead ancestor in close quarters. She'd be lucky to survive for more than 10 minutes in that kind of situation, nevermind 60 of them.
      • The bigger problem is actually the bees, which are capable of quite easily converting humans into The Dead without the influence of their master Vorak. Natalia didn't botch the actual KILL, she didn't make sure that she cleaned up. Open the plane for a moment's time and those things come swarming out en masse, and now the problem is much bigger than it was before. Kiritsugu knew that the only way to stop this right then and there was to turn the entire plane - bees, Dead and Natalia all - into a fireball in the sky. Imagine the devastation that would have been wreaked by a swarm of bees flooding out into New York. Kiritsugu had accepted that he had to sacrifice one to save a city, perhaps a whole continent. By his current math, he did so, and it was an intelligent choice. Not every choice is easy.
      • Personally, I get that landing the plane at the airport was a bad idea. Despite the fact that she could've just gotten out the front window of the cockpit and THEN they light the whole thing on fire. But, if that seems TOO impractical, how about instead of burning the zombies and bees. They drown them! Seriously, she could've (crash) landed the plane in the ocean while she was still far enough from land so that neither the bees nor zombies would be able to get away. SHE could have then gotten out through the front window, and meanwhile the rest of the plane would have sunk 100s of feet below the sea, effectively drowning all the zombie passengers AND bees. No problem. Hell, she could have even given Kiritsugu the coordinates to where she was going to do it and he just picks her up in a boat and they sneak off.

Kayneth's Contract Kill

  • Kiritsugu's treatment of El-Melloi bothers me; not killing him and his wife, the whole loophole thing was just smart playing, but refusing to finish Kayneth off. I get that the contract disallowed him from harming Kayneth (or Sola, who was dead at that point), but Maiya couldn't have fired again? Or just kept shooting until both her targets were dead? Kayneth was a dick but allowing him to expire suffused in mind-boggling pain (and despair, let's not forget that) seemed needlessly cruel. After Saber's What the Hell, Hero?! I couldn't help but agree. I get that's part of the character, but are they actively trying to make us dislike Kiritsugu?
      • It could be he really couldn't even order Maya to shot again. Think about it, if the contract didn't disallowed him from consciously doing indirect harm, it would be meaningless. He could have ordered Maya to kill Kayneth before hand because the contract wasn't accepted by that time, however.
      • One assumes his order - yes, before the contract was made - ran more along the lines of "Kill them" rather than "Shoot to wound." Unless Maiya is literally incapable of taking any actions without Kiritsugu (or Iri) making it an order, at the very least you'd think she'd have kept shooting until her targets were dead since there was no benefit to keeping them alive/allowing either of them to live. It seemed that scene played out the way it did expressly to illustrate Kiritsugu's personality.
        • Kayneth was already fatally wounded. He had at most 10 seconds to live. Maiya had already fulfilled her task.
        • Plus, it is highly unlikely that she can actually tell hat Kayneth is still alive at that point. The only indication that he is still alive would be his plea for death, which she probably can't hear from that range. As far as she can tell, he was dead at that point.

Caster's Summoning Time Changes?

  • In the 2nd episode of the anime, in the scene when Caster is summoned, it is clearly night (looking outside the window, it's dark and lights are on in neighboring houses), but when the little kid is released, the front door has a bright light shining in as if it's light and sunny out (the angle and intensity of the light seems to be unfitting for any streetlight or porchlight IMO). And when the scene goes back into the room, it clearly still night.
    • Caster is a spellcaster. A little sunlight outside the door is child's play. He probably just did it to be even more of a sick son of a bitch. Besides. It's the little details that make the end result even greater.

