TV-Series
Description
Chase forms one half of the notorious "Bad Brothers" alongside his brother, Tristan. He sports long brown hair secured with beads and bears a scar on his left forehead. A cobra tattoo marks his upper right chest, complementing his typical attire of gold earrings, fingerless driving gloves, and multi-colored clothing. His personality is loud and crude.
Chase and Tristan enter the Trans-America Wild Race using false identities in an organizer-led impersonation scheme, with Tristan posing as "Gil T. Cigar" and Chase as his partner. They later shed these aliases when Tristan publicly reveals their true names as the Bad Brothers.
The brothers join Richard Riesman's train hijacking plot, assisting in taking hostages and sabotaging racers' vehicles. During this event, Chase helps capture racers Hototo, Appare, Al, and Jing Xialian in Episode 8 and prepares to hang them before Kosame intervenes.
Chase shares a snake-themed tattoo with Tristan, identical to one sought by Hototo for vengeance against the man responsible for his father's death and his tribe's displacement, visually linking the brothers to this conflict involving Native American persecution.
Ultimately, the narrative reveals Chase and Tristan as fundamentally kind individuals, countering their earlier antagonistic roles.
Chase and Tristan enter the Trans-America Wild Race using false identities in an organizer-led impersonation scheme, with Tristan posing as "Gil T. Cigar" and Chase as his partner. They later shed these aliases when Tristan publicly reveals their true names as the Bad Brothers.
The brothers join Richard Riesman's train hijacking plot, assisting in taking hostages and sabotaging racers' vehicles. During this event, Chase helps capture racers Hototo, Appare, Al, and Jing Xialian in Episode 8 and prepares to hang them before Kosame intervenes.
Chase shares a snake-themed tattoo with Tristan, identical to one sought by Hototo for vengeance against the man responsible for his father's death and his tribe's displacement, visually linking the brothers to this conflict involving Native American persecution.
Ultimately, the narrative reveals Chase and Tristan as fundamentally kind individuals, countering their earlier antagonistic roles.