Gandalf is the Arena Season 2 Grand Champion. (Live Results on X and Bluesky)

Blade: Black Company Character Analysis

Race: Human (Southern)

Sex: Male

Faction: Black Company

Rating: 6.8

Alignment: Chaotic Good

Arena Status: Active (S2)

Blade is one of the most enigmatic and compelling mortal characters to rise to prominence during the Shadowmaster arc of The Black Company saga. A lean, dark-skinned southerner with a burning hatred for priests and an unwavering loyalty to his few chosen companions, Blade stands apart from typical mercenary archetypes. He originates from somewhere north of Taglios on the southern continent, though the exact location remains a mystery. First appearing in Shadow Games, Blade quickly becomes an instrumental figure in the Black Company’s campaigns, shifting from local rebel fighter to deep-cover infiltrator, military leader, and, ultimately, tragic casualty of the Protectorate war.

Blade from The Black Company
Blade

Where Did Blade Come From Before Joining the Taglian Resistance?

Much about Blade's origins remains shrouded in speculation. Murgen once observed in Bleak Seasons that Blade "looked like he might have been born Nar" due to his tall, muscular frame and black skin. Yet, the Nar within the Black Company do not recognize or react to him, casting doubt on this lineage. Blade himself offers little about his past. It is only known that he was nearly killed by crocodiles at the behest of insulted priests—a punishment he survived thanks to the intervention of Willow Swan and Cordy Mather. The pair found him during their wanderings and dragged him out of the swamp, forging a lifelong bond. Whether he hails from D’loc Aloc or some other jungle tribe is never confirmed, but his survival, combat proficiency, and ease in political scheming suggest noble or elite military training in a sophisticated culture.

What Was Blade's Role During the Shadowmaster Wars?

Blade's initial known role in the narrative begins as a commander hired by the Prahbrindrah Drah to aid Taglios in its desperate resistance against the encroaching Shadowmaster forces. Alongside Swan and Mather, he organized one of the first successful defensive campaigns against the invasion, as chronicled in Croaker’s Annals. Blade helped prevent Shadowlander crossings at the river Main, delaying the broader invasion and earning a reputation as a brilliant battlefield tactician.

By the events of Dreams of Steel, Blade had become a trusted military subordinate of Lady. His military precision and ruthless practicality made him a reliable and indispensable part of her inner circle. He followed her on the daring mission to assassinate Shadowspinner at Dejagore. When Lady's magical strangling tool failed to finish the job, it was Blade who plunged a blade into the Shadowmaster’s heart. This audacious act turned the tide of the siege and contributed directly to the formation of Lady's false identity as the Daughter of Night, a ruse that succeeded in seizing command of the Shadowlander forces outside Dejagore.

Why Did Blade Defect to Longshadow, and What Happened at Charandaprash?

Blade’s most complex and defining arc occurs in She Is the Darkness. After Croaker, now annalist and leader of the Company again, makes his jealousy over Blade’s affection for Lady openly known, Blade appears to defect to Longshadow. This is a deeply personal rupture—Croaker accuses Blade of overstepping boundaries with Lady, and Blade, embittered and spurned, vanishes into enemy territory.

What seems like a betrayal is ultimately revealed as a masterstroke of deception. Over time, Blade becomes one of Longshadow's top generals, defending against both Company raids and Taglian assaults. He is particularly ruthless against Taglios' priest-led armies, which he despises. This apparent turncoat behavior is later understood as a ruse: at the Battle of Charandaprash, Blade orders his army to surrender, catching Longshadow and Mogaba utterly off-guard. He reunites with Croaker in a powerful moment of camaraderie, revealing that he had been working undercover for years to sabotage Longshadow's infrastructure from within. This tactical deception not only devastates the Shadowmaster's war machine but solidifies Blade's reputation as one of the most effective covert operatives in the Company’s history.

What Happened to Blade After the Fall of the Shadowmasters?

Following Longshadow's fall, Blade accompanies the Black Company across the legendary glittering plain, a surreal expanse where they encounter ancient horrors, forgotten magic, and the godlike being Shivetya. During the crossing, the Company is ambushed and many, including Blade, are rendered unconscious and sealed in stasis in the Cave of the Ancients beneath the fortress of Overlook.