Sola questioning Kayneth's Plans

  • Just what exactly was Sola's issue with Kayneth's strategy? Even if Masters usually show up alongside their Servants, that's clearly not a rule; zero has Assassin roaming freerange as Kotomine scarys, and Servants in Fate/Stay show up alone so often that part of the plot is figuring out who their Masters are. If Kayneth had actually been present like Iri and Waver, he'd probably have been sniped; at the very least, he'd have been Magic Bullet'd to death a good deal prior to his actually biting it. If Kiritsugu had played by Magus rules Kayneth would have been a serious contender for the Grail, particularly if the Fourth Heaven's Feel hadn't been a Foregone Conclusion. Or was she just interfering because Kayneth was reading Lancer the riot act and everyone knows that Sola's hot for Lancer's pretty, pretty face?
    • A bit of the last reason, but also because while Kayneth actually loves Sola, she can't stand him and is resentful of their arranged marriage. Even if Lancer wasn't in the picture Sola would probably try to find some way to get out of their arrangement and if it means offing him, she'd just be one more person shedding no tears over it.
      • Have to disagree there; though Sola sure as hell wasn't happy about it, she seemed resigned to it or at least had dealt with it the same way she dealt with the rest of her life as a political tool, by shutting off her emotions. Given what's presented in the book, it seems more likely that she just ignored him most of the time. According to the LN and Sola's internal monologue, she only began to feel like a woman once she met Lancer and saw how brave and whatever he was. This may be Unfortunate Implications since her womanly feelings eventually lead to Sola becoming a mutilating Stalker with a Crush, and we should probably be glad she didn't just try to "fix" Lancer's loyalty in a more straightforward way.
      • You're saying Sola was trying to shame Kayneth into fighting openly in the hopes of getting him killed? Sola did come off a bit icy, but that's a whole new level of hardcore. Then again, given what we see of her, she does seem the type.

Lancer's "Honor" in Life

  • Why does Lancer have such respect for Grainne's decision to run away with him? He goes on about her abandoning her future for love and all that, but if we're going by Sola the girl was probably crazy with love at that point and not thinking of much besides "OMG DIARMUID~" Granted, she probably didn't regret anything that happened, but that was probably because she'd been brainwashed by his Mystic Face. I'm pretty sure the virtuous thing to do would have been to think about how this'll effect a guy who - at least in this universe - places literally nothing above his duty as a knight; essentially kidnapping him and making him a traitor plus a murderer of his former comrades/allies is the opposite. Of course, this is assuming everything happened Fate-style rather than according to the original legend (or versions thereof), where Grainne was checking out every guy at the wedding-feast as potential escape-routes before Diarmuid's love-spot came into play.
    • Places "literally nothing above his duty as a knight"? Really? It's precisely because he's so god-awful terrible at actually being loyal and CONSTANTLY places his own selfish wants, desires, and motivations before those of his Master that Kayneth doesn't fair MUCH better in the war. If Lancer was loyal and obedient as a knight should be, rather than constantly eschewing not only Kayneth's desires but little things like strategy and logic, Saber would have been dead 2 or 3 times before the point that Kayneth takes the origin bullet to his nervous system.
      • I object! The big problem is that Lancer really is trying to be the perfect ideal of the knight. There's a lot more to being a knight than simply obeying his lord. It means holding himself to certain codes of conduct when in battle. The big problem lies in the fact that while Lancer and Kayneth have the same goal, their personalities don't mesh because Lancer is a devoted knight whose idea of fulfilling his duty is to win the grail for his Master while following the rules of honor and fair play. On the other hand, Kayneth is a selfish prick who can't actually conceive of someone competing in a battle for the Holy Grail without some kind of selfish desire for the Grail itself automatically refuses to believe Lancer's reasons. Kayneth is incapable of understanding that the act of competing in the Grail War as Kayneth's Servant was Lancer's wish itself and assumes Lancer has a hidden agenda. This leads him to distrust Lancer and so the two of them are unable to properly cooperate.
      • Lancer should have said as much, since given what we're given Lancer's half of the contract was literally just the agreement to serve and win the Grail for Kayneth. If Lancer had actually said "... going by these antiquated rules which are the stereotypical and Romanticized ideals of knighthood and chivalry," Kayneth would have been expecting Lancer's behavior and thus wouldn't be chewing him out after the scene at the harbor as if he were surprised by Lancer's actions. Miscommunication really does kill, it seems. Also, let's keep it civil guys. Besides which, everyone is competing for a selfish desire: Regardless of the specifics, whether they want Akasha like Tokiomi or want to "save" their kingdom like Saber, their goal can only be achieved by pushing aside everyone else's respective wishes. Lancer, in attempting to recover his 'honor' and assuage his own feelings about what happened in his life - everyone else is dead now, it doesn't matter to anyone besides Diarmuid - is no less selfish than Kayneth, who's in it for magely duels/hopefully impressing Sola a little, maybe. That doesn't make either of them any less selfish or any more selfish than people like Waver, who participated to spite Kayneth and prove his theory correct, or Alexander, who intends to re-conquer a world that probably wouldn't be too happy about it despite him being Broskander. Also, the above doesn't seem to have responded to the actual question, which could probably be answered with: "Because Nasuverse Diarmuid is the kind of person who holds no grudges, whether it's against the girl who magically ruined his life or against the man who let him die."
      • Judging from his last words, he learned. A depressing thought if your theory of him not holding grudges is correct.
      • Notable in that the novel at least doesn't implicate Lancer's actual Masters in any way: Upon seeing Kiritsugu show up with an unconscious Sola and a defeated Kayneth, despite clearly having been ordered to kill himself via Command Seal (which thus means either Kayneth or Sola gave the order), Lancer curses the world that engineered his death and Saber and Saber's Master specifically. He gives no implication of blaming either Kayneth or Sola, so his rage is not at dying but at the "dishonorable" way that Kiritsugu (and therefore Saber) ended the Lancer/Kayneth/Sola team's run. Incidentally, Nasuverse Diarmuid not holding grudges is canon: He makes it plain that he blames neither Fionn nor Grainne when most people would, and as noted he never displays resentment against his current Masters despite Kayneth's berating and Sola's clear if unwitting insult to his honor (by insinuating he'd jump Masters despite swearing himself to Kayneth). Lancer's final words were not him suddenly gaining a tendency for grudges so much as it was a Dying Curse against those who screwed over his chance at redemption; grudges are resentments bottled up and held over time, Lancer's last words seemed more a spur-of-the-moment outpouring of despair given that his prior thoughts were less "Eff the world" and more "If I defeat Saber here my honor will be restored."

