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Here we have Ramza rejecting his rejection of himself (he can't completely abandon his identity as a noble and be like Gafgarion nor can he embrace it and be like Algus). Agrias contrasts him in this chapter by epitomizing everything the Knights (and nobility) is suppose to be. He sees how bad the world is and is happy to help make it worse provided he gets to rise up. He's a sellsword more than happy to work for people like Algus. He's not a privileged bigot who is happy letting people die for his purposes. Gafgarion epitomizes the opposite end of things. I'd say Algus is the true antagonist of Chapter 1 - not because you fight him at the end but because he represents everything wrong with the status quo and everything that Ramza will reject between Chapter 1 and 2. The whole thing is obviously unfair and that unfairness bugs the player and the protagonist throughout the chapter.ĭelita and Algus echo and embody that conflict with Algus being a disgusting excuse for a person for most of the chapter and Delita being a pretty good friend up until the end. One is from the nobility and gets rewarded for breaking rules, the other is a peasant and gets punished for breaking them. Both are seeking what they think is right, both seem to be good people. Wiegraf as the leader with lines he simply will not cross is a great contrast to young Ramza at that time - a young noble desperate to prove himself to the established world and crossing lines (disobeying orders) to win his own glory. The Death Corps in general were very fun antagonists because they really did have a genuine grievance and were actually sympathetic throughout the chapter. FFT Chapter 1 does an amazing job of setting the scene for Ramza's growth.