MEas aVersion of

 

Tyrant

 

From the original video game

Resident Evil

 

Actually, this character has nothing to do with tyranny and is better thought of as an often misunderstood version of

Molasar

from the movie The Keep.

T𐅪 Creation of Molastar


In creating Will, I thought of myself as, among others, a combination.of William Birkin from Resident Evil, Friedrich.Nietzsche and, of course, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. Primarily, Will is simultaneously a version of Tyrant and a Christ like male who is, among other things, at war with Evil in a combination of video games played, in some appropriate way, for real.

 

Will = Tyrant⁴ + Overman¹ + Frankenstein's 𐅪wman Creation³

⊕ Molasar² (Rasalom)

 

(1, 2, 3 and 4 above indicate order of importance)

 

My version of Tyrant is often called

 

Myrant

Neatzsche's Overman

 

Übermensch (often translated as "Superman" or "Overman") is a central concept in the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche, first introduced in his 1883 work Thus Spoke Zarathustra. 

It represents a future stage of human evolution—a person who has "overcome" the limitations of traditional morality and religion to create their own values and meaning in life. 

Key Characteristics

• Self-Overcoming: The Übermensch is not a static state but a process of constantly surpassing one's own limitations, fears, and "herd mentality".

• Creator of Values: In a world where "God is dead" (meaning traditional religious foundations have collapsed), the Übermensch creates their own moral code based on life affirmation rather than external authority.

• Amor Fati (Love of Fate): This ideal involves saying "yes" to all of life, including its suffering and pain, without resentment or a desire for an "other-worldly" afterlife.

• Mastery over Self: It focuses on internal power and self-discipline rather than the domination of others. 

The Three Metamorphoses

Nietzsche described the journey toward the Übermensch through three symbolic stages in the Three Metamorphoses:

• The Camel: Represents the initial stage of bearing the weight of tradition and societal rules.

• The Lion: Represents the rejection of external values and the "thou shalt" of society.

• The Child: Represents the final stage of "holy saying yes," where the individual is free to create anew and play their own "game of creation."

Common Misconceptions

• Nazi Appropriation: The term was notoriously distorted and co-opted by the Nazi Party to support their ideology of a "master race," a use that Nietzsche's original philosophy—which was individualistic rather than nationalist—did not support.

• Comic Book Superhero: While Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster were inspired by the term, the modern superhero Superman is a moral protector, whereas Nietzsche's Übermensch is primarily a philosophical and psychological ideal focused on transcending common human failings.