In Soldiers Live, Blade is awakened and becomes an important logistical and martial figure under Sleepy's command. He is placed in charge of Company operations at Overlook, where he supervises a corps of elite rangers responsible for recovering valuable artifacts and treasure from the fortress depths. Blade develops a quiet rapport with Shivetya and displays adaptability and endurance while working in the dangerous, metaphysically charged environment of the glittering plain.

Blade's story ends during the Protectorate War. Tasked with retaking Dejagore, Blade leads the Company’s cavalry into battle. During the decisive and brutal engagement at the Shadowlander cemetery, Blade is killed alongside his closest companion, Willow Swan. They are buried side by side, a final act of comradeship that speaks to the depth of their friendship forged over years of shared battles and near-death encounters.

Why Is Blade a Fan-Favorite Character in the Black Company Universe?

Blade’s appeal lies in his paradoxes. He is cynical and driven, yet deeply loyal. He detests religion but is willing to follow a woman whose identity is wrapped in prophecy and divine pretension. He plays the role of defector to perfection but never betrays his core loyalties. His story is not only one of redemption and vengeance but also of profound sacrifice and service.

Croaker once called him "the best damn spy I ever didn’t want to have." Lady trusted him with her life. Murgen questioned his origins but never doubted his skill. Even in the morally gray world of The Black Company, Blade stands out as someone who lives by a code, even when that code isn’t visible to others. His death, like many in the Company, is sudden and unforgiving, yet entirely earned by the life he led—cut short, perhaps, but immortal in the Annals.

Blade is never the loudest man in the room. He isn't the one wielding magic or claiming titles. But when the mission required quiet, precise violence and the spine to do what no one else could, Blade was the one who made it happen. His name, fittingly, cuts through the saga like a whisper of steel.

Blade's Raw Power

Blade exhibits a respectable level of raw power that places him slightly above the median when compared to the vast array of combatants across all fantasy universes. While he lacks any supernatural magical talent or mythic-scale destructive capabilities, he compensates with a honed physical presence, precise combat execution, and sheer battlefield competence. His effectiveness is grounded in elite human-level conditioning and martial prowess, not divine favor or arcane manipulation. This earns him a solid 6.0 in the Raw Power category—commendable, but far from the upper echelons dominated by magically or metaphysically enhanced beings.

Strength

Blade’s physical strength is never exaggerated in the texts, but what’s emphasized is his extraordinary conditioning. Described consistently as “tall, black and muscular, without an ounce of fat,” Blade is the archetype of lean and lethal. He was capable of surviving a crocodile pit prior to being rescued, and fought in countless engagements without mention of fatigue or hesitation. However, his strength is more functional than superhuman—adequate for elite close-quarters combat and endurance over long campaigns, but not augmented beyond the natural human limit. His strength rating, then, rests firmly in the competent but not exceptional range.

Magical Ability

Blade has no access to magic. He does not cast spells, manipulate elements, or call upon divine or infernal power. His skill set is entirely grounded in the material world. He operates in a magical setting and has allies and enemies who wield significant sorcery, but he himself is a non-magical asset. This lack of supernatural ability is a hard constraint in the Raw Power rubric and results in a zero contribution from this subcategory.

Combat Prowess

This is where Blade’s Raw Power profile finds its peak. He is a master of armed and unarmed combat. His battlefield composure is virtually unmatched—he is described as cool-headed, efficient, and surgical in violent encounters. His assassination of Shadowspinner, a creature possessing unnatural durability, is a striking example of Blade’s direct combat precision. He thrust a blade through the heart of one of the most dangerous beings on the continent, without hesitation, and in coordination with a complex infiltration plan. Later, he defeats multiple religious armies sent against him and rises to command a third of the Shadowmaster's military forces. His swordsmanship and tactical lethality place him near the top tier of purely martial combatants. His combat prowess makes up the bulk of his Raw Power score.

Blade's Tactical Ability

Blade’s tactical capability is one of the defining strengths that elevates him above many of his peers across fantasy universes. Devoid of magical talents or preternatural insights, he relies purely on intellect, battlefield experience, and a masterful understanding of enemy psychology. His most famous accomplishment—the feigned defection to Longshadow’s army and the orchestration of that force’s collapse from within—exemplifies high-level strategic thinking and manipulation. He is a general who wins not through overwhelming force, but through deception, precision, and resourceful exploitation of narrow opportunities. For this reason, he earns a 7.5 rating in Tactical Ability: he is not omniscient or omnipotent, but when given command, he delivers results that suggest a sharp, pragmatic, and highly dangerous mind.

