Kyonyuu Fantasy Gaiden/Fridge

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


Fridge Brilliance

  • When Lute first meets Argent, he constantly teases him, makes jokes, and acts silly around him (deliberately to piss him off). Why? Lute had found out from the start that Argent wasn't there to learn anything from them, and that he was likely plotting against him, so he figured, why not have some fun with it?
  • Lute being able to open Pandora's Box without getting killed by Reaper. How? Well, apart from Lute's genuinely heroic/pure (though pervy) nature... It's hinted that Pandora's Box is actually a demon relic that only the King of Demons can open. In other words: Only an incubus or shall we say half-incubus. Can do it.
  • Lute getting Queen Aphrodia to lift the ban and high import taxes on bras being imported so easily. How? Simple. SHE'S A WOMAN THAT NEEDED ONE!
    • In fact, when they first meet with her in Fronce, Lute presents her with several bras as gifts, but Marquis Cuvier tries to say that they must be confiscated to coincide with the ban on selling bras. Aphrodia instantly stops him by pointing out that these weren't merchandise, but gifts, therefore it was allowed. Some 10-20 minutes later, Aphrodia tells her subordinates to lift the ban, resolving the issue in a matter of minutes. Well played, Lute!
  • On 2 separate occasions, Cardinal Canossa tries to say that Lute's marriage to Shamsiel is the cause of misfortune to his people and kingdom. Even using scripture to justify his view. Which Lute promptly throws right back in his face both times. The first instance, Lute remarks how God teaches acceptance of those who have made mistakes in the past and those who are different. There's even a fitting reference to Mary Magdelin's story as a former prostitute that decided to follow the path of God, and that if the Cardinal condemned Shamsiel, Emeralia, or anyone simply for their pasts, then he would be implying that all forms of penance is futile. This shuts up Canossa pretty fast, and even Cardinal Fango thought Lute's words were spot on. The second instance is the morning when Lute and his group are going to visit Vunderbalt. Canossa claims that the recent attacks and misfortune befalling Edelland to be God's punishment cursing the people for Lute's marriage to "a devil". Lute then flips that back on him by saying that IF that were the case, why would God wait 2 years to punish him instead of immediately? Canossa just tries to say that the Lord's will is thus inscrutable. Lute then asks how he would know what God's thinking or decided? Canossa asks if Lute is trying to defy the Lord, so Lute responds that he only defies those who try using God as a means of judging/criticizing others. Lute then says an old saying about a "fox borrowing a tiger's authority" and thus he can't stand when a "fox" borrows God's authority (which is to say, using God's name for one's own benefit). Once again, this shuts up Canossa and impresses Cardinal Fango who agrees with him.
  • Despite her attitude, Shamsiel demands respect, and when people insult her or tell her she's being rude to them, she calls them out on it. In the case of when she meets everyone in Fronce, they tell her she should respect her elders, but then she proclaims that she's actually the eldest in the room, being over 500 years old, so if anything they shouldn't be so rude to HER.
    • That being said, in the first game, she was said to have known Lute's father for over 1000 years, but then... Why did she lie about her age here? The same reason anyone else would.

