Thread:Misry6/@comment-31330278-20190811230954/@comment-31330278-20191006171649

1. I have one definite PE, and the other two are up for debate. The definite one is Khelshot Axedouble (pronounced Axe-E-Diub-Lay, but without stretching the Y). He's Hawarged's elder brother and the leader of the wall sharks clans. He's based on Hitler, but also on a violent man I once met (i'll tell you more when the time will come). Khelshot hates Hawarged for being born, and constantly tried to kill him, both during the story and long before. Hawarged stopped counting after the 3rd time. In any situation where Khelshot doesn't try to kill/execute Hawarged, he tried to exploit Hawarged to the bone. Both brothers are orcs, except Khelshot is a psychopath who could lead every pre-Warcraft orcish horde (or any horde for that matter) and Hawarged is a good orc with deep self-hating who work with mankind against his race. The first less definite villain, who shares Abretar's pragmatism and backstabbing tendencies, is Hamid Rouhani. He's a death knight working as Khelshot's right hand. His job as a death knight gives him some extent of necromantic powers, but his connection to the dark forces isn't as deep and binding as the warlocks who sold their soul have. He doesn't share Khelshot's madness either, just as much as Abretar isn't as mad as the other shadow dragons. The second less definite one is Tyrant. He's not just the common red fire-breathing dragon. He have a vision. He want to achieve things, and is less sadistic than Khelshot and Hamid. He'll be less vile than Deathwing, but still the last creature you want to piss off. He'll keep manipulating orcs and mankind alike even when three mages (technically two mages and a warlock) will steal 75% of his powers and reduce him to an underground steam, similar to the gas/steam fountains under the oracle sites in ancient Greece. Even in that state, he'll intoxicate an orc hunter to become his new champion. Think about a fundementalist who create a new religion by turning himself to intoxicating stuff.

2. A vicious monster with a heart of stone becomes a stone. Good symbolism :-). Syclone sounds like w:c:hero:Baymax:Baymax, especially with his moments of almost killing Voltron with Abretar. The Camelot academy sounds interesting. Jonathan is based on King Arthur, Patricia is based on Gwen, and who's based on Lance? And did Morgan meant to be redeemed, or just not a villain at all in your version?

3. Frodo is a holocaust survivor. Similarly to Harry Potter, but not as good as a character. Bilbo is jewish too, because the hobbits were meant to represent the jews. Sméagol is a judenrat. Morgoth might be the architects behind the murder of Frantz Ferdinand and the beginning of WW1. Eru is ambiguous, but I do know Gandalf is Churchill. I assume Galadriel represents the heroic faction of America, which eventually convinced the rest of the state to take action after bombing Pearl Harbor. What does Azog and the goblin king are meant to symbolize?

P.S: Here's my new villains rap battles series:

https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/User_blog:ScaryMovie53/Villains_Rap_Battles#Verdict

episode 2, with Facilier and Rasputin, is out. Take your vote :-).

P.S2: I'm working on a new wiki dedicated to underrated characters. The opening page says what a character should be to qualify. If you have underrated characters you want to add, feel free to add and explain why are they worthy for this wiki. I know this wiki is broken, and I can't create normal templets (character information, stub, construction and such), but with some work, it might work.