Gorgon, born as one of Greek mythology’s Three Gorgon Sisters, was twisted into a monstrous deity through divine curses and the devouring of her siblings. Once known as Medusa, her divinity corroded into a serpentine form adorned with venomous snakes and petrifying Mystic Eyes, a transformation fueled by divine retribution that amplified her wrath and severed ties to humanity.
In the Babylonia Singularity, she emerges as a Beast-class entity summoned by a corrupted Grail, crafted by Tiamat from the remnants of Quetzalcoatl and Ereshkigal. Towering with draconic wings and coiling serpent heads, she embodies chaos, driven to eradicate humanity as vengeance for her torment.
Though consumed by rage, fractured echoes of her past self linger. Brief interactions expose internal strife—fleeting glimpses of Medusa’s lingering humanity. This duality peaks when she rebels against Tiamat, channeling her waning power to delay the primordial goddess’s rampage, sacrificing herself to aid those she once targeted.
Her powers encompass regenerative immortality, petrifying gaze, and venomous serpents, cementing her as an avatar of divine fury. Her narrative weaves identity, vengeance, and fractured redemption, painting her as a cursed figure whose final defiance briefly eclipses eternal hatred.