TV-Series
Description
Harry MacDougall is a primary antagonist in the Outlaw Star series and the younger half of the infamous MacDougall brothers. He is a young man of nineteen years with distinctive blue hair and purple eyes. Alongside his older brother Ron, he operates as a ruthless mercenary and outlaw, taking on high-risk jobs for the right price.
Harry is characterized by a highly unstable and manic personality, with a pronounced thirst for destruction and chaos. He finds genuine excitement in combat and large-scale explosions, often displaying an overconfident and unhinged demeanor that makes him unpredictable in battle. His signature catchphrase reflects this destructive obsession. Unlike his brother Ron, who is more calculating and composed, Harry acts on impulse and revels in the mayhem he creates.
Despite his insanity, Harry possesses a specific and powerful obsession with Melfina, the bio-android integral to reaching the Galactic Leyline. He first encounters her digital persona while attempting to hack into the Outlaw Star's computer system and becomes immediately fixated on her. From that point forward, his primary motivation shifts from simple rivalry to a desperate desire to possess Melfina, believing she belongs with him as a fellow artificial being. He is willing to attack Gene Starwind and his entire crew without hesitation to achieve this goal.
Harry's role in the story is that of a recurring personal antagonist to Gene Starwind. He is present for the death of Gene's father, Norman Starwind, creating a deep-seated grudge between the two characters. He pilots a powerful ship named the El Dorado, often fighting in tandem with Ron's vessel, the Shangri La. In his first major confrontation with Gene, Harry challenges him to a battle in an asteroid field, a conflict that leaves Harry severely injured and his ship destroyed.
Following this defeat, Harry is salvaged by the scientist Gwen Khan. Khan replaces Harry's damaged cybernetics with a full-body prosthetic, transforming him into a powerful cyborg. This new body grants him superhuman speed and lethal claw attacks, and Khan even programs secrets related to the Grave of the Dragon directly into his systems, making him a key to unlocking the Galactic Leyline. Despite this upgrade, Harry remains mentally unstable and meets his physical end at the hands of the series' primary villain, Lord Hazanko. In a final act of cooperation, a mortally wounded Harry uses his connection to the Leyline to unlock its core for Gene, where he makes one last request for Melfina to sing for him. An echo of his personality lives on as an artificial intelligence he created for the Shangri La before his death.
Harry is characterized by a highly unstable and manic personality, with a pronounced thirst for destruction and chaos. He finds genuine excitement in combat and large-scale explosions, often displaying an overconfident and unhinged demeanor that makes him unpredictable in battle. His signature catchphrase reflects this destructive obsession. Unlike his brother Ron, who is more calculating and composed, Harry acts on impulse and revels in the mayhem he creates.
Despite his insanity, Harry possesses a specific and powerful obsession with Melfina, the bio-android integral to reaching the Galactic Leyline. He first encounters her digital persona while attempting to hack into the Outlaw Star's computer system and becomes immediately fixated on her. From that point forward, his primary motivation shifts from simple rivalry to a desperate desire to possess Melfina, believing she belongs with him as a fellow artificial being. He is willing to attack Gene Starwind and his entire crew without hesitation to achieve this goal.
Harry's role in the story is that of a recurring personal antagonist to Gene Starwind. He is present for the death of Gene's father, Norman Starwind, creating a deep-seated grudge between the two characters. He pilots a powerful ship named the El Dorado, often fighting in tandem with Ron's vessel, the Shangri La. In his first major confrontation with Gene, Harry challenges him to a battle in an asteroid field, a conflict that leaves Harry severely injured and his ship destroyed.
Following this defeat, Harry is salvaged by the scientist Gwen Khan. Khan replaces Harry's damaged cybernetics with a full-body prosthetic, transforming him into a powerful cyborg. This new body grants him superhuman speed and lethal claw attacks, and Khan even programs secrets related to the Grave of the Dragon directly into his systems, making him a key to unlocking the Galactic Leyline. Despite this upgrade, Harry remains mentally unstable and meets his physical end at the hands of the series' primary villain, Lord Hazanko. In a final act of cooperation, a mortally wounded Harry uses his connection to the Leyline to unlock its core for Gene, where he makes one last request for Melfina to sing for him. An echo of his personality lives on as an artificial intelligence he created for the Shangri La before his death.