TV-Series
Description
Lü Bu, titled the "Flying General," entered the world in 159 AD near Jiuyan District, his infancy shaped by tragedy as his village fell to ruin, sparing only him. Rescued by the blacksmith Lü Shang, he revealed prodigious strength as a child, clashing with authorities and kindling unrest. When soldiers slaughtered his adoptive father, Lü Shang’s final words—urging him to forge bonds through combat—ignited his relentless hunt for a rival to match his might.

Roaming Eurasia, he tested warriors and amassed followers, his path altered when lightning sheared a tree before him, kindling faith in celestial adversaries. In Rome’s Titanomachy Tournament, he toppled champions like Octavius, Cesc, and Gryps, yet their weakness left him restless. Victories brought no hunger for crowns, only sharper resolve to seek greater foes.

Dong Zhuo, the warlord, lured him with promises of battle, deploying him against figures like Sun Jian. Their alliance shattered when Lü Bu, bored by hollow conquests, slew Dong Zhuo to end his tyranny—a testament to his loyalty only to strife.

At Hulao Pass and against Ji Ling, he wielded cunning alongside brute force, piercing a halberd from afar to rout enemies. Yet in 199 AD, facing Cao Cao’s forces, he surrendered, embracing death when despair eclipsed purpose. His final breath welcomed the afterlife, craving the duel mortality denied him.

There, Brunhilde enlisted him for a godly tournament, pitting him against Thor. His Sky Eater technique tore the heavens; his halberd mastery and peerless physique—resilient to poison, pain, and extremes—crowned him humanity’s apex. Red Hare, his steed, moved as his own flesh, a symbol of war incarnate.

Aloof to wealth and fleeting bonds, he spoke through combat, a stoic colossus driven by an unquenchable thirst for challenge. Legends paint him tragically: a warrior eternally unfulfilled, seeking transcendence in clashes beyond mortality’s grasp.