TV-Series
Description
Do Bergan, alias General Oslack in select adaptations, operates as a secondary antagonist under Emperor Zu Zambajil’s command. Dispatched to monitor Prince Heinel, he covertly schemes to neutralize the prince as a rival to the throne. Cloaked behind a blank mask, he masquerades as Heinel’s ally while pursuing a hidden agenda driven by narcissism and delusions of supremacy. His arrogance fuels repeated underestimation of the Voltes team, epitomized by his reliance on Maxingal—an alloy he touts as impervious yet consistently outmatched by Voltes V’s adaptive strategies. Disregard for Boazanian protocols, including insufficient deference to Heinel, sparks friction briefly overshadowed by his tactical value.
After Zuhl’s demise, he inherits the operative’s duties while covertly vying to supplant Heinel. He commissions mass-produced Beast Fighters armored with Maxingal, but their defeat follows Voltes V’s enhancements. His ambitions escalate to conspiring with General Gururu to detonate a Magmite Bomb on Earth—a plot foiled by the Voltes team. When Zambajil disavows Heinel, he defects openly, aligning with Gururu in a desperate bid to annihilate Voltes V and regain imperial favor.
Interactions expose manipulative layers: he feigns loyalty to Heinel while orchestrating assassinations and oscillates between scorn and begrudging admiration for Katherine, a human Voltes ally. He mocks her combat role yet acknowledges her appearance after her interference disrupts his schemes.
In adaptations like *Voltes V: Legacy*, his tactics shift—employing mind-control devices to manipulate foes and allies alike, including an attack on noblewoman Zandra. This version downplays original misogynistic traits but amplifies his cutthroat ambition.
His arc culminates during the Voltes team’s Boazanian assault, where he and Gururu intercept them in a starship. Initial gains collapse when Voltes V obliterates their vessel, killing both. Their defeat catalyzes enslaved Boazanians’ uprising, hastening Zambajil’s regime collapse.
Persisting across narratives as a duplicitous, overconfident schemer, his machinations amplify political strife, embodying themes of ambition’s peril within Boazania’s power struggles.
After Zuhl’s demise, he inherits the operative’s duties while covertly vying to supplant Heinel. He commissions mass-produced Beast Fighters armored with Maxingal, but their defeat follows Voltes V’s enhancements. His ambitions escalate to conspiring with General Gururu to detonate a Magmite Bomb on Earth—a plot foiled by the Voltes team. When Zambajil disavows Heinel, he defects openly, aligning with Gururu in a desperate bid to annihilate Voltes V and regain imperial favor.
Interactions expose manipulative layers: he feigns loyalty to Heinel while orchestrating assassinations and oscillates between scorn and begrudging admiration for Katherine, a human Voltes ally. He mocks her combat role yet acknowledges her appearance after her interference disrupts his schemes.
In adaptations like *Voltes V: Legacy*, his tactics shift—employing mind-control devices to manipulate foes and allies alike, including an attack on noblewoman Zandra. This version downplays original misogynistic traits but amplifies his cutthroat ambition.
His arc culminates during the Voltes team’s Boazanian assault, where he and Gururu intercept them in a starship. Initial gains collapse when Voltes V obliterates their vessel, killing both. Their defeat catalyzes enslaved Boazanians’ uprising, hastening Zambajil’s regime collapse.
Persisting across narratives as a duplicitous, overconfident schemer, his machinations amplify political strife, embodying themes of ambition’s peril within Boazania’s power struggles.