"The Honor of a Knight" VS "The Honor of a Mage"

  • Kayneth was very distrusting of Lancer, despite Lancer repeatedly stating that all he wanted to do was uphold his honor as a knight and win the Grail for his sworn master (Kayneth). Sure, Lancer had that magic beauty mark thing that affects women, except that Sola technically SHOULD have been immune to it given her prowess as a mage, unless she was willingly letting it affect her (which she was). However, Lancer had learned from his original life what would happen if he got involved with his master's woman again (and besides, he had loved his original wife anyway so he was maintaining THAT loyalty too), so he was doing his best to keep true to his Knight's code of chivalry.
  • Meanwhile, Kayneth kept right on being paranoid and jealous of his servant seemingly seducing his wife. Thus, he never could accept what Lancer was saying about just wanting to fight as his loyal servant. However, the weird thing is that Kayneth was almost exactly like Lancer regarding honor, except for him it was mage fighting. As evidenced when he single-handedly charged into the Einzbern castle alone and made a proclamation for the "Einzbern Master" to come forth so that they may conduct an "honorable Mage's duel". But when no one comes forward, Kayneth starts walking further into the mansion and sets off a trap. He blocks it, and then declares that if they're resorting to using petty booby traps, it must mean their pride and prowess as mages is far beneath him, so it would no long be a mage's duel, but an extermination (like pest control). THAT is the strange contradiction. He can't understand the honor in a knight's chivalry, but he was all-for a mage duel?

No commands to stop Sola?

  • So... Why didn't Kayneth use a Command Seal to summon Lancer and prevent Sola from carrying out her threat to break/remove anything else? Did he really not want to burn those Command Seals? Was he still in shock and/or just not thinking clearly? I'd hoped the anime episode would clear that up a bit, but...
    • I assumed it was the shock and pain of the woman he loves going completely yandere on him.
    • Assuming she hadn't already done so (which I doubt--The Corruption couldn't be that bad if only one Servant had died)...if Iri needed to cut off senses to boost her magical control, why didn't she turn off something less necessary than touch, like smell or taste?
    • Rule of Drama.

Caster's Appearance

  • Why doesn't Caster have a beard? Its in the friggin' title by which he is remembered!
    • Why is King Arthur a woman?
      • Her canonical name is explained as actually being Arturia, and her covering up of her gender is a plot point. Bluebeard, however, is known in-story as having been Bluebeard, but no explanation is given for his bare chin or why he might fool people about it.
        • Gilles de Rais is the inspiration for the story of Bluebeard. He wasn't famous for having a beard while alive. Caster just went by the name because he understood that was how people remembered him.

