Rodi’s the kind of character who grows on you the more you analyze 'Attack on Titan’s' later arcs. At first glance, he’s just another Titan shifter in Marley’s arsenal, but dig deeper and he’s this tragic figure trapped between bloodline duty and the changing world. His War Hammer ability is ridiculously OP—creating weapons out of thin air?—but Isayama cleverly balances it by making him physically vulnerable outside the Titan. It’s such a smart metaphor for how the old noble families’ power was both immense and fragile.
What fascinates me is how his story parallels Historia’s. Both are Reiss descendants, but where Historia rejects her lineage, Rodi wears his like armor... until it cracks. His death hits differently because you realize he never really had freedom—just different masters. The way his Titan gets consumed by Eren feels symbolic; the old order literally being devoured by the new chaos. Makes me wish we’d gotten more flashbacks of his training or interactions with the other Warriors.
Rodi’s introduction in Season 4 was such a curveball—this elegant, almost bored-looking guy who turns out to be one of Eren’s toughest opponents. I adore how his fighting style reflects his personality: calculated, ruthless, but with this weird artistry. Those crystalline structures he creates during the battle are like grotesque sculptures. It’s hilarious how the fandom initially thought he might be related to Historia because of their similar blond hair, but nope—just Isayama messing with us again.
His brief screentime packs a punch though. That scene where he gets yeasted? Brutal. But it also shows how 'Attack on Titan' never glorifies war—even the ‘villains’ get these haunting final moments. Rodi’s last words about not understanding Eren’s rage stick with me. In another story, he’d be the aloof villain, but here? Just another kid raised on propaganda, realizing too late that the world’s more complicated than he believed.
Rodi? Oh, that guy's a fascinating wildcard in 'Attack on Titan'—kinda sneaks up on you with his importance! He's the War Hammer Titan's inheritor from the Reiss family, but what makes him stand out is how he operates in the shadows for most of the Marley arc. Unlike the flashy aggression of the Jaw or Armored Titans, Rodi's power is all about precision and brutal creativity—those spiky constructs he whips up are nightmare fuel. I love how his quiet demeanor contrasts with the chaos he unleashes during the Liberio battle. It’s like he’s this chess player suddenly flipping the board mid-game.
What really stuck with me was his dynamic with Eren. Their fight isn’t just physical; it’s this ideological clash between two guys who’ve been molded by war in totally different ways. Rodi’s got that aristocratic detachment, but you catch glimpses of his humanity when he’s forced to confront the reality of Eldians on both sides. That moment when he realizes Eren’s using his own family’s tactics against him? Chills. Makes you wonder how much of his loyalty to Marley was genuine and how much was just survival instinct.
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Jericho St. Claire was born to rule—crown prince of Scotland, heir to both a kingdom and a powerful pack. But after a devastating accident leaves him the sole survivor, everything changes. Branded a liability and cast out by his own blood, Jericho is stripped of his birthright and forced into exile.
With nothing but his Beta, Slade, at his side, he flees to the United States and disappears into a small town determined to rebuild what he’s lost. Together, they forge a new pack from the ground up—one built on loyalty, survival, and hard-earned trust. But the past refuses to stay buried.
Enemies rise from the shadows, drawn by whispers of power and a prophecy that binds Jericho to a fate he never chose. Though estranged, his father watches from afar—and when danger closes in, even exile cannot sever blood ties completely.
Caught between expectation and defiance, Jericho must navigate the weight of leadership, the scars of betrayal, and a mate he isn’t sure he wants—but cannot ignore. As history threatens to repeat itself, he faces a choice: follow the path carved by those before him, or break the cycle and become something greater.
Forged through loss, tested by loyalty, and haunted by destiny, Jericho must rise—not as the prince he was born to be, but as the king he chooses to become.
" Who was that boy, angel?" He asked coming forward and she started going backwards.
She started saying with her shaky voice," My.......umm......my.............
Because of fear, she wasn't being able to form any words. She was crying and shivering like a little kitten.
" Answer me," he shouted and she replied in one go," My classmate."
He asked raising one of his brows," Only classmate?"
" And my friend too," She replied hurriedly gulping down her saliva.
Hearing her, he continued looking at her with dark suspicious eyes when she requested crying," I swear I don't have anything with him. He is just my classmate and friend. Nothing else."
" I see. But, you have to prove that he is only your classmate and friend, nothing special," He said caressing her rosy cheeks.
She asked wiping her tears," What do I have to do?"
" Nothing much. You just have to punish him for thinking that he can be your friend. And, you know how to punish," He replied calmly and she lost all colour from her face.
**************
Orni was like an innocent angel unaware of the existence of the demons which lurks among us wearing human skin. She never imagined even in her dream that a demon was waiting for her very eagerly to crush her in every possible way.
********************
Trigger warning and abusive scene ahead. Kindly read at your own risk.
I am not a native English speaker so pardon my mistakes.
Maya de Cruz thought the worst thing that could happen before her wedding was catching her fiancé cheating on her.
She was wrong.
One reckless night with Rhysand Bernadi, her fiancé’s dangerous older brother, changed the course of her entire life. By morning, Maya disappeared without a word, carrying a secret powerful enough to destroy two old-money families.
Five years later, Maya has rebuilt herself in Los Angeles as the owner of De Cruz Atelier, a luxury event company trusted by celebrities, billionaires, and people rich enough to turn scandals into PR strategy. Her life is controlled, successful, and carefully protected around the one thing that matters most: her son, Aiden.
