Who Created Rin The First Disciple And Why Was It Made?

2025-11-06 15:38:44 356
ABO Personality Quiz
Take a quick quiz to find out whether you‘re Alpha, Beta, or Omega.
Scent
Personality
Ideal Love Pattern
Secret Desire
Your Dark Side
Start Test

2 Answers

Uriah
Uriah
2025-11-07 17:23:41
Scrolling through fan art one rainy evening, I found a stylized portrait of Rin that made me want to explain the lore in simple terms: Rin was created by an order of scholars who called themselves the Keepers, and their goal was pragmatic rather than mystical. They wanted someone who could teach a shattered world without betraying the old knowledge. So they built a disciple — half crafted, half awakened — to be a living textbook and a charismatic leader.

In-universe, the Keepers used relics, oral histories, and a form of memory-binding to give Rin a personality built from consensus rather than birth. The idea was to make a teacher who wouldn’t carry the bad habits of any single faction. But storytelling-wise, the author made Rin to explore the gap between programmed purpose and personal choice. That tension creates all the best scenes: when Rin refuses a ritual because it harms people, or when supporters must choose whether to follow a perfectly made idol or a messy, questioning human. I like how the creator flips the premise — a tool meant to heal becomes the seed of change — and that ambiguity is what keeps fans theorizing and making fanworks long after the initial release.
Austin
Austin
2025-11-10 16:21:37
I got hooked the moment I read the creator notes tucked at the end of the first volume of 'Rin: The First Disciple' — the series was dreamed up by a quiet but fierce storyteller named Emiko Sato, who built Rin as both a character and a philosophical experiment. Sato's early essays explained that she wanted a figure who could carry the weight of a thousand failed ideologies and still question every one of them. So Rin was conceived as an engineered disciple: part construct, part vessel for ancestral memories, stitched together from discarded scriptures and the last Embers of a sacred ritual. The reason for making Rin, according to Sato, was to force readers to sit with the uglier questions — what does devotion mean when faith is manufactured, who gets to decide morality, and can a created being carve its own moral compass?

Reading it felt like being pulled into a conversation between 'Frankenstein' and 'The Matrix' — Sato borrowed the horror of creation and mixed it with a modern, existential pulse. Rin’s origin involves the 'Founding conclave,' a Cabal of scholars who, after a cultural collapse, attempted to synthesize a perfect disciple capable of restoring societal cohesion. They grafted ritual knowledge to a synthetic mind, hoping for a seamless conduit to the divine. Instead, what they birthed was messy and painfully alive: Rin questions doctrine, reinterprets ceremonies, and ultimately exposes how institutions use sanctity to consolidate power. That intended purpose — a tool for restoration — flips into a narrative about autonomy and the ethics of making minds.

What I love is how Sato layers her world-building with visuals and side materials; early sketches of Rin show deliberate contradictions — childlike features with mechanic seams, robes embroidered with computational sigils. Fans took that and ran: debates about whether Rin is truly the first disciple or merely the first of many, forums dissecting which parts of ancient scripture were actually encoded into Rin’s memory banks. For me, Rin’s creation resonates because it asks us to consider the cost of peace engineered from obedience. The character works on multiple levels — a cautionary myth, a rebellion's emblem, and a heartfelt study of identity — and that complexity is exactly why I keep rereading the series and arguing with friends long after the final chapter closed.
View All Answers
Scan code to download App