Strategic Mind

Blade’s understanding of strategic planning is most evident in She Is the Darkness, where he rises to become one of Longshadow’s most trusted generals. His control of nearly a third of the Shadowmaster’s army was no accident—it was a long game played with calculated discipline. At the Battle of Charandaprash, Blade executes a maneuver of profound audacity: he feigns strategic incompetence, lures his own army into an indefensible position, and then orders a mass surrender directly into the arms of his true allies. This single act crippled Longshadow’s war effort and ensured the survival of the Black Company. It was not a decision made rashly, but through long-term deception involving enemy infiltration, intelligence gathering, and finely-tuned trust manipulation. Blade’s strategic mind is neither flamboyant nor mystical—it is clinical, patient, and devastating.

Resourcefulness

What sets Blade apart from many high-functioning tacticians is his ability to operate in degraded, uncertain, or hostile environments. His escape from priestly execution and survival in the crocodile pit was only the beginning of a long pattern of adaptation under duress. Whether infiltrating Shadowspinner’s command camp alongside Lady or surviving years trapped in the Cave of the Ancients under Shivetya’s watch, Blade displays constant improvisation and endurance. His success in infiltrating a supernatural military hierarchy and gaining access to command without being a sorcerer, noble, or native, demonstrates his ability to manipulate perceptions and make do with limited assets. Even when isolated underground, leading a group of barely-trained young rangers through shadow-haunted ruins, he organizes effective excavation and supply chains in support of a war effort unfolding above. He thrives in the margins, in the blind spots of his enemies, and makes do with tools that rarely look sufficient at first glance.

Resource Arsenal

While Blade lacks the alliances or supernatural boons many characters in his world rely on, he maximizes what he does have: personal credibility, old friendships, and hard-earned battlefield experience. His deepest asset is trust—not blind loyalty, but confidence in his ability to execute. Lady, then Croaker, then Sleepy—each of the Company’s dominant figures entrusts Blade with critical tasks even when his methods remain murky. His comrades Swan and Cordy form a de facto unit, supporting him with competence and discretion. Beyond personnel, Blade exploits institutional memory, cultural rifts among enemies, and psychological warfare with frightening effectiveness. Though his arsenal is not mystical or vast, it is wielded with precision, making him far more dangerous than his rank or equipment would suggest.

Blade's Influence

Blade's influence is a subtle force—rarely performed on public stages or through soaring speeches, but often delivered with deadly precision behind the scenes. Unlike charismatic demagogues or mystical visionaries, Blade operates in shadows, commanding respect and shaping events through reputation, conviction, and sheer presence. While not a leader of mass movements or a deity of reverence, he exerts real sway over elite allies, intimidates enemies with surgical effectiveness, and resists external manipulation with remarkable steadfastness. He earns a 6.5 out of 10 in Influence: solidly above average for a mortal character operating in a magically infused world, but lacking the broad cultural or supernatural command of the genre’s most iconic figures.

Persuasion

Blade's style of persuasion is minimalist and cutting. He does not waste words, nor does he attempt to woo others with charm or rhetorical flourish. His power lies in directness—when he speaks, others listen not because he cajoles them but because they understand he means what he says. His most persuasive moment comes not through dialogue, but through action: his surrender of a Shadowlander army at Charandaprash. Without giving away his long con, Blade maneuvers tens of thousands of soldiers into accepting his command and marching under his leadership, all while he plans to betray them at the decisive moment. That he could pull this off without detection, amid paranoid enemies and cutthroat generals, speaks volumes about his ability to influence key personnel without raising suspicion. Though he lacks theatricality, his persuasive authority is undeniable in close, strategic relationships.

Reverence

Blade inspires few songs, garners little popular reverence, and is not an object of myth. His reputation is instead built on professional competence and battlefield results. Among peers—especially within the Black Company and the high command of Taglios—he becomes a figure of tactical fear and military credibility. Longshadow, one of the most powerful Shadowmasters, trusted him with a third of his total forces, despite Blade being a foreigner with no magical talents. That level of trust in a wartime context reflects how others regard him: with suspicion, yes, but also with deference. He is respected by the elite, but his name does not stir the masses. His reverence score is limited by his lack of symbolic or spiritual impact, but compensated by his consistent reliability in command. He is not revered in the cultural sense, but he is feared and respected in the professional one.