Then Maya is hired for the biggest project of her career.
Designing Rhysand Bernadi’s wedding.
Rhysand is no longer the reckless heir she left behind in Hawaii. He’s colder now. More powerful. More dangerous. And the moment he sees Maya again, it becomes painfully clear that neither of them ever truly moved on.
As old attraction resurfaces, family tensions explode, and anonymous threats begin appearing around Maya’s life, the past she buried starts clawing its way back to the surface. Because someone knows what happened five years ago.
And someone has been watching Maya for much longer than she realizes.
The problem is no longer just the wedding.
It’s the little boy with Rhysand’s eyes.
Seventeen years ago, Ye family held a wrong daughter, and seventeen years later, he was found. sThe return of the real daughter is despised by her father, disliked by her grandmother, and disliked by her nominally fiance. Her father "Gu annd Ye family arre married. The Gu family doesn't accept a village girl as a daughter-in-law. For the sake of the interests of both families, we will announce that you are an adopted daughter." Mrs. ye: "your academic performance is too poor to sleep in the master room. Go to the guest room." Fiance: "only the daughter of the Ye family, Mary Ye, is worthy of me. Get out of here!" Yuri said: it doesn't matter. Later The name Yuri appears frequently in the headlines. Uncover secret 1: Yuri is the learning ttalent with full marks in the college entrance examination! Uncover secret 2: the hacker crow is Yyru! Uncover secret 3: No.1 in the list of natural medicine is Yuri! Uncover secret 4: Yuri is Fremmingo's favorite! Uncover secrets 5: Once those who despised Yuri were slapped in the face, kneeling for help, but they were taught by a man.
“A black rose symbolises death and grief but new beginnings as well.”
Rojean Cai has the most perfect life anyone could ever imagine. She has a stable job that pays her well, a fiance who loves her so much, and a family that will continue to support and care for her and she feels like life has just been really kind to her. Unbeknownst to her, when Krister Usoro approached her for a favour-- a favour in which she felt she couldn’t decline, her life had turned for the worse as it had never been. All hell breaks loose when the truth about a person she never thought she’d meet unveils, leaving her clinging to the thin thread of hope she has left.
A Slave. A King. A Coward. A god.
6 kingdoms.
Arlankis, Kronos, Mrygyan, Summer Isle, the Free Nation, and Vilandres.
The Great War had men triumphing over dragons.
Victory brought greed and cruelty. Men became scheming kings creating a chasm between nobles and common people, bringing back division and slave trades.
Slave and hot-headed, Mare’s only claim in life is that she is a dragon lord, an untested claim, and as such has been chosen to unseat the cruel king of fantastical Arlankis, becoming a hero.
A hero without a proven claim.
When her attempt at heroism, assassinating the king, goes horribly wrong, she becomes the king’s slave, chosen to please his sexual demands.
Her actions also condemns her friends and people to a horrible fate.
Her journey is only beginning when an incident proves that she is indeed a dragon lord, able to command a surviving dragon of the war. This changes everything. Vallezarii, king of Arlankis marries her to give him dragon heirs.
But she is not the only dragon lord.
Perci, the king’s heir, has secrets of his own. He is a dragon lord. Like Mare, he seeks to unite the 6 kingdoms again.
The true prophecy: A hero will arise to unite the kingdoms under dragons. Who becomes a hero? Mare or Perci?
Challenges arise.
First came love: Mare and Perci are bound by their blood and desires. Mutual hate becomes more. The consequence of their affair is disastrous.
Then came betrayal: Dragons rise again. Thirst for power is once again unquenchable. Men want to rise with dragons, doing anything– even betraying kin, to dine with a dragon lord.
Then the mystery: A seventh kingdom. The Dragon Seat. People who seek to suppress dragon dynasty. The opposition are the mysterious descendants of dragon lord.
Rodi's portrayal in 'Vinland Saga' is such a fascinating mix of brutality and vulnerability. At first glance, he's this hulking, almost monstrous figure in Askeladd's band, known for his raw strength and terrifying presence in battles. But what really gets me is how the story peels back layers to show his deeper struggles—his loyalty to Askeladd isn't just blind obedience; there's a twisted sense of honor and even desperation there. The scene where he fights Thorfinn highlights this duality—he's not just a mindless thug, but someone clinging to his role because it's all he has.
And then there's his end. Without spoiling too much, the way he goes out is so... human. It's not glamorous or heroic, just messy and sad. That's what 'Vinland Saga' does so well—it takes these seemingly one-dimensional warriors and forces you to see their humanity, even when you don't want to. Rodi's arc left me with this lingering melancholy, like mourning someone who was never truly a 'good' person, but whose pain felt real.
Rodi isn't a super common name in anime, but I can think of a couple of characters off the top of my head. The first one that comes to mind is Rodi from 'Mobile Suit Gundam: Iron-Blooded Orphans.' He's part of Tekkadan, this scrappy group of kids trying to survive in a brutal world. What I love about him is how he starts off as this kind of reckless, hotheaded guy, but you see him grow over time. He's not the main focus, but he adds a lot of heart to the crew.
Another Rodi I stumbled upon is from 'Kuroko's Basketball,' though he's more of a minor character. He's part of the rival team and doesn't get much screen time, but his design stuck with me because of how exaggerated his features are—typical of the show's style. Honestly, I wish there were more Rodis out there; it's a fun name that could fit a lot of different personalities.