@Lmpkio The Brotherhood could have a chat with Vader, it seems like they might hit it off. They do after all share a taste for fashion.
And nobody could talk to Vader or the 40k guy. xD
There's that other thing that I put off. But I finished it. : D
- Name: Gilgamesh
- Title: King of Heroes, Oldest King, Archer.
- Gender: Male
- Appearance: Very shiny.
- Personality: There are many things that could be said about Gilgamesh's attitude and personality but they all pale before one factor: his ego is greater than the sum of everything else combined. Only one person has ever been or will ever be acknowledged as his equal and everyone else has to struggle simply to earn his respect. Fortunately for everyone else, this means that to make him fight you properly is a fight in and of itself, with any normal person having to be decisively winning (on top of aggravating) in order for him to respond in kind. It's safer to be beneath his interest.
He also believes that everything belongs to him. Were he not in another world, this would be correct from at least one point of view and the change of scenery is hardly going to deter him a bit. Money, items, people: all are under the king's purview and to interfere with his desires it the worst crime of all. Strangely enough, this isn't simply restricted to the positive things: all that is wrong and corrupt with the world belongs to him. All the world's evil belongs to him as well and Gilgamesh is consequently able to withstand being immersed in something that would utterly corrupt or destroy some lesser figure.
When not being consumed utterly by his own arrogance, Gilgamesh is actually highly intelligent and insightful--you don't rule what basically amounts to the entirety of humanity for a lifetime, most of that as a good king, and fail to understand human nature. The most obvious display of this is that, no matter how angry he gets, he doesn't let his emotions dictate his actions.- Ideals: Himself. He is the absolute king, the only one with the authority to judge humanity, and all the world is his. He has no need or interest in lesser ideals, since (by Gilgamesh's view) anything that he does is intrinsically right.
- Biography: He would be shocked to hear that anybody was unfamiliar with the basic tale--it's the oldest literature recorded, after all. King of Uruk, wrestled Enkidu, killed a giant, rejected a goddess, killed a bull, lost his friend, quested for immortality, failed, reigned and died. A pretty accurate summation of the King of Heroes' life, only missing important parts: the gods created him in order to prevent the end of their own age, yet he took an interest in humanity and chose to be a standard by which humans could be measured. During his lifetime, he also collected every treasure, every creation of human ingenuity... and stuck them all in a vault. What did he actually have to do with them?
He was summoned, using the snake's very first shed skin, to be Archer for the Fourth Holy Grail War. Despite fighting an entire army at one point, the worst that could be said to have actually happened to him before the end was losing a dogfight. And then... All the World's Evil was dumped on his head. Uniquely, this was not a fatal and impossibly corrupting occurrence: instead, he shouldered it... and got a physical body because it just wanted to get him out. Not that this was entirely a good thing, because it made him more in tune with the general gist of humanity, and cynical consumer culture makes him quite bitter...- Powers: As a Servant, Gilgamesh is simply inhuman--though having a purely physical, rather than spiritual, body has blunted this. Nevertheless, both his strength and speed are on a level where a normal person would have no chance to compete and anything short of being impaled probably isn't fatal; losing an arm just made him angry. He lacks most of the other benefits that would come from being a Servant, again because of the physical body.
What he does still retain is a level of Charisma that is explicitly supernatural; should he choose to lead a fight or assist then it would be almost impossible to not feel an improvement in morale. He also has an uncanny ability to gather wealth and treasure to himself: drop him penniless and alone in a foreign culture and he will inevitably become one of the richest people alive without even trying. He literally can't be poor.
He mainly uses the Gate of Babylon to fight (or to supply wine for a conversation) as it's fully capable of accessing the nearly limitless depths of his treasury. Whilst he can just deposit the item into his hands, the Gate has the useful ability to arrange an array of weapons behind him... then shoot them all at high velocity. Then return anything back to the vault to be fired again.- Weapons: Due to collecting all their prototypes in life, there are very few heroes' weapons that aren't within his vault. Excalibur is a notable exception, due to having been forged long after his time by faeries. He does not, however, have anything in the way of experience in wielding them--so unless facing a vastly inferior foe at his mercy (and yet worthy enough to take some effort at all) they mostly just serve as glorified ammunition. Still, there's something to be said for using legendary weapons as the bullets for a railgun.
There are two weapons that he actually cares about. One, the Chains of Heaven, have been named for Enkidu and were used to restrain the Bull of Heaven. Since they can extend indefinitely, the chains can be shot from opening to opening in the Gate to create a spider's web of restrictions, or just used to grab someone from a long way away. They're normal steel chains against anyone without a touch of the divine, and consequently quite useless on most people he might fight.
The other weapon that is specifically Gilgamesh's is Ea, the Star of Creation that Split Heaven and Earth. It is a sword that is actually more of a drill, and completely useless for fighting with (though it can tear through your chest with no effort). What it can do is start spinning and unleash a magical blast of wind that can stop on any stage of disastrous effects. At its strongest, Ea splits the sky to show the world before it was created... and would tear it utterly apart. At a more reasonable level, it's a razor wind that can devastate an army, or a laser of wind that can overpower even Excalibur. Without being a Servant, you'd have to nearly kill him to bring it out.- Equipment: Aside from weaponry, Gilgamesh's treasury contains enough anti-magic jewellery to render him nigh impervious to magical attack (and shinier than ever), quite possibly an ancient Hindu spaceship (though given that was destroyed...), a well-stocked wine cellar, sources of infinite food... almost anything you could possibly need. If he can remember it exists, given that he was never fully aware of everything that lay within the treasury in the first place. It also includes his armour: despite being nameless and unidentified, it is one of the few things that can stand up to Excalibur's full power and remain intact. He still died after that but, unlike normal, he wasn't vaporised. It's good armour.
- Universe of Origin: Nasuverse (Immediately pre-Fate/Stay Night, specifically)
@Lmpkio The Brotherhood could have a chat with Vader, it seems like they might hit it off. They do after all share a taste for fashion.