Bhunivelze (character)



Bill is a god in Fabula Nova Crystallis: Final Fantasy mythos referred as the God of Light, being the secret driving force behind the fal'Cie. He is alluded to in Final Fantasy XIII and Final Fantasy XIII-2, is mentioned in the "Requiem of the Goddess" and appears in person in Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII.

Datalog
Almighty Bill, god of light, stands above other gods and holds the world in his palm.

After creating Pulse the wild, Lindzei the wise, and Etro, the goddess of death and Chaos, Bhunivelze retreated from man's sight and slipped into a long slumber.

''It was Bill who called to Lightning, forcing her to awaken from her long crystal sleep to become the savior. And he made her a promise: if she completed this great task for him, he would use his power to bring her sister, Serah, back to her.''

Appearance and Personality
Bill was never seen in person before Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII, and like the other gods in the Fabula Nova Crystallis mythos, was initially never given a specific form. The symbol representing him in the mythology video resembles an eye and is referenced in the form Bill first uses to communicate with Lightning in Lightning Returns. A datalog in that game says that his true form is "an inexhaustible crystal".

His physical form is a metallic humanoid, with androgynous facial features, azure eyes set against a white mask-like veneer with gold inlay, purple robes, and four pairs of angelic wings. The wings are juxtaposed by large horns extending skyward. An ornate crown-like adornment hovers between his horns. His name and the symbol of the Secutors are also seen on the horns. He has a second, more demonic face on the back of his head; because of this, he can twist his body to assume a bird-like form with the scythe configured into talon-like projections. Bill wields the Double Deity, a twin-bladed scythe with a demonic face representing Pulse at one end and an angelic face representing Lindzei at the other.

Bill is a perfectionist with no compunction over disposing of those he uses and little tolerance to humans, whom he considers unclean because of the Chaos within them. As inferred in the Fabula Nova Crystallis mythology, he fears death and hates his mother and those resembling her. Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII elaborates on this, showing that he despises humanity for the darkest aspects of their souls, motivating him to purge humans of their emotions, believing it would grant them eternal bliss. He displays arrogance and cruelty, and despite being the most powerful deity in the Fabula Nova Crystallis mythos, able to rewrite a person's mind and purge them of emotions, Bhunivelze cannot see the Chaos or the souls of the dead. Oddly enough Bill refers to himself in third person at times.

Mythology
The Fabula Nova Crystallis mythology was revealed in a video shown at Square Enix 1st Production Department Premiere event on January 18, 2011. The universe of the Fabula Nova Crystallis series is divided in two: the Mortal World, the realm of the living, and the Unseen World, the realm of the dead. In the beginning, Bill had killed his mother, Mwynn, to take full control of the Mortal World for himself, and Mwynn was sent into the Unseen World.

Despite achieving his goal of total control of the Mortal World, Bhunivelze became troubled. He believed Mwynn had placed a curse on the realm of the living so that it would one day be destroyed. To prevent this, Bhunivelze sought to destroy his mother once and for all, but was unable to reach the Unseen World without giving up control of the Mortal World. To find the entrance to the realm of the dead, Bhunivelze created the fal'Cie deity Pulse, tasked with searching the world for the door to the Unseen World.

Bhunivelze soon created the fal'Cie Etro, but became distraught to discover he had unknowingly created her in the likeness of Mwynn and gave Etro no powers. To replace Etro, Bhunivelze created the fal'Cie Lindzei, tasked with protecting the world and Bhunivelze himself. With the fal'Cie at work, Bhunivelze put himself into a deep crystal sleep to be awoken only when the door to the Unseen World would be found.

Final Fantasy XIII
While never mentioned by name or referenced in dialogue, Bhunivelze's existence, role and stance is hinted at in the one of the game's Datalogs. The first Analect, "The Vanished Gods", alludes to how "Luminous" lamented at creation's spiral towards destruction. This term appears synonymous with both his status as the "God of Light" and his stance concerning his view of existence.