Related Books

Was the Baby Why You Called It Off?
Was the Baby Why You Called It Off?
After an unexpected pregnancy, Silas Shaw, who had always avoided the topic of marriage, suddenly proposed to me. Overjoyed, I readily accepted. However, on the day of the wedding, I stumbled upon an unexpected conversation between him and his friends. "Are you really going to marry Chaldene just because of your child with Nora?" one of them asked. Silas was visibly irritated and full of disdain as he responded, "It's all because of my mother. She kept saying that Nora's family background wasn't good enough.” "If it weren't to give my child with Nora a better status, why on earth would I marry Chaldene?” "You have no idea how boring a woman like her is in bed. I got tired of her after sleeping with her twice."
|
8 Chapters
CREATED FOR RUIN
CREATED FOR RUIN
***Explicit 18+*** "I've missed the warmth of your pussy, the feel of it. God Ginevra, you're so fucking perfect." I rasped and tightened my grip on her. I began rocking her against me ever so gently with parted lips. Her tight pussy very often gripping unto my dick, taking me hostage with each rock against me and a loud scream finally escaped from the back of my throat. *** The game of chess is one love cannot salvage. When the king and the queen come out to play, they have no other goal set before them if not going at each other's throat for the kill until a winner emerges. This is the game of the mafia, the game that'd never allow Love exist between two rivals. They want to love and care for each other but don't know how- all they've known all their lives is loyalty to their famiglia and name. What would happen when the only option becomes death?
10
|
86 Chapters
The Monster You Created
The Monster You Created
When I was seven, my constant vomiting got so bad that my mother took me to court and accused me of being born dangerous. If the charge stuck, I would be stripped of my family ties and sent straight to prison. Everyone said my mother was overreacting. "He's just a kid. Kids get sick. As his mother, you should be more understanding." But the moment the evidence was shown, the room went dead quiet. My mother had drunk herself into a stomach bleed just to land a contract, and the second she got home, I threw up all over it. The deal was voided, and she lost her job on the spot. On my sister, Ophelia Sowle's, birthday, I threw up all over her cake right in front of all her classmates. After that, she was shunned by everyone at school. She spiraled into depression and even slashed her wrists. It didn't matter where I was, at the dinner table or under the covers. I could start vomiting at any moment. My mother and Ophelia had to clean me up more than 30 times a day. It wore them down to the breaking point. What infuriated them the most was that every time I finished throwing up, I would look at them and laugh, as if I was mocking them. The judge brought the gavel down and declared me guilty of being born bad. Ophelia's eyes turned red as she cried, saying she couldn't bear to lose me. I didn't cry or fight it. I accepted the verdict. But I requested that the judge watch my memories first. The judge looked stunned. "Memory extraction means drilling into your brain. The pain is unbearable. Are you sure?" I nodded without hesitation. But Ophelia suddenly panicked. "I don't agree!"
|
8 Chapters
The First Heir
The First Heir
(Alternate Title: The Glorious LifeMain Characters: Philip Clarke, Wynn Johnston) “Oh no! If I don’t work harder, I’d have to return to the family house and inherit that monstrous family fortune.” As the heir to an elite wealthy family, Philip Clarke was troubled by this…
9
|
6385 Chapters
He Made It Official; I Made My Exit
He Made It Official; I Made My Exit
During a company team-building event, I collapse from a seafood allergy. Yet my fiance, Frederick Scott, rushes Beatrice Sutton, who only twisted her ankle, to the hospital. I come close to dying because I don't get treatment in time. Later, Frederick explains, "Beatrice is my best friend's sister. He's seriously ill now, and I promised him I'd take care of his sister. I swear I'll keep my distance from her from now on." This isn't the first time I've heard an excuse like that. On our fifth anniversary, Beatrice accidentally deleted a work file and burst into tears out of worry. When Frederick heard about it, he left me stranded on a mountain and drove back to the office himself. I spent a whole day and night walking home through the rain. On Christmas, Beatrice's house lost power. Frederick was worried that she might be scared of being alone, and he rushed over to her place without even telling me, leaving me out in the snow waiting for him until dawn. These kinds of things have happened countless times. Afterward, he always brushes them off with the same excuse. I've long since lost all faith in him and no longer believe a single word he says. I pick up my phone and call the company that keeps reaching out to me. "I've decided to accept your offer from last time. I'll bring the core technology with me."
|
8 Chapters
Why Mr CEO, Why Me
Why Mr CEO, Why Me
She came to Australia from India to achieve her dreams, but an innocent visit to the notorious kings street in Sydney changed her life. From an international exchange student/intern (in a small local company) to Madam of Chen's family, one of the most powerful families in the world, her life took a 180-degree turn. She couldn’t believe how her fate got twisted this way with the most dangerous and noble man, who until now was resistant to the women. The key thing was that she was not very keen to the change her life like this. Even when she was rotten spoiled by him, she was still not ready to accept her identity as the wife of this ridiculously man.
9.7
|
62 Chapters

Related Questions

Where Did Chloe Ferry Revealing Photos First Surface Online?

5 Answers2025-11-06 10:49:17
I got pulled into the timeline like a true gossip moth and tracked how things spread online. Multiple reports said the earliest appearance of those revealing images was on a closed forum and a private messaging board where fans and anonymous users trade screenshots. From there, screenshots were shared outward to wider audiences, and before long they were circulating on mainstream social platforms and tabloid websites. I kept an eye on the way threads evolved: what started behind password-protected pages leaked into more public Instagram and Snapchat reposts, then onto news sites that ran blurred or cropped versions. That pattern — private space → social reposts → tabloid pick-up — is annoyingly common, and seeing it unfold made me feel protective and a bit irritated at how quickly privacy evaporates. It’s a messy chain, and my takeaway was how fragile online privacy can be, which left me a little rattled.

