< The King of Fighters
The King of Fighters/Fridge
Fridge Brilliance
- Ash Crimson is pretty much The King of Scrappies. He's a Jerkass Smug Snake who has gotten away with some pretty controversial stuff in the current saga (namely, stealing the powers of Chizuru and Iori) simply because SNK likes him too much. If you've played The King of Fighters XI, you've probably noticed that there's a common motif with a few of the team themes, such as Jack, Queen, and King; they're all high level playing cards (in fact, Ace is the only one missing from the bunch). Joker is the theme of the "Hero" Team. Given that there's a literal card-wielding Badass Grandpa on the team, you might think that this theme had Oswald in mind. However, this was subtle foreshadowing at its finest. The Joker is used in a variety of roles when it comes to card games. It can either be the most powerful card to play or the weakest. It can even be used as a placeholder for missing cards. Ash Crimson only appears to be a frail, unassuming weakling, but he's a bastard of both the Manipulative Bastard and Magnificent Bastard varieties. He is literally the personification of the Joker, a true Wild Card. Not only did he run the masses with an Expy of Gambit and a fight-craving Badass Normal in order to progress far enough through the tournament, but he set it up with such finese so that after he turned his former allies against one another (when they had outlived their usefulness) by preying on their personal ambitions (thus eliminating any potential threats by having Shen Woo and Oswald duke it out to the death as Ash slips away), he could then steal Iori's powers (as Orochi Iori, may I add) immediately after Iori had been worn down in a fight with Kyo and Shingo. That's Obfuscating Stupidity so brilliant that you might wonder whether or not Ash is The Chessmaster. You can't deny it.
- Going back even farther, one of Ash's win quotes in 2003 was "Don't play your trump card till the end... the very end!" In hindsight, SNK was pretty much telling us, "Keep your eye on this guy. [insert word here]'s gonna happen."
- Related to the above: In XIII, Ash's a single entry character. Quite odd, given that he's The Hero of the saga... You'd think that it's because he'll become the True Final Boss at the end as Evil Ash, and that's right - but it's deeper than that: Like the above troper has stated, he's prone to manipulate his teammates to his own ends. So him being a single entry is a subtle Gameplay and Story Integration - He can make team with any character in the roster, but he'll end up leaving them in the end.
- Additionally, this all seems to tie in with the revelation that Ash really is on the heroes' side. He functions as a Guile Hero because of the very probable mindset that if more people (including sister figure Elizabeth, presented here as a rival to Ash) knew about his true intentions, his plans to stop Saiki and Those From the Past would be less likely to actually succeed. The Jerkass Facade he dons is a calculated farce used to further his goals and ensure that the number of other fighters thrown into the crossfire is a bare minimum. Perhaps you could say he didn't want anyone to call his bluff.
- For some people, Yuri's Neomax, the Haoh Raiouken, seems lackluster compared to flashier Neomaxes, save for the mushroom cloud at the end. Then, I realized that, unlike fellow Kyokugen practitioners Ryo and Robert, she was only taught the very basics of Kyokugenryu, aptly named the Raiou principle. In a way, her Neomax serves as a Take That to her father and brother, showing that she can throw away Raioukens like atomic bombs.
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