Willpower

Of all the Influence subcategories, this is Blade’s strongest. He exhibits extraordinary mental fortitude in scenarios designed to crush lesser men. Surviving execution by crocodile, infiltrating enemy forces for years, enduring imprisonment in the Cave of the Ancients, and resisting religious indoctrination in the theocratic furnace of Taglios all illustrate his unshakable self-determination. Perhaps his most telling moment of willpower is his lifelong hatred of the priesthood. Even when surrounded by cults wielding real supernatural power, Blade remains openly hostile, never compromising his convictions for safety, approval, or social advantage. He resists both physical coercion and ideological capture. This resistance is not loud or showy—he does not sermonize—but is manifested in consistent behavior over decades of war and betrayal. His will is ironclad and entirely his own, placing him at the high end of this scale even when measured against magically-augmented minds.

Blade's Resilience

Blade earns a 7.0 out of 10 for Resilience, a category that evaluates how well a character withstands physical and metaphysical adversity across multiple dimensions. This rating reflects not only his ability to survive and function under extreme stress and trauma, but also his capacity to recover and remain mission-effective despite brutal setbacks. He is not immortal, invincible, or magically protected—but his sheer toughness, mental fortitude, and narrative survivability place him above the typical warrior archetype, especially given the dark, high-lethality world he inhabits. Blade's durability manifests across all three resilience subdomains.

Physical Resistance

Blade’s survival through multiple wars, betrayals, and high-risk covert operations speaks to exceptional physical endurance. He is described as muscular, wiry, and lean—a man with no extraneous mass and presumably maximum cardiovascular and muscular efficiency. Blade is not simply in shape; he is an optimized human weapon. His fitness is not ornamental but integral to his function: infiltrating enemy lines, assassinating magically-enhanced warlords, and enduring prolonged exposure to harsh environments, from the jungle to subterranean tombs.

He survives his initial execution—being thrown to crocodiles—through a mix of physical struggle and improbable fortune. Later, he withstands the rigors of long-term operations within hostile military regimes, surviving direct combat engagements and the grind of siege warfare without known supernatural healing or reinforcement. He endures imprisonment and a years-long frozen stasis in the Cave of the Ancients and still returns to full combat readiness after being revived. Blade’s resistance is not exaggerated or flashy, but realistic and gritty, forged through attrition and application rather than blessings or enhancements.

Magical Resistance

Blade possesses no innate magical resistance in the traditional sense; there is no textual evidence that he can shrug off spells, hexes, or supernatural compulsions through any inherent power. However, what he does demonstrate is practical resistance—he functions and succeeds in environments where magical forces are rampant, including prolonged exposure to the deceptive atmospheres surrounding Lady, the Shadowmasters, Kina’s cult, and later, Shivetya’s fortress.

He is never depicted as vulnerable to suggestion, illusion, or spiritual domination. He walks alongside known sorcerers, dreamwalkers, and divine entities without succumbing to psychological breakdown or spiritual contamination. His immunity is not metaphysical but behavioral: he does not believe in the gods, and his sheer disdain for metaphysical systems acts as a psychological firewall. This stoic disbelief may not protect him from fireballs or curses, but it allows him to function unimpaired in environments that would spiritually compromise or mentally destabilize other non-magical characters. In this sense, his magical resistance is a passive attribute of his hardened mental schema.

Longevity

Blade’s longevity is a functional triumph more than a biological or metaphysical one. He is neither unnaturally long-lived nor reborn through divine cycles. His durability is instead evidenced by his sustained relevance across multiple campaigns, shifting political orders, and existential threats. From the early resistance in Taglios to the final battle at the Shadowlands, Blade remains not only alive but a key operator. His ability to return from cryogenic stasis in the Cave of the Ancients and resume command duties is particularly striking. Unlike others who returned mentally fractured or spiritually changed, Blade resumes his role with clarity and tactical focus.

Moreover, Blade’s legacy is not extinguished upon death. His burial beside Swan—and the honor he receives in death—testify to a warrior whose resilience carved out a space in the memory of both comrades and chroniclers. His narrative presence is preserved by the Annals, which rarely linger on the dead unless they mattered. Blade mattered. His resilience was not just personal; it was narrative.

