How Do Berserk Guts And Griffith'S Choices Affect Their Fates?

2026-06-27 19:14:54 52
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3 Answers

Xander
Xander
2026-06-29 16:24:49
I always thought Guts had way less 'choice' in the traditional sense. Dude gets sold by his 'dad,' forced to kill him, finds the only place he belongs, and then has that brutally ripped away. His 'choice' after the Eclipse is just... to keep moving. It’ docsn’t feel like a heroic decision, more like a feral animal backed into a corner. The Berserker Armor is basically the physical manifestation of that: you lose yourself because the only way to survive is to become a monster.

Griffith? He had every option. He could have let Guts leave. He could have grieved and rebuilt. But his dream was more important than his people. His choice on that hill was to break the world rather than let it bend him. He got his kingdom, but he’s just a puppet on a prettier string. Funny how the guy who wanted to rule his own fate ended up being the one most completely owned by his.
Brandon
Brandon
2026-06-30 17:42:22
The core difference is in their relationship to causality. Griffith accepts the predetermined path of the God Hand, believing it to be the pinnacle of his own will. Guts smashes against the current of fate with every swing of his sword. Griffith’s choice leads to a glorious, empty throne. Guts’s struggle, however bloody, carves out a sliver of free will in a universe seemingly designed to crush it. His fate isn’t sealed; it’s a battlefield.
Oliver
Oliver
2026-07-01 19:05:38
Griffith’s trajectory is the more obvious tragedy of ambition. He builds the Band of the Hawk on a pyramid of corpses, but his own tower is made of glass. The moment he believes he can possess everything—Casca, the kingdom, Guts’s loyalty—is the moment he shatters. He chooses the God Hand’s offer because it’s the ultimate extension of his dream: absolute control, but at the cost of his own humanity. He becomes Femto, a being of pure will, yet utterly hollow. His 'fate' is a gilded cage of his own design; he gets his castle, but it’s a nightmare landscape populated by the ghosts of everyone he sacrificed.

Guts, on the other hand, doesn't so much choose his fate as he chooses to keep fighting the one handed to him. His entire life is a series of reactions to monstrous choices made by others: Gambino selling him, Griffith's betrayal, the Eclipse. His 'choice' is in the relentless, grinding refusal to die. He becomes the Black Swordsman not out of destiny, but out of pure, stubborn survival. Where Griffith’s fate is a twisted fulfillment, Guts’s is an endless defiance. The irony is that Griffith, who sought to control fate, is now trapped by it, while Guts, who is hounded by a cursed fate, finds fleeting moments of purpose and even something like family in his struggle against it. The Beast of Darkness inside him is the cost of that struggle, the erosion of his own humanity mirroring Griffith’s transformation, but born from trauma rather than ambition.

In the end, Griffith’s fate is static—a king frozen in a hell of his own making. Guts’s fate is motion, a path forward stained with blood but lit by the occasional, hard-won spark of something like hope. One chose a dream and became a demon; the other had a nightmare forced on him and became, against all odds, something almost human again.
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4 Answers2026-02-07 02:10:55
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