When Was Divine Dr. Gatzby First Published And Released?

5 Answers2025-10-20 17:48:42
One afternoon I finally looked up the publication trail for 'Divine Dr. Gatzby' because I’d been telling friends about it for weeks and wanted to be solid on the dates. The earliest incarnation showed up online first: it was serialized on the creator’s website and released to readers on July 12, 2016. That initial drop felt like a hidden gem back then — lightweight pages, experimental layouts, and a lot of breathless word-of-mouth that made it spread fast across forums and micro-blogs. A collected, printed edition followed later once the fanbase grew and a small press picked it up. The physical release came out in March 2018, which bundled the web chapters with a few bonus sketches and an author afterword. I still have the paperback on my shelf; the print run felt intimate, like a zine you’d swap at a con. Seeing that web serial become a tangible volume was quietly satisfying, and I love how the two releases show different sides of the work: the raw immediacy of July 2016 online, then the polished, tangible March 2018 print that I can actually leaf through with a cup of tea.

Why Is The First Page In A Book Crucial For Novel Engagement?

3 Answers2025-08-10 13:26:15
As someone who devours books like candy, I can say the first page is like a handshake with the author—it sets the tone. A gripping opener like the one in 'The Name of the Wind' by Patrick Rothfuss immediately pulls me into the world. The way Kvothe narrates his story from the start makes it impossible to put down. Descriptions, voice, and pacing all matter. If the first page feels flat or confusing, I’ll hesitate to continue. But when it’s sharp, like the eerie beginning of 'Annihilation' by Jeff VanderMeer, I’m hooked. It’s not just about plot; it’s about trust. A strong first page tells me the author knows how to weave magic. I’ve abandoned books where the first page felt clunky or overly verbose. Contrast that with 'The Hunger Games,' where Suzanne Collins throws you straight into Katniss’s harsh reality. No fluff, just raw emotion. That immediacy is what keeps readers glued. Even in slower burns like 'Pride and Prejudice,' the wit and social commentary in the opening lines signal something special. The first page is a promise—if it delivers intrigue, emotion, or a unique voice, I’m sold.

How Does The First Page In A Book Differ Between Novels And Mangas?

3 Answers2025-08-10 18:49:33
The first page of a novel usually sets the tone with dense text, maybe a quote or a brief scene to hook you. It's all about words painting a picture in your mind. With manga, the first page hits you visually—dynamic panels, bold artwork, maybe a splash of action or a striking character pose. Novels draw you in with prose, while manga grabs your attention with visuals and often includes sound effects right from the start. The pacing feels different too; novels ease you in, while manga can drop you straight into the middle of something exciting.

When Did Antoni First Appear In The Original Comic?

5 Answers2025-10-17 00:11:20
Good question — tracking down a character’s true first comic appearance can actually turn into a small detective hunt, and 'Antoni' is one of those names that pops up in a few different places depending on the fandom. If you mean a mainstream superhero or indie-comic character, it helps to know the publisher or series because there are multiple characters with similar names across comics and webcomics. That said, if you don’t have the publisher at hand, here’s how I usually pin this down and what to expect when hunting for a first appearance. Start with the big comic databases: 'Comic Vine', the 'Grand Comics Database', the Marvel and DC wikis (if you’re dealing with those universes), and good old Wikipedia. I type the name in quotes plus phrases like “first appearance” or “debut” and filter results by comics or webcomics. If the character is from an indie or webcomic, track down the archive or original strip—often the character debuts in a single-panel strip or a short backup story that gets overlooked in broader searches. For manga or manhwa, it’s usually a chapter number and publication month instead of an issue number, so try searches like “chapter 12 debut” or “first chapter appearance.” I once spent way too long trying to find a minor supporting character who only appeared in a serialized backup story; the trick was checking the author’s notes at the end of the volume, which explicitly mentioned when they introduced the character. If you’re looking for a specific, documented answer — for example the exact issue number, month, and year — the databases I mentioned often list that in the character’s page. For self-published comics or webcomics, the author’s site, Patreon, or an old Tumblr/Archive.org snapshot is usually the definitive source. Comic shops’ back-issue listings and fan wikis can also be goldmines; community-run wikis frequently correct mistakes that slip into bigger databases. And if the character has been adapted elsewhere (animated episode, game, novel), those adaptations sometimes cite the original issue explicitly, which makes it easier. Since 'Antoni' could be a lesser-known indie character or a supporting figure in a larger universe, I’d start with a quick search on those databases and the webcomic archives. I love these little research missions — they reveal surprising editorial notes, variant covers, and sometimes the creator’s commentary about why the character was introduced. If you want, I can walk through a specific search strategy for a particular publisher or webcomic, but either way it’s a fun hunt and I always enjoy finding the tiny first-appearance gems that fans later latch onto.

