Psychology of Evil dictates that men like Kefka could never exist in the real world. In our entire history of civilization, no ruthless dictator or cold-hearted conqueror has ever thought of themselves as ‘evil.’ In their mind, what they did was justified and was for the greater good of the people. In some cases, they act as if they were the hand of righteousness. Yet, for some reason that cannot be fully comprehended, Kefka is a popular villain that we all love to hate. His actions seem to have no purpose: he is the clown prince of madness spreading destruction and pestilence while freely admitting that he enjoys every minute of it! Simply disturbing. It is frightening to imagine what obscene thoughts must traffic within that twisted brain perched on his sinuous body. Kefka’s goal is also equally vague: to destroy. Life is blasphemous and he reveals his magnum opus to total annihilation. Of what, Kefka? The planet? The universe? All of existence?! You’ve got a wee bit of work ahead of you. You know, maybe he is just plain crazy…
blkmage wrote:Psychology of Evil dictates that men like Kefka could never exist in the real world. In our entire history of civilization, no ruthless dictator or cold-hearted conqueror has ever thought of themselves as ‘evil.’ In their mind, what they did was justified and was for the greater good of the people. In some cases, they act as if they were the hand of righteousness. Yet, for some reason that cannot be fully comprehended, Kefka is a popular villain that we all love to hate. His actions seem to have no purpose: he is the clown prince of madness spreading destruction and pestilence while freely admitting that he enjoys every minute of it! Simply disturbing. It is frightening to imagine what obscene thoughts must traffic within that twisted brain perched on his sinuous body. Kefka’s goal is also equally vague: to destroy. Life is blasphemous and he reveals his magnum opus to total annihilation. Of what, Kefka? The planet? The universe? All of existence?! You’ve got a wee bit of work ahead of you. You know, maybe he is just plain crazy…
CDLviking wrote:Seymour: Creepy, and did I mention how freaking creepy he is? Actually uses nihilistic logic to justify destroying the world. Kills those closest to him and manipulates people's religious beliefs. For partricide, genocide, nihilism, using religion to exploit others and overall creepiness... 8 evil points.
Kokoro Daisuke wrote:Sephiroth: 4. I feel he's to blame for the overabundance of angsty all powerful sword swinging villains I see in amateur fiction writing nowadays.
KoDai wrote:I didn't like FF8.
termyt wrote:Seymour was a freak job, that much is true. I didn't like him from the start, he was way too creepy, but I would have joined his side if such a thing were permitted in the game. Here's why (I feel compelled to spoilerize to protect those who have not played the game but want to, so please bare with me):
[spoiler]
Seymour wanted to kill everyone on the planet. If that had been Earth, then yes, he's a mad man who must be stopped, but this is Spira. Death doesn't seem so bad there. After all, you're own party member Auron is dead and he seems fine. If anyone's a criminal, it's Yuna. She takes the dead and locks them all in a tiny room in Guadosalam. Think of it - billions of people all trapped in a little room. That seems like unlawful imprisonment to me. Seymour's method would seem to liberate all of these people, freeing them to pursue the life of their choosing. So some of them become monsters - so what? What are they going to do, kill me? I'm already dead.
It really doesn't help my sense of justice and right versus wrong that the main character of the story is just a figment of some else's imagination, either.
[/spoiler]
So, I can't vote for Seymour. He's as close to a hero as Spira's got. Since Yuna's not a choice, I choose good old Sephiroth. He's a twisted genius - both mad and clever, and one heck of a fighter, to boot. No match for the Knights of the Round summon, but then, who is?
And there wasn't an option for Kain.
MasterDias wrote:[spoiler]2. Er...that wasn't the entire Farplane at Guadosalam. That doesn't really make any sense. What was at Guadosalam was only a gate to the Farplane were people could view their loved ones or whoever. The Farplane is supposed to be similar to various cultures' concepts of the afterlife.[/spoiler]
Brainwashed good guys who become allies later on shouldn't really count in a poll like this.
Kain was a cool character however.
At least, I assume that you are talking about FFIV's Kain. I don't remember any other Kains in FF.
MasterDias wrote:As far as Seymour is concerned, he had the motivations to be a good villian. But, you fight him three times and beat him up all of those times. Seemed like more of a nuisance who didn't want to stay dead...
CDLviking wrote:A word on Sephiroth
[spoiler]My take on the game was that, yes the real Sephiroth was in the Northern Cave the whole time. He washed up there after cloud threw him into the depths of the Mako Reactor in Nibelhem. The Sephiroth that you see throughout the game is not Jenova, it is his clone. Throughout the game you meet several pathetic looking individuals with tatoos of nubers on them. All of them are Sephiroth clones, but the one that actually looks like Sephiroth has the number 1 tatoo, which I assume to mean that he is the first and strongest of the clones. Sephiroth is able to manipulate them all from within his cave. The sword is definitely Masamune that they find because Cloud identified it as such, and having personally been run through by that sword, I think he would know. What I haven't figured out yet, is whether or not Cloud was a failed clone as Sephiroth claimed, or the boy from Tifa's past.[/spoiler]
kaemmerite wrote:[SPOILER]Well, it could be a clone, I forgot to mention that. One other thing I forgot to mention is that when you kill the third form of Jenova you retrieve the Black Materia from it, but it was "Sephiroth" who initially took the Black Materia. So I guess maybe it was Jenova in some spots, and the clone in the other. The other main evidence that Sephiroth wasn't in the rest of the game is everyone claims to see a black-caped man with a tattoo of the number one. Obviously, the real Sephiroth doesn't have a tattoo, making it a clone. Either way, all Sephiroth did was sit in the North Cave.
And I think Cloud is who they said he was on the Highwind. Just a failed SOLIDER who got screwed up and lived vicariously through Zack. Remember, Zack was physically and mentally strong and able to resist Jenova/Mako, while Cloud wasn't. They tied up all the loose ends pretty good, I thought...except why Masamune didn't affect Cloud.[/SPOILER]
Tom Dincht wrote:Then again, I`m halfway through FF6 so i don`t have a strong opinion on him. He just looks really stupid. At least you can`t tell he`s a clown in the original and his laugh made me dislike him.
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