The Real Irisviel's Death

  • Was it really Irisviel that Kiritsugu choked to death during the illusion that Angra Mainyu cast on him at the end of the Holy Grail War? It just doesn't feel probable that Irisviel wasn't aware of the fact that the Holy Grail of which she is the vessel has been corrupted all this time that she contained it.
    • Interesting question. With the answer of yes. And no. Like how Dark Sakura isn't Sakura but also is.
    • Irisviel was physically dead when Kirei snapped her neck. Her mental/spiritual death came when she was inside the Grail and that black sludge consumed her. At that point, the REAL Irisviel was dead and gone. After that, we see "Black Dress Iris". That wasn't Iris, but Angra Mainyu taking on her form using her mental imprint. Hence it had her appearance, voice, and memories, BUT wasn't actually her. Kiritsugu figured this out, and the Grail even admits it to him. So when he "shoots Ilya" and "strangles Iris", Kiritsugu knew that they WEREN'T actually either one of them, so killing them may have stung from a memorial point of view, but not from a literal "I JUST KILLED MY ACTUAL WIFE AND DAUGHTER" viewpoint.
      • As for how Iris and the rest weren't aware of the Holy Grail being corrupted, it's because no one had ever come in contact with the grail before the 4th Grail War. Initially, the Holy Grail War was just a ritual, not a war. The first attempt at performing the ritual had too few participants and so it failed to appear. The 2nd time, there were 7 masters and 7 servants, but it wasn't a war that time either, because they managed to make contact with the grail to an extent and learned that the Grail could only grant 1 wish, which led to a debate among the participants as to whose wish, and WHICH methods should be used. The time period ran out and it was another flop. The 3rd time around, was the first time it was actually called a Holy Grail War, because the masters came to an agreement that they would all fight for the rights to make the wish, and last one standing would win. However, THAT one was also a failure, because all the participants (servant AND master) ended up dying, so there was no one to summon the grail much less use it. THAT was also the trigger though, because Angra Mainyu (or the servant that is attributed with that name) was summoned and killed off, and at which point THAT was when the Grail became corrupted and evil. Again though, there was nobody around to figure that out. The 4th War has someone FINALLY make contact with the Grail for real, but no wish is made, and its vessel is destroyed, so it too ends as a failure, and thus the 5th War happened.
      • Technically speaking, the only ones who COULD have known beforehand about the Grail's corruption would have been the Einzberns, since their job is supplying the vessels FOR the Grail war, but they either didn't care if it was corrupted or not so long as it would achieve its completion and gave them back the 3rd Magic, Heaven's Feel. However, being the Grail's vessel and being the Grail itself are described as separate existences. Iris makes it clear that once she became the Grail, her humanoid form would be dead and gone and she would no longer be able to interact with the outside world anymore. So it wouldn't be UNTIL that point that she'd learn the truth about the Grail, but after that she wouldn't be able to do anything about it. (Which is EXACTLY what happened to her.)

Kiritsugu's inability to reunite with Ilya

  • While we're on the topic of homunculi: While the curse of Angra Mainyu effectively disabled him from using his Magecraft ever again, it also doesn't sound reasonable that Kiritsugu, with a lifetime's worth of training in using non-magical methods in countering Magecraft or bypassing bounded fields, was not, for five years, able to ever get past Einzbern Castle's defenses to retrieve Ilya, or at least see her or communicate with her. Even assuming the curse also negated said training, someone like Kiritsugu must have already had this in foresight way before the Holy Grail War began, and prepared countermeasures for it (like, say, Probably leaving a recorded message or non-magical communicator hidden with Ilya.
    • His skill with bounded fields was all magic. Why would he leave a record for Ilya in case of failure? He wasn't planning to fail by destroying the Grail.
      • Slight ambiguity aside on Kiritsugu's plans (at the start, he indicated his wish to destroy the Grail, but sometimes in the middle of the story, he wanted to wish world peace upon the Grail) , he would've known that destroying the Grail would've pissed the Einsberns off, especially given how their sole objective in winning the Grail War was to achieve the Third True Magic, Heaven's Feel, something only achievable by fully manifesting the Grail (whether or not they knew it to have been corrupted, i.e., by hook or by crook). Given that, Kiritsugu must've had the foresight on handling the aftermath of destroying the Grail in a way where he still keeps Ilya. Poor girl.
        • Destroying the Grail was never part of the plan. That was Kiritsugu's alternate wish where he gives up the Grail and just leaves. Again, none of his plans accounted for his circuits being destroyed.
    • Must've been one hell of a bounded field, because you'd think Kiritsugu would have probably tried to hire others like himself to try and get into the barrier to retrieve Ilya, but to no avail.

Saber without Avalon 2

  • Why did Kiritsugu not want Saber to know about Avalon existing, let alone the fact that it was implanted within Irisviel and later himself?
    • So Saber wouldn't want it back. They don't trust each other even at the start.

