Movie
Description
The Lion King, revered as Goddess Rhongomyniad, emerges from a fractured timeline where Bedivere’s failure to return Excalibur after the Battle of Camlann spared her mortal demise. This divergence allowed the Holy Lance Rhongomyniad to steadily reshape her into a divine spirit. For fifteen centuries, she drifted as a spectral wanderer before anchoring herself within the Camelot Singularity, founding the Holy City to enact her "Holy Selection"—a ritual to safeguard humanity by encasing virtuous souls within Rhongomyniad’s stasis.
Her demeanor mirrors her ascension to divinity: aloof and analytical, prioritizing humanity’s abstract survival over individual fates. She perceives her frozen utopia as flawless preservation, a stark departure from her mortal conviction in progress through struggle. This ideological rift drives her to assemble the Knights of the Lion King—Gawain, Lancelot, Tristan, Mordred, and others—tasked with eradicating dissent and enforcing her vision.
Her dealings with these knights underscore calculated pragmatism. Mordred remains confined to daylight operations, her Gift of borrowed power corroding her spirit with each activation—a consequence the Lion King coldly disregards. Lancelot, however, earns uncommon trust, granted independence in his duties. She balances discipline with utility, chastising Gawain for shortcomings yet sparing him upon survival, and strategically delaying clashes with rivals like Ozymandias until Camelot’s defenses solidify.
To thwart Solomon’s annihilation of mankind, she accelerates the construction of the Tower of the Farthest Reaches, a conduit for Rhongomyniad’s energy. Yet her ideal—a motionless world devoid of strife—proves barren, its stillness sapping humanity’s vitality. Her reign unravels when Bedivere finally restores Excalibur, severing her bond to the Lance. In her final moments, flickers of her former self surface, a fleeting echo of humanity before her dissolution.
Her demeanor mirrors her ascension to divinity: aloof and analytical, prioritizing humanity’s abstract survival over individual fates. She perceives her frozen utopia as flawless preservation, a stark departure from her mortal conviction in progress through struggle. This ideological rift drives her to assemble the Knights of the Lion King—Gawain, Lancelot, Tristan, Mordred, and others—tasked with eradicating dissent and enforcing her vision.
Her dealings with these knights underscore calculated pragmatism. Mordred remains confined to daylight operations, her Gift of borrowed power corroding her spirit with each activation—a consequence the Lion King coldly disregards. Lancelot, however, earns uncommon trust, granted independence in his duties. She balances discipline with utility, chastising Gawain for shortcomings yet sparing him upon survival, and strategically delaying clashes with rivals like Ozymandias until Camelot’s defenses solidify.
To thwart Solomon’s annihilation of mankind, she accelerates the construction of the Tower of the Farthest Reaches, a conduit for Rhongomyniad’s energy. Yet her ideal—a motionless world devoid of strife—proves barren, its stillness sapping humanity’s vitality. Her reign unravels when Bedivere finally restores Excalibur, severing her bond to the Lance. In her final moments, flickers of her former self surface, a fleeting echo of humanity before her dissolution.