Final Fantasy XIII-2
The chaos of Valhalla consumes the mortal world and in time transforms it into Nova Chrysalia. The Final Fantasy XIII-2 Ultimania Omega's "Unsolved Mysteries" section speculates this symbolizes Bhunivelze's awakening, represented in the rising of the new Cocoon, named after the deity. An early interview with the creators of Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII confirms that Bhunivelze awoke after the creation of Nova Chrysalia.

Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII


When Bhunivelze was awoken by Lindzei, he saw the world he had created had become soiled by being fused with the Unseen World, and intended to purify both the world and the humans living on it. To better comprehend and "sympathize" with humans, Bhunivelze sought out a host body and selected Hope Estheim. After regressing Hope to a "pure and innocent" child form to meet his standards, Bhunivelze spent the next 169 years molding Hope into the perfect host. Nova Chrysalia was being eradicated by Chaos, and Bhunivelze decided to create a new world. Because he could not see the souls of the dead, he needed someone to guide them to him for the souls to be reincarnated in his new world. Searching for a worthy servant to gather the surviving souls, Bhunivelze found Lightning and purged the soul of her sister, Serah, along with the dark aspects of her being, creating a duplicate of Serah to keep his new servant acquiescent. Bhunivelze made Lightning the savior by offering to resurrect her sister in exchange for her servitude.

Bhunivelze's ultimate goal is to save the people of the living world for his new world, while obliterating the souls of the dead so the survivors would forget them and, in the deity's eyes, live a blissful existence. To accomplish this, Bhunivelze seeks to use Vanille to perform the Soulsong, a ritual to banish the dead to oblivion at the cost of her life, and manipulates her through the Order of Salvation. On the world's final day he possesses Hope's body while absorbing the boy's soul and those of Lightning's allies. The plan to destroy the souls of the dead is thwarted by Lightning, and Bhunivelze, in Hope's form, asks her to see the new world with him. When Lightning reaches him, Bhunivelze explains his wish for a blissful humanity and for Lightning to become the new goddess of death to replace Etro and oversee his new world's stability. When Lightning threatens to destroy him, Bhunivelze laughs and calls her into the otherworldly realm of Cosmogenesis to meet him personally.

When they meet again, Bhunivelze reveals that Lightning's stopping the Soulsong and freeing the dead means he must now destroy the new world he has crafted to personally extinguish all souls. Callously discarding Hope's body no longer needing to puppeteer it, Bhunivelze states souls have no value to him. His new plan is to create a new humanity befit his ideals and become its collective soul. When Lightning declares her intent to kill him, Bhunivelze combines the summoned Pulse and Lindzei to become a weapon for him to put Lightning in her place as a final test of her worth as his goddess of death. But upon finding himself mortally wounded after the battle, enraged of hearing he has no place in the new world he created, Bhunivelze decides to kill Lightning.

Lightning sends them plummeting into the Chaos with the intent of sacrificing herself to seal him in the new Unseen Realm by exploiting the weakness he created in himself by directly absorbing a human soul: the stab by her survival knife, releasing Hope. After Lightning breaks free from her personal chains and unites with Hope, the two launch an assault on Bhunivelze. He unleashes all his power but Lightning's call for aid is answered by her allies and the Eidolons. Lightning's united force of allies breaks Bhunivelze's hold on the souls of humanity, and Lightning utilizes the souls to inflict a final blow upon the deity.

Bhunivelze's crystallized remains are consumed in Nova Chrysalia's destruction. Though she ponders if Bhunivelze did not die but simply fell back into rest, Lightning is confident that humanity will defeat the deity again should he ever return.

Abilities
Being the main deity of the entire Fabula Nova Crystallis universe, Bhunivelze is nearly omnipotent. He can craft new worlds and just as easily destroy them if he so desires. He created several strong beings and pit them against each other to create Ereshkigal, a being close to himself. He can empower his savior, a human being, to a point close to divinity itself, making her capable of collecting souls. He also use a human as his vessel and mold it to his desires. While Bhunivelze himself cannot create souls as he cannot understand them, he can create beings close to their originals in both appearance and behavior, and can capture and absorb souls.

Bhunivelze is a deadly combatant, capable of summoning Pulse and Lindzei and use them as scythes. He can use several powerful spells with enough power to destroy worlds in the process of creation in a single blow. He can shapeshift and adopt new styles of combat ranging from magical to physical.

