Which Saint Seiya Character Is The Strongest In Canon?

2025-08-24 21:36:51 437

3 Answers

Ian
Ian
2025-08-25 01:39:57
On the highest level of 'Saint Seiya' canon as I read it, you can't really escape the gods. If we stick strictly to Masami Kurumada's main continuity — the original manga and his continuation 'Next Dimension' — the top slot belongs to Hades as a godly force and the cosmic hierarchy he represents. He's not just a tough opponent; he's literally a divine presence whose domain, followers, and supernatural laws make him the single biggest threat the Bronze Saints face. That doesn't always translate to cinematic one-on-one showdowns, but in terms of raw narrative weight and cosmic authority, Hades sits at the top.

That said, I love arguing the nuance. If you define "strongest" as outright destructive potential, a full-power god (Hades, or a prime Olympian if you want to include them) wins. If you mean the strongest fighter who actually engages in hand-to-hand combat and showcases technique and cosmos control, I'd point to people like Shaka or Saga — they have feats, calm dominance, and metaphysical attacks that change the battlefield. And then there's Seiya himself, whose God Cloth and sheer will let him punch above the usual mortal limit; narratively he becomes a god-tier protagonist even if, by canon hierarchy, gods outrank him.

So my personal read: Hades as the strongest canonical entity, with Shaka/Saga as the strongest Saints in combat terms, and Seiya as the ultimate narrative wildcard who reaches godlike status through growth and plot. It's messy, wonderfully dramatic, and exactly what keeps me re-reading scenes and debating with friends over ramen and rewatching certain fights in slow motion.
Hazel
Hazel
2025-08-25 04:53:43
If I boil it down quickly: in Kurumada's canon the gods outrank Saints, so Hades is the strongest in terms of cosmic authority and narrative impact. But if you mean "who would win in a straight fight among fighters we actually see brawl?" I'd pick Shaka or Saga for technique and Seiya for growth-based power when his God Cloth shows up. I like framing it by categories — divine omnipotence (Hades), peak Saint combatants (Shaka/Saga/Dohko), and story-driven ascension (Seiya). That lets me enjoy both the mythic scale and the personal, sweaty fights that make the series addictive.
Kate
Kate
2025-08-26 23:56:50
I get asked this all the time in message boards and over coffee: who’s the strongest in canon? For me, the cleanest answer is to separate divine beings from human Saints. Canonically, a god like Hades is on a different tier. In 'Saint Seiya' and the Kurumada-led 'Next Dimension' threads, gods operate on a scale that Saints simply aren't built to match. Hades embodies those rules — resurrection, control over soul realms, army of Specters — which makes him the top-tier threat.

But fans who love comparing duels tend to champion characters like Shaka, Saga, or even Dohko and Mu for technical supremacy. These guys display control over cosmos, psyche-bending techniques, and survival against impossible odds. Seiya complicates things because his God Cloth elevates him beyond standard Bronze constraints; in certain fights he behaves like a peer to godly opponents. So depending on whether you value lore-hierarchy, combat technique, or protagonist evolution, the "strongest" label shifts. Personally I lean toward Hades for canonical power, but I always side-eye any debate that ignores the emotional and plot-driven strength Seiya and Athena bring to the table.
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