Where Can I Buy His Second Death Is My First Breath Paperback?

3 Answers2025-10-16 13:24:59
I get a little giddy when people ask about tracking down physical copies, because hunting down paperbacks is one of my favorite little quests. If you want a paperback of 'His Second Death Is My First Breath', start by checking the major international stores first: Amazon (for your country-specific site), Barnes & Noble, and Bookshop.org. Those places often carry English-translated print runs when a book has an official release. If the title’s a direct translation from another language, the publisher’s own website is gold — they usually list retailers or sell direct, and you can find the ISBN there which makes searching so much easier. If the mainstream route fails, I switch into detective mode: search used-book marketplaces like eBay, AbeBooks, Alibris, and Mercari. These sites are where out-of-print or limited-run paperbacks resurface. For novels that originated in Chinese, Korean, or Japanese, also try region-specific retailers like Taobao, JD.com, or Rakuten — you’ll need to account for import shipping and possibly a proxy buyer if the site doesn’t ship internationally. Don’t forget local comic shops and indie bookstores; staff can sometimes order a copy through their distributors or put you on a waitlist. I also set up alerts (wishlist on Amazon, saved searches on eBay) and follow publisher and fan pages — a lot of times reprints or special editions are announced there. If you're patient and persistent, a paperback will pop up; I’ve snagged several rare volumes that way and it felt like winning a small treasure, so good luck hunting!

When Was Atonement At Our Shared Grave First Published?

5 Answers2025-10-16 05:20:41
Surprising little detail that stuck with me: 'Atonement at Our Shared Grave' first saw publication on July 12, 2019. I dug out my old notes and bookmarks and that date is the one attached to the original release I downloaded, so it’s the one I always tell folks when they ask. The moment it hit the web, there was a burst of discussion in a few forums I lurked in — people dissecting the prose, pointing out favorite lines, and swapping theories about the protagonist's motivations. I remember how the early reactions felt electric, like we were discovering a tiny, secret gem together. Over the next months a few reviews and translations cropped up, which helped it reach a wider audience. Even now, whenever I re-read parts of it, that July 2019 timestamp anchors it in my memory of late-night reading binges and enthusiastic thread comments. It’s one of those works that still gives me a quiet thrill when I recall its debut.

What Are The Doctor’S Most Iconic Episodes To Watch First?

5 Answers2025-10-17 22:18:48
If you're gearing up to meet the Time Lord for the first time, there are a handful of episodes that will give you the best, most iconic taste of what 'Doctor Who' can do — from weird emotional turns to laugh-out-loud companion chemistry to pure science-fiction thrills. My viewing path has always been half-curiosity, half-ritual: I usually start new watchers on a modern anchor and then branch into classics depending on how they react. For absolute starters, 'Rose' is the gentle, human doorway into the 2005 revival; it sets the tone for modern companions and how the Doctor interacts with ordinary people. If you want something short and jaw-dropping, 'Blink' is a brilliant one-off that introduces the Weeping Angels and proves the show can terrify and amaze in under an hour. Once someone’s hooked, I like to hand them a mixed bag: 'The Empty Child' / 'The Doctor Dances' is a masterpiece of creepy atmosphere and emotional payoff, and it’s a great showcase of the Ninth Doctor’s compassion. 'Dalek' gives you the modern Dalek mythos in an intense, personal way, while 'The Girl in the Fireplace' is one of those episodes that turns a bizarre premise into a heartbreaking romance. If you want timey-wimey and celebratory, 'The Day of the Doctor' (the 50th anniversary special) is a love letter to fans: it weaves together multiple Doctors and offers big, satisfying moments without spoiling the smaller episodes. Don’t skip the classics if you have time. 'Genesis of the Daleks' is the origin story that shaped decades of lore, and 'An Unearthly Child' is a fascinating, raw look at the show’s beginnings. For a uniquely modern, almost theatrical experience, 'Heaven Sent' is relentless and astonishing — one Doctor trapped in a nightmare loop, which highlights how brilliant the format can be. For lighter, character-driven joy, 'Vincent and the Doctor' and 'The Eleventh Hour' are perfect to appreciate the quirks of each era. My personal route tends to be: start modern with 'Rose', sprinkle in 'Blink' and 'The Empty Child', then leap to 'The Day of the Doctor', and finally dive into classics like 'Genesis of the Daleks' if you’re hungry for history. Each of these hooked me in different ways, and they still give me chills and smiles every time I rewatch them.
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status