Desha rules the Underworld as a demigod king, once second-ranked among global monarchs before claiming the highest throne. Son of the tyrannical primordial deity Satun, he orchestrated a rebellion with brothers Despa and Ouken to topple their father, whose quest for immortality fueled atrocities. Victorious, Desha secured his crown amid turbulent bonds with his siblings. Though revered by his people for judicious leadership, his rapport with Despa simmers with rivalry, clashing over revolutionary tactics and divergent ambitions. Yet necessity bridges their divide—uniting them in military stratagems or desperate attempts to save Ouken.
A towering figure with ashen skin, sharpened teeth, and obsidian hair cascading to his shoulders, Desha cuts an imposing silhouette draped in royal purples and gilded fabrics, his brow perpetually crowned. His magic channels cataclysmic lightning storms, while cupped hands project his voice across vast distances. Inherited divine senses alert him to mystical anomalies, and his raw power once froze the immortal Ouken mid-rampage with a single blow.
A calculating opportunist, Desha seizes kingdoms in turmoil, like the Bosse realm fractured by Miranjo’s sorcery. He spearheaded a two-pronged invasion through hidden tunnels and open warfare, overwhelming foes such as Domas yet often withdrawing when broader schemes demand restraint—even covertly aligning with Despa to retreat without carnage.
Ouken’s descent into madness, twisted by cursed immortality, drives Desha’s every move. To cure him, Desha claimed the top king’s rank, infiltrated the Divine Treasure Vault, and bypassed bloodthirsty blades to free a captive demon. The bargain stripped his memories in exchange for restoring Ouken’s mortality and sanity. Now adrift, detached from his past, Desha relies on his brothers to navigate this hollow existence as they confront the fallout of his sacrifice.
Across chronicles, he emerges as a monarch veiling compassion beneath steel-clad pragmatism, sacrificing identity to salvage family. His post-memory erosion transforms him from master tactician to a spectral figure—dependent, disoriented, yet cementing the brothers’ fractured, inescapable interdependence.