What Motivates Record Of Ragnarok Adam In The Battle Scenes?

2026-06-26 00:38:37 192
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4 Answers

Everett
Everett
2026-06-27 09:26:17
It’s the contrast with the other fighters for me. Most have revenge, honor, a personal creed. Adam? His backstory is literally just vibing in Eden with Eve and the animals. His entire world was that garden and his partner. So when the gods declare humanity a failed experiment, they’re not just condemning abstract souls—they’re trashing his home, his happy memories, his grandkids playing in the dirt. That’s what makes him so terrifyingly focused.

He doesn’t monologue about destiny. He just looks at Zeus and sees a trespasser. The motivation isn’t complex theology; it’s the instinct to protect what’s yours. I’ve seen debates calling it shallow, but I find that simplicity more powerful. When he’s on the verge of death, he’s not thinking of lofty ideals. He’s probably just thinking, ‘Not yet. They still need me.’ It’s heartbreakingly straightforward.
Charlie
Charlie
2026-06-28 00:26:24
I genuinely think his motivation shifts mid-fight in a way people overlook. Starts as defending his kids, sure. But once Zeus pushes him, it becomes about pride—human pride. He’s the first man, the prototype. Losing means admitting the blueprint was flawed from the start. That’s an unbearable legacy to carry into oblivion.

The eyes of the world are on him, literally. Every human soul is cheering. He can’t be the one who lets the family line end. It’s like the pressure of every ancestor and descendant all at once. So yeah, love is the spark, but the stubborn, aching weight of being ‘Father’ is what keeps him standing long after his body should’ve quit.
Quinn
Quinn
2026-06-29 14:14:46
Adam’s drive is shockingly simple when you strip it all back. Everyone talks about his ‘love for humanity’ but honestly? I think it’s mostly pure, unadulterated spite. He’s not fighting for some grand philosophical ideal about human potential—he’s fighting because some smug god just tried to swat his kids. That primal ‘don’t you touch my children’ reflex is what makes him instantly relatable. The divine disdain from Zeus and the others isn’t an abstract insult; it’s a direct threat to his family.

He doesn’t even get a fancy weapon or special powers beyond his copied eyes. Every punch is fueled by that raw, paternal ‘I will end you’ energy. It’s less about proving humanity’s worth and more about a dad seeing a bully in the playground and stepping in. The moment he sees his ‘children’—all of humanity—backing him, it just adds more fuel to the ‘you will not hurt them’ fire. It’s personal, not political.
Ulysses
Ulysses
2026-07-02 06:11:13
Frankly, I think the ‘for my children’ thing is a bit overplayed by the fandom. It’s there, but the cooler layer is his defiance of fate itself. He’s a man told by the ultimate authorities that his kind’s time is up. His motivation is the sheer audacity to say ‘no’ to that final verdict. It’s the ultimate underdog spirit, cranked to mythic levels. Every dodge and punch is a middle finger to predestination.
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