Heroic Spirit Re-Summoning

  • If a Heroic Spirit dies in a Holy Grail War, what stops them from being summoned once more to the next one? It just bugs this troper, what with the What If plot implications of, say, Diarmuid being summoned in Fate/stay night in Cu Chulainn's place as Lancer; and so on.
    • I don't think anything stops them, but returning to the Throne of Heroes resets their memories of the Grail Wars anyway. Saber is a special case because she returns to Avalon instead of the Throne of Heroes.
      • Nothing stops them from being summoned again. They wouldn't have memories of the previous War since each summoning is from the base template. It's just hard to get artifacts. Waver tried to participate in the 5th War, but the Grail didn't provide him with Command Spells and Master status.
        • Yeah, on that note: This is less a question, and more a wish: I hope Type-Moon makes a behind-the-scenes story or something for Fate/Stay Night working in whatever loose ends have been left in Fate/Zero, and/or just to further develop the character of the others.
    • An interesting little spin-off of this line of thinking is in regards to Waver. If you pay close attention during the anime episode where Iskandar first uses his Ionion Hitiroi the first time, one of the members of his army actually IS Waver himself as a future heroic spirit being summoned in the past. Makes one wonder if THAT Waver remembered what was happening. Hell, they could have made a whole series just for THAT, but that's not what this story was meant to focus on.

Berserker's Disguise Noble Phantasm

  • I'm a little confused as to how For Someone's Glory works. According to the source material, Lancelot would have been able to masquerade as other heroes. Does that mean that he would have been able to go as far as imitating their abilities and weapons? Or is it appearance only?
    • Appearance only. It is born from his legend of disguising himself to gain fame and/or glory.
  • Wait, so what was the point of that scene where Kayneth's Mystic Code shows up out of nowhere at a construction site (and presumably kills everyone)?
    • ...dude, that was the remains of the hotel. It shows how Kayneth survived having ten floors drop on his head.
      • Thanks. I might've not been paying attention but the anime played it rather vaguely.

How strong ARE the Holy Church Inquisitors VS Mages?

    • Kirei breaks a live tree with his bare hands tied TO it. He also shrugs off being riddled with bullets from an automatic sub-machine gun. (Is he BULLET PROOF?) Not to mention, the overseer of the Holy Grail War HAD to be a representative of the Holy Church.
    • On the mages side, Tokiomi was a strong mage, but dies when he gets stabbed in the back with a (seemingly normal, though fancy named) dagger. Kayneth was said to have been the most powerful mage going INTO the 4th Holy Grail war, but ends up having to use a magical metallic thing to shield him from getting shot. Kiritsugu negates that and Kayneth gets shot and winds up losing his magic, and then shot some more. Kariya Matou had magic potential, but his rushed training and implantation of the worms DESTROYED his body and mind, pile on the strain of having a Berserker Class Servant and you knew he was doomed from the start (but that was what Zouken WANTED to happen).
    • Kind of seems like the Holy Church members hold more power (in more ways than one) than the Mages or their Association.

The Holy Grail's Unholy Riddle

  • The riddle that the Holy Grail presents Kiritsugu to explain his wish's outcome: All of humanity is wiped out except for 500 people who board 2 ships. 300 on one ship, 200 on the other. At some point, holes break open in both ships and Kiritsugu is supposedly the only person capable of saving the ships, but when he tries to save the 300 ship, the people on the 200 ship kidnap him and try to force him to fix their ship first. What would he do? Kiritsugu's answer would have been to fight his way back to the 300 ship, killing anyone and everyone who got in his way. The riddle continues: After saving the 300 ship, the people eventually abandon the boat for 2 new ships and continue their journey with 100 on one ship and 200 on the other, but once again, holes break open on both ships and the people on the 100 ship try to force him to fix theirs first. Kiritsugu's answer: Once again to fight and kill all who would have gotten in the way of him saving the 200 first. Kiritsugu's answer would have left 300 dead and 200 alive of the original 500. I however, think I have found a solution to the riddle that could have saved all 500 no matter what...
    • When the holes break out on the original 200 and 300 ships, I would try to fix whichever ship I was on first, but at the same time, I would have the people from both ships forming a human chain of sorts to where I could shout instructions and receive information from either ship to where I would have fixed the ship I was on, and given all necessary instructions to the people of the other ship for them to be able to fix their ship too as though I was there simultaneously. Granted, the Holy Grail wouldn't have liked my answer since the Holy Grail was corrupted and trying to use any excuse it could to wipe out as much of humanity as it could via whatever wish it was asked for. Still, the idea that there IS a better solution to the sadistic riddle it presented is a nice thought.