The Lion of Ivalice/YMMV

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


  • Alternate Character Interpretation: Several, usually for the ones that didn't join as party members.
    • Izlude: In game, a templar with very similar views of Ramza during his Hokuten days and killed rather suddenly by his father, with his death sparking Mel's vengeance towards the Beoulve. Here, a hired sword to the Nanten that meets Ramza as an ally this time and forms a Bash Brother bond with him and undergoes a well rounded transition from a blindly loyal soldier to a second Ramza in all but name.
    • Gafgarion: In game, a gruff mercenary that was willing to fight and kill for money, damn ideals on 'right and wrong'. Here, he fights for a chance of redemption out of an honor debt losing to Ramza (twice).
    • Celia and Lede: In game, two demons masquerading as assassins (or possibly possessed by demons somewhere along the line) under Elmdore's service as Bodyguard Babes. Here, human assassins with a history with Valmafra and gradually grow into the hearts of a mechanic, an automation, and the readers.
    • Valmafra: In game, a magus with relatively little background other than being an agent keeping tabs on Ramza, Delita, and the war. Here, is convinced by Olan to help stop the demon invasion, and keeps a troubled past to herself, being a pupil to Kletian and helped committing terrible deeds.
  • Complete Monster: It's quite arguable that Morrigan Konoe/Shemhazai earned her C.M. diploma in Chapter 28, what with tormenting Delita and Wiegraf with the spirits of their deceased sisters to weaken their resolve - one reviewer even considered this to be worse than Vormav's actions in canon where he brought back Zalbag as a possessed zombie, forcing Ramza to fight him. May be negated by Chapter 30, wherein we see that Ajora and Morrigan did love each other, but given that they're willing to destroy the world so that they might rule it and don't care who they destroy along the way, it's ultimately somewhat debatable.
    • Kletian the Templar Knight definitely earns these credentials in Chapter 35, with the way he brutally murders Rafa. If you're still not convinced, here's Valmafra's thoughts on the matter:

Kletian had always been a vile man, Val knew that, and she should have expected to see him standing beside the Lucavi. He'd stopped at nothing to acquire some of the most formidable magic in the world, and had used the Templars to that end. There was no better sorcerer in Ivalice, it was said. Val never spoke of the training she had received while in the service of the High Confessor, not even to Olan, and this man was the reason why. The things he had done, and had asked her to do, had been despicable, and that was when he was still human.