Ragnarok

AgeN/A
RaceN/A
DebutAct XII
HomeN/A
Height5’5″
Hair ColorBlack
Eye ColorRed
Measurements32, 26, 34

Ragnarok is a legendary, sentient sword, fabled to be the strongest in all of Eden, and the predecessor to both the Archlight’s Blade and the Hellfire’s Edge. Those that wield her are able to see her personified image who represents the very soul of the sword itself.

She was once the prized weapon and armament of Seraph, the Dark Queen of Tyranny. She is also the “sister” of Aegis.

She is currently in the service of Daniel Sorres, her new handler.

Appearance

The sword itself appears as a massive blade with a white wrapped handle, polished darkened steel, and a sharpened white edge. The hilt has a large red orb shining in it while small vents near it along with engravings on the sword itself radiate with crimson energy.

Her personified image is a woman who isn’t just wearing armor but rather the armor is part of her very being. Her feet, legs, hips, chest, arms, and hands are all clad in similar dark red plating that the sword itself is designed with. Her hair is long and black, her eyes are red with white notches around the irises, and a black and red headdress is worn atop her head. The teeth she shows in her wide, menacing smile are overly sharp while her voice is spoken in a slightly abrasive metallic tone.

Personality

Ragnarok’s mindset is very straightforward. As a sentient weapon, she views herself first and foremost as a tool, an object made to kill and destroy her handler’s enemies. When Daniel tried summoning her, she scolded him for treating her like a person and asking permission to wield her. This suggests that she does not “feel” as most other beings do and thus possess no true morals. She herself stated that she was created for one purpose: to kill.

Nevertheless, Ragnarok showed great interest in Daniel because of his connection with the ether, by how his soul is linked directly with it, and how he was able to reach into the magical stream, something only her last handler, Seraph the Tyrant, was able to achieve. Through both the enormous monster energy flowing through his soul, as well as her desire to be free from the ether to which she was banished, the sword deemed Daniel worthy of being her new handler.

However, due to his past experience with the Gemini, Daniel wasn’t willing to trust Ragnarok at first. He was especially wary about her wanting something in return for her service. Ragnarok didn’t elaborate what exactly she wanted, but pressured Daniel with the promise of avenging Squeak and killing the Gemini before they murdered anyone else.

Despite her claims of being a weapon and nothing more, however, Ragnarok has a cross personality. Upon her freedom and finding most of Daniel’s monster energy drained upon claiming her, Ragnarok felt angry and cheated for now being attached to a human soul with hardly enough power to call upon.

As of Season 2, Ragnarok is more or less an unhappy tagalong and deeply dislikes Daniel for his morals, having absolutely no desire to use her, and his refusal to feed her any monster energy. For better or worse, though, she’s stuck with him, bound to his soul and body, and should Daniel die, she will perish along with him.

In retaliation for Daniel’s refusal to feed her, Ragnarok takes her small revenge by keeping vital information from him. Since she’s familiar with Seraph and the other Dark Queens of Eden, Ragnarok knows perfectly well who Twilight really is and how dangerous she is as the Reaper. So, to some small gratification, she’s keeping silent about Twilight’s true nature while Daniel and his mates continue to view the Dark Queen as a trusting friend.

Power of the Sword

When it was first forged long ago by Seraph, Ragnarok served as the Dark Queen’s personal weapon that was used to terrifying effect. After Seraph was imprisoned in her City of Eden, her weapon was left without an owner. Ragnarok was eventually deemed so powerful that both angels and demons alike were stricken with fear. Neither could wield it nor control its devastating might, so they banished it deep into the ether and forged the Archlight’s Blade and the Hellfire’s Edge from its power instead. As strong as these two swords are, they pale in comparison to the original.

Ragnarok is so powerful that it can kill absolutely anything. Human, monster, angel, demon, not even the Dark Queens themselves can survive the strength of this blade. In fact, Ragnarok herself stated that killing the Gemini was one of the reasons she was created.

Its true strength comes from its ability to cut apart more than just flesh. It can cut deeper than any normal blade and can actually overpower monster energy. In a sense, the sword acts kind of like a bug-zapper, or in this case a lightning rod. When Daniel used it on Jovian & Jacqueline, he not only permanently damaged their bodies. He tore into their monster energy and overloaded it. Despite their supposed immortality, the energy that Ragnarok pulsed through the Gemini sisters was far more than they could tolerate, causing them to feel actual pain. Without their monster energy, the source of their immortality, there was nothing left, and thus the Dark Queen of Anarchy perished in an explosion of destructive energy.

As of S.1 – Act XII, only a fraction of Ragnarok’s true power has been shown since Daniel couldn’t properly sustain the sword upon claiming her as his. In order to wield this mighty weapon, a hefty “price” must be paid.

Price of the Sword

In order for Ragnarok to manifest her physical, weapon form, her handler must “feed” her enough monster energy. This is done by her handler initiating the magical art of Synergy with any viable companion(s), and then willingly relinquishing the bond between them over to Ragnarok, giving her the ability to freely draw and absorb the monster energy from the companion(s) into her being. Essentially, the handler must give Ragnarok the ability to feed off of those linked with the Synergy magic, however in doing so they will have no further control over the process. Ragnarok will be free to leech as much monster energy from those she has the bond with to her heart’s content, or until those she’s linked to die from having all their energy sapped away.

This process can only be done in this order, as Ragnarok is only able to be fed monster energy while in her “spirit form” so long as the handler willingly offers those linked with them through Synergy to the sword. After enough energy has been gathered by Ragnarok, she is then able to be summoned into the physical world, and take her weapon form for the handler to use. In this form, Ragnarok is only able to sustain her physical form from the energy she had devoured beforehand, as well as any monster energy that remains within the handler. If not enough energy is present, the Ragnarok blade will deteriorate and eventually disappear. Should the handler not properly feed the blade, and not have enough or any monster energy within their own body to sustain the Ragnarok weapon, they will feel “the full brunt of trying to support the sword all on their own”, which as seen by Daniel when this happens, involves overwhelming pain that borders blinding and near-crippling agony all throughout their body, with the feeling that every part of them is under so much stress that it is about to break entirely. It is stated by Ragnarok that failure to properly prepare to wield her will likely not kill her handler, but could likely cripple them for life all the same.

Additionally, if Ragnarok isn’t offered any energy even in her spirit form, she suffers from withdrawal and becomes increasingly cranky and irritable, yet doesn’t appear to risk dying as anything else would if starved for long periods of time. Whether she’s fed or not, her soul remains bound to whoever is her handler.

Currently, Daniel Sorres has absolutely no interest in using Ragnarok, but Aeon relayed that he will eventually need to train with and master her. In order to properly wield the sword, Daniel will need a vast amount of monster energy to both summon and sustain the weapon. How many mates he will need to use Synergy with in order to achieve this has yet to be revealed.

Trivia

  • The term “Ragnarök” comes from Norse mythology: ragna which means “the ruling power/gods” and rok which can have several meanings, including “origin, relations, or fate.” Put together, it roughly translates to “fate of the gods” or “twilight of the gods.”
  • The true meaning and story of Ragnaök has differing interpretations. In Norse mythology, Ragnarök details the absolute end of the world, accumulating in a chaotic battle that results in the destruction of several gods. In one version, all the gods die and the cosmos is robbed of life. But in other interpretations, Ragnarok involves a rebirth of the world.

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