Blade's Versatility

Blade earns a 7.0 out of 10 in Versatility, an assessment of how effectively a character operates across a range of scenarios, adapts to changing conditions, and deploys a variety of skills or tricks in complex, often hostile, environments. This rating places Blade in the upper tier of mortal figures, particularly those without magical augmentation, due to his consistent competence across espionage, warfare, political manipulation, and survival in supernatural environments. He is not a polymath or an all-powerful jack-of-all-trades, but a hardened, pragmatic survivor whose utility repeatedly proves decisive across vastly different contexts. Blade’s score reflects his strength in adaptability, the occasional fortune that saves him from death, and most notably, the presence of a hidden capability that turns the tide at critical moments.

Adaptability

Blade's adaptability is one of his defining traits and the cornerstone of his versatility. He pivots effortlessly between roles: tavern owner, battlefield commander, insurgent leader, deep-cover operative, and military defector. He is equally effective infiltrating enemy camps, assassinating godlike warlords, managing the logistics of fortress operations beneath the glittering plain, or executing grand strategy as a mole within Longshadow’s army. His time in the subterranean layers of the fortress after the Company’s freeze—interacting with Shivetya, coordinating logistics, and restoring operational continuity—underscores his ability to reorient himself even after supernatural stasis. Blade does not rely on a specific setting or rigid framework to function. Instead, he retools himself to the task at hand, even when the task is something wholly new, such as becoming a steward of the Company’s future financial engine during the Protectorate war.

Luck

Blade’s survival from certain death multiple times suggests a non-trivial degree of narrative luck. His escape from the crocodiles is the first instance: not only does he survive, but he is rescued by two of the most capable wanderers in the South, who then become his lifelong allies. Later, he plays a pivotal role in several schemes that by all rights should have ended in disaster—such as the infiltration of Shadowspinner’s camp—yet survives without magical defenses. More impressively, during his staged defection to Longshadow’s army, he avoids being exposed as a traitor until the critical moment of betrayal, despite close contact with Mogaba and Soulcatcher. These outcomes require a combination of precision and improbable fortune. Blade never relies on luck as a crutch, but it cushions the margins of his survival and success more than once.

Shaved Knuckle in the Hole

Blade's most compelling contribution to this category is the deception he engineers during the Shadowmaster Wars: a long-term, high-risk ploy in which he appears to defect to the enemy and rises through their ranks. When he finally reveals the truth by ordering his army to surrender mid-battle, the maneuver devastates Longshadow’s position and allows the Taglian Liberator to claim victory. This strategy is not just an act of espionage but an existential gamble. Only someone with extraordinary willpower, iron discipline, and mastery of persona could maintain such a ruse for years. Moreover, this is not Blade's only hidden hand—his sudden alignment with Lady during the assassination of Shadowspinner also reveals a readiness to spring into action at key turning points, often from positions where others believe he is passive or spent. These actions elevate his versatility because they demonstrate latent capabilities that are only deployed at maximum impact.

Blade's Alignment

Blade, a dark-skinned human from the southern reaches of the Black Company universe, is a mortal of ambiguous ancestry—possibly Nar, K'hlata, or another martial subculture—though no definitive affiliation is ever confirmed. His most meaningful identity is not tribal or ethnic, but ideological: he belongs to no religious faction and actively despises organized priesthoods, particularly those of Taglios. His primary loyalty is to his two companions, Willow Swan and Cordy Mather, and eventually to the Black Company itself, where his values align with pragmatic resistance against tyranny—whether secular or divine.

Blade's alignment is best described as Chaotic Good, though not without nuance. On the axis of law and chaos, Blade is firmly chaotic. He exhibits deep skepticism toward hierarchy, especially when imposed through religious dogma. His first recorded act is defying the authority of local priest-kings, for which he is sentenced to death. Even after joining formal military operations, he resists command structures emotionally and ideologically, tolerating them only insofar as they serve his chosen cause. His staged defection to Longshadow, a warlord supported by dark sorcery and enforced zealotry, is a masterstroke of subversion—not only of the enemy, but of the very notion of loyalty as a rigid moral category. He uses duplicity and improvisation as tools of liberation, not power.

On the moral axis, Blade leans strongly good. He is not motivated by glory, conquest, or cruelty. He rarely seeks personal vengeance and displays compassion in low-key ways—such as forming bonds with outcasts, working alongside the disenfranchised, and helping preserve the Company’s long-term legacy. His mission, though often violent, consistently aligns with freeing people from tyrannical control. During the siege of Dejagore and the later Battle of Charandaprash, he risks his life to weaken regimes of oppression. Even when he operates within enemy structures, he does so not to uphold them, but to dismantle them from within.

