TV-Series
Description
Volkan, a dwarven troublemaker exiled from Masmaturia, embraces his self-proclaimed title of “Volcan the Great” with delusional grandeur, relentlessly chasing wealth and power through ill-conceived schemes that inevitably unravel. His banishment forced younger brother Dortin into a life of reluctant partnership, their dynamic defined by Volkan’s domineering orders and Dortin’s exasperated compliance, cementing their roles as recurring sources of chaos-driven humor. Volkan nurses a bitter grudge against the protagonist—the “black wizard”—refusing to honor a substantial debt and sparking frequent clashes driven by spite.
Dwarven resilience grants him near-indestructibility against physical harm and magical assaults, while his titanic ego manifests psychically, overpowering a trapped White Mage’s consciousness to hijack her sorcery temporarily—a testament to his unyielding stubbornness. Briefly trained as a Stabber, an assassin-sorcerer order, his expulsion foreshadowed a lifetime of half-baked ambitions. Every action serves self-interest, whether sabotaging rivals or begrudgingly aiding allies when opportunism outweighs risk.
Though he trails the protagonists across realms like Urbanrama, his presence injects disorder rather than growth. Volkan remains static—a whirlwind of greed, ineptitude, and laughable villainy—never deviating from his core identity as a comedic foil whose blunders ripple through the narrative without redemption or evolution.
Dwarven resilience grants him near-indestructibility against physical harm and magical assaults, while his titanic ego manifests psychically, overpowering a trapped White Mage’s consciousness to hijack her sorcery temporarily—a testament to his unyielding stubbornness. Briefly trained as a Stabber, an assassin-sorcerer order, his expulsion foreshadowed a lifetime of half-baked ambitions. Every action serves self-interest, whether sabotaging rivals or begrudgingly aiding allies when opportunism outweighs risk.
Though he trails the protagonists across realms like Urbanrama, his presence injects disorder rather than growth. Volkan remains static—a whirlwind of greed, ineptitude, and laughable villainy—never deviating from his core identity as a comedic foil whose blunders ripple through the narrative without redemption or evolution.