Talk:Remedios Custodio/@comment-120.188.5.114-20180405213214/@comment-34666853-20180406133909

It doesn't change. I could use Varamyr Sixskins from the prologue of A Dance with Dragons as an example over Cersei and it'd still be true. He's a wretched coward and his desperate struggles for life is genuinely riveting. He truly wants to live whereas she exists to spout unconvincingly one-note ideals and look like an utter fool the reader can make fun off for not being as omniscient of the events as they are. Varamyr only appears in a prologue, not an entire book as Remedios did and she's still the ridiculous, unconvincing "cartoonish" character. She's not comparable to the knights as she has more pages and more relevance to the story as the de-facto leader of the resistance movement Ainz is courting/scouting. She's like that rich nobleman cum knight waiting to be bested by some quirky peasant in medieval themed stories: pompous and arrogant just because its the trope and it's easy.