I highly doubt all those Wyverns she let loose were super particular about whether or not the peasants they tried to eat alive were part of the mob or not
I highly doubt all those Wyverns she let loose were super particular about whether or not the peasants they tried to eat alive were part of the mob or not
The least evil FGO antagonist were Septem's Roman emperor league, because they had no evil plan whatsoever.
Medb did nothing wrong.
So true!
Britomart:
STR: C
END: A+
AGI: C
MAG: B
LUC: B+
NP: B
That endurance stat is probably with the armor on.
Spoiler:
Moriarty's second interlude is kinda nice in the sense that it addresses the naivety of just thinking "holmes will come back because he already did so once" (even showing how Chaldea's team knows it's not a given but chooses to believe it anyway) by having Moriarty lay down some more logical reasoning for a possible Sherlock return. Basically, the main point is that, aside from "he came back from the falls once, he can do it again", Chaldea believes he will return because a mystery remains unsolved, but Moriarty doesn't see why any great detective through history couldn't take on that role. Hell, even if you got "sherlock" back, due to throne stuff (when you ignore FGO conveniences) it wouldn't even be the "same" sherlock whatsoever.
However, on the other hand, Holmes played another important role in the Bleaching case. As an Apostle of the Alien, he was directly involved with the case and the Alien God (to an extent), which means, for all intents and purposes, he's a key witness. That in turn means that even if someone took over his role as detective for this unsolved mystery, his role in the case is not over.
Considering how Moriarty's first interlude set up the Traum reveal, this is basically confirmation (if one were needed) that he'll come back, though I would almost presume that in whatever chapter that is (whether it's LB7 or whatever "final third" Nasu has for next year), we'll have Moriarty tag along (because of the second half of this interlude), finally wrapping up the Holmes and Apostle stuff.
It's funny because Moriarty's reasoning for why Sherlock is going to come back is essentially the meta reasoning: his plot-line isn't resolved.
That's what I've been saying!
Come back as the enemy mid-boss.