Demon who bends gravity to his will.
Description
Diabolos is the Rank II Flying Non-elemental Esper in Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings.
Obtained[]
Diabolos can be bought from the Ring of Pacts for 2 Auracite.
Gameplay[]
Summoning Diabolos costs 18 Affinity. Its normal attack, Nightmare, deals damage to a single foe and may inflict Sleep, and its special attack, Gravity, takes 25% of a single enemy's HP.
Stats[]
Missions[]
- Mission 33: Aegyl Uprising
- Mission 42: Fallacy
- Mission 45: The Abyss
- Mission 59: That Left Behind
- Mission 66: Ordered Chaos
- Mission 71: For a Moment's Peace
- Mission 80: Keeper of Precepts
- Paramina Rift Summoning Melee
Etymology[]
Diabolos is the Greek word for "devil". It has entered many languages to mean devil, such as Diabolus (Latin), Diavolo (Italian), Diablo (Spanish), Diable (French), and Diabo (Portuguese). Diabolos actually means "accuser" or "slanderer" and could also be connected to the Greek word diabolous, which means "divider" (which befits Diabolos's affinity with the gravity element in the Final Fantasy series), but eventually the general word Diabolos became the specific name of the entity. In the original Greek rendering, it was used to refer to the Christian Devil (The New Testament was written in Greek). Devil is the English translation of Diabolos and in Christian belief, this being is the embodiment of evil.
The concept of the Devil is believed to originate in Zoroastrianism with Angra Mainyu (also known as Ahriman) as well as from the Judaic Satan in the Book of Job in the Old Testament. Their Satan was merely the "devil's advocate", an angel who acted as a skeptic and whom God allowed to afflict Job with suffering. Satan is Hebrew for "prosecutor/accuser" or "adversary".
The concept of the summon Diabolos in Final Fantasy may be connected to the Jinn in Islamic mythology, similar to Ifrit. The djinn were the origins of genie myths and were spirits or ghosts made of fire or smoke. They were said to grant wishes.