
If he creates the “world without the sin of ability users” it is likely that Dos will disappear too along with the rest of the ability users. He commits crimes that he does no personally want to do, if he believes it will lead the people around him without a better world. However, Gatsby’s self motivated ambitions are not something that makes him better or worse that Dos, simply opposite.Įverything Dos does is for the sake of the world around him.


Gatsby is like a businessman he acts to maximize profit and minimize loss, and he also considers those around him his own personal assets, possessions that are worth more to them than random strangers which is why he’s willing to raze an entire city for the sake of a few people.

Gatsby may occasionally look kind, he may save people, but everything he does will only ever benefit himself in the end. He wants to get his family back, and the rest of the world can burn for all he cares. I would also argue that while Gatsby’s goal is entirely self motivated. Hence why Dos has a tendency to act as judge, jury, and executioner on the people he fights. So the same way that Fitzgerald’s ability wastes money, Dos’s ability is one that kills with a touch.
#Agatha christie bsd free#
If what Fitzgerald values the most is money and therefore that’s what he seeks to have power over, or to use to gain power, then what Dos values is “life.” What he wants is the concept of a pure life, free from sin and free from the world’s troubles. The rats are few, and they crawl around in the dark and steal and sabotage to survive rather than face others in open warfare the way Fitzgerald did. The guild had an incredible reputation and was a powerhouse of information, and had manpower and resources. Fitz is a businessman but Dos is a thief and that already puts them on opposite ends. In fact his entire ability revolves around spending money as quickly as possible and basically wasting it to increase his own physical strength, because it’s not about the accumulation of money itself that he wants so much money for but rather the power it gives him.ĭos’s first instinct is to burn away all the money and jewels in Ace’s vault like they were nothing. He spends it very easily and with little compunction. In Gatsby fashion, he sees money as a means to an end to acquiring people the same way one would purchase an object that belongs to them.įitzgerald loves money, but he almost never hoards it. If he has enough money, there is nothing he cannot control, there is no tragedy that he cannot endure. His desires are pretty simple, money and influence should give him the power to change the world in a way he sees fit, if he acquires enough money nothing should be impossible for him even bringing back the dead. Fitzgerald is like a general who leads from the front lines, whereas Dos is a rat who hides in the shadows and leads while scurrying around. Fitzgerald values money above everything else, and his first instinct was to simply buy the agency. Even the actions they take as they are introduced are complete opposites. As antagonists and the leaders of their respective factions, both Fitz and Dos are foils in the sense that they’re a study in contrasts.
