Hm…I’m not sure I’m reading your question right, so feel free to correct me if I don’t answer what you were looking for, haha!
My intention as I wrote it was basically that the villain – who was probably an elf – built this new body, which was super strong and very invulnerable, with the intention that he would transfer his own mind into it. He’s not terribly attached to being an elf (considering he’s worn the body of a boetheri as well) and since humans have most of the power in the world now, building his new body to appear human made the most sense. The boetheri scouts interrupted his plans, however, and he had to abandon the place before he could finish his work.
And so he leaves behind a super-human in the form of Ravik. Ravik saw what he did to other people while trying to create this perfect body and was so upset by it that he wants to hunt down the villain and make him pay for it or at least stop him from doing it to anyone else.
It never occurred before…
How does a being built like that retain the sense of “human” justice?
Hm…I’m not sure I’m reading your question right, so feel free to correct me if I don’t answer what you were looking for, haha!
My intention as I wrote it was basically that the villain – who was probably an elf – built this new body, which was super strong and very invulnerable, with the intention that he would transfer his own mind into it. He’s not terribly attached to being an elf (considering he’s worn the body of a boetheri as well) and since humans have most of the power in the world now, building his new body to appear human made the most sense. The boetheri scouts interrupted his plans, however, and he had to abandon the place before he could finish his work.
And so he leaves behind a super-human in the form of Ravik. Ravik saw what he did to other people while trying to create this perfect body and was so upset by it that he wants to hunt down the villain and make him pay for it or at least stop him from doing it to anyone else.