Moyo
Name: Moyo
Class: Headhunter
Identity: Chimera
Weapon: Has a weapon that's a little smiler to rider's expect has a
sickle on a chain
Gender: female
Appearance: strangly she looks like rider noone in the dark world
knows why so it remains unkown. (in 15 year old form she looks like
rider's sisters)
Abilities: uses traps can also turn herself little. (meaning she can
turn herself into a 15 year old (this isn't really much of a abilitie
she is still the same.) and also Martial arts
Noble Phantasm: Rage of the three sisters- Moyo would ran at the enemy
and slashes them about five times and then sends the oppent flying
backwards with a blash of fire.
STR: Speed
Weak: Strength
Master: Sukie
history of the identity: In Greek mythology, the Chimera (Greek
???????; Latin Chimaera) is a monstrous creature made of the parts of
multiple animals. Chimera was one of the offspring of Typhon and
Echidna. Descriptions vary – some say it had the body of a goat, the
tail of a snake or dragon and the head of a lion, though others say it
had heads of both the goat and lion, with a snake for a tail. All
descriptions, however, agree that it breathed fire from one or more of
its heads. Sighting the chimera was a sign of storms, shipwrecks, and
natural disasters (particularly volcanos). In Medieval Christian art,
the chimera appears as a symbol of Satanic forces.
While there are different genealogies, in one version it mated with
its brother Orthrus and mothered the Sphinx and the Nemean Lion.
Chimera was finally defeated by Bellerophon with the help of Pegasus,
the winged horse, at the command of King Iobates of Lycia. There are
varying descriptions of its death – some say merely that Bellerophon
ran it through with his spear, whereas others say that he fitted his
spear point with lead that melted when exposed to Chimera's fiery
breath and consequently killed it. Another story is that Bellerophon
chopped off the three heads of the Chimera, and it fell to the ground
dead.
The myths of the Chimera can be found in Apollodorous' Library (book
1), Virgil's Aeneid (book 6), Homer's Iliad (book 6), Ovid's
Metamorphoses (book VI 339; IX 648) and Hesiod's Theogony.
Chimera is also an relative of Cerberus and Hydra
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