Fuhrer King Bradley commands Amestris across Fullmetal Alchemist continuities, with distinct origins, abilities, and roles per adaptation. In one continuity, he manifests as Wrath, a homunculus forged by Father. Originally a human candidate, he absorbed a Philosopher's Stone of wrathful souls, ultimately condensing into a single dominant consciousness. This granted superhuman physical prowess—enhanced strength, speed, reflexes, and senses—despite his aging mortal form lacking regeneration. His signature trait is the "Ultimate Eye," delivering instantaneous analytical vision to assess threats, pinpoint weaknesses, and optimize combat strategy within his sight. This complements his extraordinary swordsmanship, enabling him to wield multiple blades and counter foes with lethal precision. As Führer, he orchestrates military campaigns like the Ishval Civil War to advance Father's plans, while cultivating an approachable facade through gestures like gifting melons to hospitalized soldiers or humorously evading aides. He reveals unexpected depth, expressing genuine affection for his wife as his sole self-chosen bond and showing restrained respect for skilled adversaries like Ling Yao or Fu. His homunculus nature surfaces in suppressed rage, evident in trembling during a funeral disruption, and brutal combat efficiency. His demise follows injuries compromising his Ultimate Eye, culminating in a final confrontation where river currents engulf him. In another adaptation, he is Pride, the eldest homunculus created by Dante. Unlike his counterpart, this version possesses regeneration and ages like a human. His demeanor is colder, openly contemptuous of humanity, viewing himself as a divine instrument to curb human hubris. He manipulates societal conflicts, including the Ishval Civil War, to generate Philosopher's Stones for Dante, maintaining a deceptive public persona as a benevolent leader and family man. His combat relies on a single sword and extreme speed, engaging directly only when necessary. His hidden weakness is the skull of his original human body, which nullifies his powers in proximity. This vulnerability triggers his downfall when his adopted son, Selim, inadvertently brings the skull near. Enraged, Pride strangles Selim before Roy Mustang immobilizes and incinerates him. Both iterations share core traits: mastery over political and military authority, exceptional swordsmanship, and a meticulously crafted human disguise concealing homunculus objectives. Their backgrounds diverge fundamentally—one an enhanced human serving a collective agenda, the other an ageless entity pursuing personal supremacy under a creator's direction.

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Fuhrer King Bradrey

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