Blade's shifting affiliations might superficially suggest neutrality, but his long-term behavior belies any amoral or unprincipled stance. He chooses sides—and chooses them with moral conviction. He supports Lady against Shadowspinner, Croaker against Longshadow, and Sleepy’s post-glittering plain Black Company against the Protectorate. Each of these alignments reflects a conscious tilt toward freedom and resistance, never opportunism or nihilism.

Thus, Blade’s alignment is not chaotic for its own sake, nor is his goodness sanctimonious. He is a freedom fighter shaped by trauma, distrustful of ideology, and loyal only to those he believes will use power responsibly—or not at all. In a world where gods are real and often monstrous, Blade’s rejection of divine order is itself a moral act. He is a Chaotic Good human aligned with the Black Company faction, and his ethical compass points toward resistance, subversion, and ultimately, redemption through action. Pride and Prophecy keeps an updated character alignment matrix across all planes of existence.

Blade's Trophy Case

Arena Results

Titles & Postseason Results

Halls of Legend Records

Overall Conclusion on Blade and Position Across Planes of Existence

Blade’s final rating of 6.8 reflects his solidly above-average capabilities when measured across all fantasy universes. While he may lack supernatural force or mythic stature, Blade consistently punches above his weight through a combination of lethal combat skill, battlefield cunning, ideological defiance, and emotional resilience. His strength lies not in grand sorcery or divine lineage, but in tactical execution, moral clarity, and a deeply internalized resistance to authoritarian control. Across every realm—mundane or magical—Blade would survive, adapt, and leave a mark, though not necessarily from the front of a mythic charge.

In terms of Raw Power, Blade is proficient but not transcendent. His physical conditioning, particularly his lean strength and flawless combat execution, give him a distinct advantage over average soldiers. Yet, in universes where combatants may summon storms, tear through dimensions, or regenerate from death, Blade’s non-magical lethality caps his ceiling. His lack of supernatural augmentation is notable, though he compensates for it with discipline and precision. His rating in this category is respectable, but grounded.

Where Blade’s rating truly climbs is in Tactical Ability, where he demonstrates extraordinary skill. His staged defection to Longshadow's side during the Shadowmaster Wars, culminating in the engineered collapse of one-third of the enemy's army, is a masterclass in infiltration, misdirection, and battlefield manipulation. Blade understands morale, perception, and the weight of timing in conflict. He is neither a pure field general nor a scheming spymaster, but he comfortably occupies the intersection of the two—always a step ahead of his enemies and even his allies.

His Influence/Persuasion is harder to categorize. Blade is not charismatic in a traditional sense, nor does he command spiritual reverence. Rather, his influence emerges from personal integrity, uncompromising ideals, and a burning hatred of tyranny. His ability to command respect in spite of—sometimes because of—his moral abrasiveness signals powerful will. His manipulation of Shadowspinner’s forces through psychological bluffing, as well as his coordinated leadership alongside Lady and Swan, shows persuasive capacity rooted in action, not rhetoric.

Blade’s Resilience is quietly exceptional. Surviving a crocodile pit, enduring exile, resisting divine manipulation, and returning from stasis beneath Shivetya all speak to his stamina and emotional fortitude. He faces capture, betrayal, and frontline war repeatedly, and recovers each time with his mind and mission intact. His durability is human, not magical, but the depth of his mental steel elevates his rating considerably in this category.

Lastly, in Versatility, Blade’s ability to operate as soldier, spy, commander, saboteur, and resistance icon places him well above average. He demonstrates adaptive brilliance, especially in changing regimes or ideological landscapes. His value to the Black Company is not limited to swordplay—he becomes a symbol of rebellion against spiritual authoritarianism, a bridge between ideologies, and a field leader trusted with ancient secrets beneath the glittering plain.

While Blade will never threaten the gods or tip the balance of cosmic wars, he is the man you send when gods overstep and tyrants grow confident. His 6.8 reflects a human who maximizes every tool available in a universe that rarely favors the mortal. Across all planes of existence, he is dangerous, durable, and deeply principled. Pride and Prophecy keeps an updated power ranking across all planes of existence. This will only be sortable on desktop viewing. The below table shows a summary within the same plane of existence of this article.