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Lalisa Truong

So! Obligatory full list of the ironic deaths for each of the Homunculi + Father and Hohenheim! Lust: incinerated to death by Mustang, the notorious lady killer. Greed: sacrificed himself for others and died feeling satisfied and no longer desiring anything else. Gluttony: gets eaten. Envy: commits suicide out of sadness, humiliation, and self-loathing born out of his jealousy towards humans. Sloth: dies from over-exertion. Wrath: dies a relatively peaceful death with a smile on his face. Pride: threw away his pride as a homunculus and thus, was stripped of his power and reduced to an even weaker form of the creatures he considered inferior. Father: lectured by the real god on how he couldn't have been more stupid and hypocritical himself, thinking he was so far above humans even though he originated from and used them. The Eye of God then drags him back into the Eye, allowing Father to become as high as God in some senses whilst stripping Father completely of the freedom he cherished. Hohenheim: wanted to continue living, but he didn't have anymore time. With that said, rest in peace Greed and Hohenheim. It still pulls my heartstrings seeing them both die. "What do you mean lower myself? That's the only thing I've ever been. Just a simple human that couldn't save a little girl...not even with alchemy." I can't help but greatly admire Ed for what he did and said. In the end, he sacrificed his alchemy in order to get back what was most important to him, family. This moment was also a great moment of humility on his part! It was such a huge contrast to Father's conversation with the Truth.

Antiquity

I commend you for not crying the whole series.

Antiquity

React to the bloopers.

Ashgar77

Greed was an excellent character.

Rue Surnameunimportant

I don't agree that Hohenheim did not have anything to redeem himself for as he didn't originally leave for the express purpose of saving the country-- and even then, it was fucked up how he went about it. He certainly needed redemption. Dying for them would have hurt the boys far more.