OVA
Description
Michael, titled "The One Who Resembles God," holds dominion as Heaven’s Chief of Angels and Shining General, commanding celestial armies with ruthless precision. He adopts the guise of Elliot Eden, a silver-haired student with crimson eyes, retaining these traits even in his divine form alongside his wings. His demeanor oscillates between calculated calm and explosive cruelty, marked by a penchant for manipulation and harsh reprisals against subordinates like Uriel.
Driven by an unrelenting rivalry with his twin brother Lucifer, he schemes to thwart Lucifer’s resurgence, perceiving it as a destabilizing threat to Heaven’s order. This fuels his strategic exploitation of humans such as William, bending mortal agency to celestial agendas. He enforces a worldview where power justifies dominion, employing merciless tactics to uphold his vision of hierarchy. Though disdainful of humanity, he reacts with territorial ferocity when challenged, his pride flaring at perceived slights against his authority.
Among divine peers, he displays selective allegiance—favoring Gabriel with rare camaraderie while treating others like Metatron as disposable assets. His narrative threads intertwine with historical pivots: guiding Jeanne d’Arc, wielding the sword and scales to judge souls, and orchestrating Lucifer’s fall. These acts cement his role as Heaven’s enforcer, a warrior-arbiter echoing theological tradition. Unswayed by moral compromise, his arc revolves solely around preserving celestial structure, clashing eternally with angelic and demonic dissenters alike, his convictions as immutable as his feud with Lucifer.
Driven by an unrelenting rivalry with his twin brother Lucifer, he schemes to thwart Lucifer’s resurgence, perceiving it as a destabilizing threat to Heaven’s order. This fuels his strategic exploitation of humans such as William, bending mortal agency to celestial agendas. He enforces a worldview where power justifies dominion, employing merciless tactics to uphold his vision of hierarchy. Though disdainful of humanity, he reacts with territorial ferocity when challenged, his pride flaring at perceived slights against his authority.
Among divine peers, he displays selective allegiance—favoring Gabriel with rare camaraderie while treating others like Metatron as disposable assets. His narrative threads intertwine with historical pivots: guiding Jeanne d’Arc, wielding the sword and scales to judge souls, and orchestrating Lucifer’s fall. These acts cement his role as Heaven’s enforcer, a warrior-arbiter echoing theological tradition. Unswayed by moral compromise, his arc revolves solely around preserving celestial structure, clashing eternally with angelic and demonic dissenters alike, his convictions as immutable as his feud with Lucifer.