What Key Moments Define Berserk Guts And Griffith'S Conflict?

2026-06-27 08:10:11 37
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3 Answers

Isaac
Isaac
2026-06-28 10:09:05
Whew, where to even start? I mean, that one panel after the Eclipse, the way Guts just... keeps going. That's the whole story right there. But for me, the moment that feels like the real fracture is earlier, after they rescue Griffith from the Tower of Rebirth. Guts leaves, and Griffith breaks. That's the pivot. Griffith sees Guts choosing his own path and can't handle it—the one person he couldn't psychologically dominate just walked away, and it shattered his entire self-image. Everything after that, the Eclipse and all, feels like Griffith trying to force the world back into a shape where he's on top, where Guts is a part of his story again, even if it means destroying him.

That scene of Guts weeping over Casca's body after the Eclipse, sword in hand, broken beyond belief—that's the fallout of Griffith's choice made manifest. It’s not just the physical horror; it's the complete emotional annihilation of everyone who trusted him. Their conflict becomes this endless loop of Griffith needing to erase that moment of his own perceived weakness, and Guts defined forever by the aftermath.
Priscilla
Priscilla
2026-06-30 13:26:05
Everyone points to the Eclipse, obviously, and it’s huge—the sheer brutality of it, Guts losing an eye and an arm, Casca’s fate. That’s the physical and emotional breaking point. But I always go back to the fight between them before all that, when Guts actually beats Griffith. That’s the crack. For Griffith, being defeated physically by the one person he sees as his, it’s the ultimate humiliation. It shatters his myth of superiority. From that moment on, he’s spiraling, and everything bad happens because he can’t live in a world where Guts is stronger. The Eclipse is just him rewriting the rules of reality so he can ‘win’ again, permanently.
Claire
Claire
2026-07-02 01:28:43
The whole golden age arc feels like a slow burn to the conflict, honestly. You watch them become comrades, and then rivals, but the key for me is that moment when Griffith gives that speech about a friend. He says a friend is someone who would never aspire to another's dream, who has his own dream. Then he says Guts is the only one who’s ever made him forget his own ambition. It’s supposed to be this profound compliment, but it’s terrifying. Griffith essentially tells Guts he’s a threat to his entire existence.

After that, Guts leaving makes perfect sense—it’s self-preservation. But Griffith reads it as total betrayal, leading directly to his reckless, self-destructive decisions. The Eclipse is the final, monstrous answer to that question of what happens when Griffith’s dream is truly, irrevocably threatened. The conflict is about two irreconcilable wills colliding, with Griffith willing to sacrifice the entire world for his castle, and Guts defined by surviving that sacrifice.
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