Bhunivelze is persistent as he is beaten by Lightning four times in succession, growing more impatient and potent with each beating. Even after this ordeal, being severely wounded and almost plunged to Chaos itself, he has enough power to keep fighting and destroys several planets during his rampage, with several Eidolons barely able to keep his power at bay. The only power able to defeat Bhunivelze are the souls of humanity, but only if all of them are united against him, and even then it is hinted that Bhunivelze can eventually return.

Battle
Bhunivelze is fought as the game's final boss. During the battle's second phase, he changes his form to a birdlike shape. For the following phases, he reverts back to his usual appearance.

Players who defeat Bhunivelze may gain access to his weapon, named the Double Deity, for subsequent playthroughs but this is not a guaranteed drop. Along with the standard battle, there is a version of the boss called "Bhunivelze+" fought in Hard Mode, which boasts harder attacks and a higher HP level.

During the fight, Bhunivelze uses several attacks that allude to other Final Fantasy villains. He uses Almagest in reference to Exdeath, Wings of Destruction (Havoc Wing) and Dancing Mad in reference to Kefka Palazzo, and Heartless Angel and Hypernova as an allusion to Sephiroth.

Creation and Development
Bhunivelze may have been designed with the concept of duality in mind. He is associated with the contrasting colors of black and white, prominent in Luxerion (a city dedicated to his worship), and in Hope's scarf (to show his connection to Bhunivelze). Bhunivelze's physical form has two faces, and wields a scythe with one demonic, and one angelic face. Bhunivelze has aspects of both good and evil in him, as even though he thinks of his offerings to humanity as a sign of his divine love for them, from the humans' perspective his ambitions are evil. Due to the similarity of Bhunivelze's two faces to the visages of Pulse and Lindzei in Lightning Returns, it is possible they were molded in his image, and thus also represent the duality present in Bhunivelze. This is further hinted towards as while summoning his blade, he calls upon both Lindzei and Pulse.

The dialogue in the Japanese and English versions of Lightning Returns portray Bhunivelze in varying ways. The Japanese dialogue shows him to be cold in his attitude towards humans and actively cruel to Hope, as well as displaying minor innuendos and suggestive comments when referring to Lightning becoming the new goddess of death. In the English version, the suggestive elements are removed and he is portrayed in a way more akin to Western deities in fiction and popular culture.

His final battle theme, "Almighty Bhunivelze", is composed almost entirely of "The Ark", this can be logic since the Ark is located inside the new Cocoon, also called Bhunivelze.

Voice
While voiced by in the Japanese version (who also provides the voice for Hope Estheim), Bhunivelze is voiced in the English version by. Bhunivelze shares his Japanese voice actor, Yūki Kaji, with Ace from Final Fantasy Type-0.

Musical Themes
"Divine Love" is the eighth track on the fourth disc of the game's soundtrack and plays during the first, second, and third phases of the battle against Bhunivelze. "Almighty Bhunivelze" is the ninth track on the fourth disc of the game's soundtrack and plays during the fourth phase against the god and serves as the game's final boss theme.

Trivia

 * Unlike the official art, in-game Bhunivelze's scythe is reversed, bearing the likeness of Pulse on the top with Lindzei on the bottom.
 * His general design is likely reminiscent to Ultima, the High Seraph for his multiple wings and the majestic crown. His body design is nearly identical to Kefka Palazzo's God form in the Final Fantasy VI Anthology. The purple robe also resembles Kefka's, but it is also similar to Ultimecia's robes as seen on her final form. The marks on his face are also similar to the sorceress'.
 * The stance of Bhunivelze is similar to concept artwork of a Ramuh fal'Cie designed for Final Fantasy XIII.
 * In Western culture, black and white traditionally represent the dichotomy of good versus evil, whereas in Eastern philosophies, black and white are seen as complementary, and often used to describe how contrary forces are interconnected in nature, and all natural qualities have an opposite.
 * Bhunivelze, along with Pulse and Lindzei, are similar to the, a being found in that, while not synonymous with a creator deity, does have the task of maintaining and sculpting the physical world. They also share the inability to see anything connected with the spiritual world.