Fridge Horror

  • Compared to the first game, a lot more people die over the course of this game's story. Not on screen, but the sound effects and descriptions DEFINITELY qualify as this.
  • What actually DOES Saint Reaper mean when he says he'll "devour one's soul"? A very chilling thought.
  • For that matter, how DOES a succubus kill someone? Sure, they give us a few hints toward the likely manner, but really think about it... The victims of the succubi (fake or real) are left, described as "shriveled up piles of just skin and bone" does that mean a succubus drains the fluids from a victim completely or is it even worse? Which is to say, do they suck out the victims insides too? Want another chilling thought? They can kill someone in a matter of SECONDS like this!
  • The life of the fake succubi (there's 2 of them). Each of them is a spiritual entity that was captured and contained inside of a magic jar, and they exist only to follow orders of whoever opens the jars, despite showing signs of free will. Even if they manage to break free of their jars on their own, they still operate only under the guidance of the last order given to them, which could mean they're forced to harm and kill innocent people whether they actually want to or not. Perhaps the worst part for them is that one of them ends up simply disappearing... Whether that meant she died or not is left unknown. While the other gets her soul (YES, these beings DO have their own souls) taken and consumed by Saint Reaper... Perhaps an even more chilling thought is that when Reaper had appeared and looked around the room that was full of people, ghouls, and the fake succubus, he said he would devour any corrupted soul, but when he says that, he wasn't talking about the fake succubus or the ghouls. He was looking at Cardinal Canossa. Which is to say, the fake succubus and ghouls were NOT the most evil ones in the room, despite all things they did, but THEY were the ones who got their souls devoured.
  • Also consider the life of the Wraith. Summoned/born to fulfill one objective: drive people to suicide. If it fails? It itself dies.
  • Nellis' life is also implied to have been really bad. For starters, it's revealed that Bazalt I beats and hits her when she angers him (by trying to warn him that his plans against Lute aren't good ideas to begin with). Then there's the fact that Prince Argent ignores her as a woman, but uses her for her magic skills to hurt people. Lastly, the fact that she was "given" to Lute as a tribute/gift which they referred to as a "milk made"... Which unfortunately means that she was basically being given as a sex slave. Thank God Lute treats her well, even knowing she was part of a plot to kill him. Eventually she severs her ties with Lingobard and begins to happily stay with Lute as part of his harem.
  • When Lute first meets Queen Aphrodia, they do so in secret on a hill outside of Boan, there she tries to challenge him to a duel. Lute accepts on under the condition that if he bests her, she has to let him grope her breasts. She agrees. Lute manages to subdue her in a matter of seconds due to her being distracted, and she concedes. After that, Lute claims his prize, and she winds of fainting from orgasming so much. When she starts coming to her senses again, Lute was in the middle of fixing her armor. She instantly jumps to the assumption of the worst-case scenario, thinking Lute may have done something to her in her while she was unconscious. When she asks him if he had done anything indecent to her, he knew what she was getting at, and he assures her that he had not (and in truth, he actually didn't). He tells her that the deal was only for him to be able to touch her breasts, and that even though he DOES find her attractive, he felt that the "main event" would best be saved for another time. She asks if he truly IS a gentleman, and he tells her that that's how everyone gets fooled by assuming he isn't. She accepts his words and believes he hadn't done anything and leaves... The scary part comes from the fact that that scenario very well COULD have gone extremely bad for her, had it not been Lute who was with her and the fact that Lute truly IS a good person and wouldn't do that to anyone.
  • In one of the alternate routes, Lute, Shamsiel, Gladys, and Motaire stop by Vacatin on their way back home. While there, Cardinal Nigolinov tries to goad Lute into opening Pandora's box in front of them, because (as he claims) if only Cardinal Canossa and Fango saw, perhaps they were just dreaming. He even tries to see if Shamsiel would try to open it. Shamsiel gets irritated and says that succubi couldn't open it. However, she then tells Lute to go ahead and open it... To "show 'em the path". Lute wonders if he would have to play rock-paper-scissors with Saint Reaper again, but Shamsiel tells him that she doubted that would be necessary (with a smile). Lute proceeds to open the box and Saint Reaper emerges once again, and he challenges Lute to another game, but this time it would be over the soul of the most wicked person in the room. Lute loses, and Saint Reaper takes the soul of Cardinal Nigolinov for his sins of trying to see if Reaper would kill Lute instead. All in all though, the foreshadowing of this event is that Shamsiel likely knew what was going to happen (particularly to those trying to get Lute to open the box), and she encouraged him anyway... Do NOT mess with Shamsiel.
  • In the climax of the canon ending, Marquis Cuvier uses a magic spell to awaken 100 soldiers he had smuggled into the capital via using magic to shrink them, render them unconscious in a state of hibernation, and hiding them in wine barrels. Unbeknownst to him, the wine barrels had all been stored in a cell in the dungeon below the castle, so when he used magic to enlarge and awake his 100 soldiers, they all did so in that single cell. It's played for laughs, but really think about it. 100 grown men wearing armor and carrying weapons suddenly "appearing" all in a single dungeon cell. Many of them could have been crushed to death in such a space or suffocated.

Fridge Logic

  • The soldiers in Vunderbalt were able to recognize the fake succubus as an imposter instead of the real Shamsiel sooner than anyone else, because for the past several weeks to perhaps months, they'd been working directly under the supervision of the REAL Shamsiel, so they know her personally.
    • Speaking of said soldiers, they apparently got along with Shamsiel really well, and Lute recognized it because they had something in common. Both she AND they were once outcasts of the Kingdom, and thus could bond over that.