"My greatest regret is that once I've collected all of humanity and all of my siblings into my pit, that I ONLY have eternity to punish them." Is one of the coldest lines in the entire series and all of Critical Role.
Literally and when he says that it doesn’t come from a place of ignorance or unknowing hatred. It comes from a deep anger where he wants them to KNOW they deserve it.
The moment Zerxus shouts "You're WRONG!" to Asmodeus you can see Brennan calm down, but he's still clearly in character. Asmodeus was humoring Zerxus like an annoyed, but rational, parent humors a screaming toddler.
I love how through Zerxus’ whole diatribe, Brennan just has this look of nonchalant disgust on his face. They’re both get so into the character during this whole exchange.
@@superhero6785 It's the "I'm finally at a point in my plan where I don't need to use puppets anymore, so I'm just enjoying listening to not-puppets who will do what I want in the end anyway," look.
@@foolslayer9416 The entire theme of Calamity was how filled with hubris the powerful people of Avalir are, and how it blinds them to their own flaws and the consequences of their actions. As Asmodeus says, Zerxus is an incredibly proud man, and that pride is misplaced. That combines with his endless desire to redeem everyone and makes him the easiest prey of the whole cast for Asmodeus' plan.
@@magiv4205 And not just the players, the viewers. There were dozens, maybe hundreds, of comments talking about how Asmodeus wasn't that bad, that maybe the Prime Deities were just the ones who wrote the history because they were the victors. There were videos talking about how all this changes how we perceive the Betrayer Gods. I even had one person respond that I couldn't know that Asmodeus was evil because he may not be the same as he is in the lore of other settings, they were so taken in by his introduction. Brennan was a masterclass in playing him.
@@Dragon_Lair Oh absolutely! I found it absolutely fascinating to read the comments and see how many people were fooled by Brennan when I was just waiting for the inevitable rug-pull. Brennan truly puts the "master" in "game master".
@@Dragon_Lair Those people were incredibly misinformed, had presumably not watched a lot of CR and were additionally unbelievably naive if they honestly thought that Asmodeus was "not so bad"... We *know* what happens during the Calamity. We also *know* how Pelor is (including his commandments) and how he treats those who come to his realm, and we additionally know how devils act and how Asmodeus treats those in his realm, all this based on previous CR campaigns. We *also* know, based on EXU:Calamity, what the K'nauthi are, what the word means, and what is done to them both physically (cutting off eyelids and lips, i.e. disfiguring them) and spiritually (using them as conduits rather than people and not giving a shit about the tumours that it results in). We *know* what devils do in this world also, it is stated multiple times that devils are attacking the civilian populace. Those are all under Asmodeus command. Who would be fool enough to believe that he is really a good guy, or that he is somehow redeemable if you only reach into his soul?
I think this says a lot about Luis too, he played along amazingly. Most players at my table would have said "nah he's THE devil himself, I'm not trusting him" but Luis went for the drama and it absolutely paid off
@@CEllis1036Matt's villains are complex and charismatic as all hell. I love watching them. Brennan's villains tho? Brennan's are terrifying. I'd be hiding under the table too.
@@burgervonstadt6503 That's why Lou and Aabria are nonplussed by this whole ordeal. It's pretty much the"first time?" meme all throughout the scenario.
No wonder he got a Mortal Kombat death. It takes a lot of idiocy to think you can tell a archfiend, a Lord of Hells, who they are and who they should be.
"I'll tell you why I spit on your forgiveness. Why I loathe your redemption. To reach a hand down to someone, they need to be BENEATH YOU! And I'm beneath NOBODY!!" Brennan truly channeling the arrogance and hatred of the Father of Lies. Chefs kiss on his performance.
It's even more impressive because it followed up on Xerxes' own arrogance in believing he could change the Lord of the Hells to be what he (Xerxes) believes him to be, called him (Asmodeus) a child, and felt he knew better than Asmodeus himself the nature of his own divine being and history. Xerxes was truly arrogant and proud, and he did look down on ALL the gods and felt himself better than them. Going back to episode 1, his speech about how he denies all the gods and bows to none.
It comes off as arrogance but that last line is very true. We should pull people forward in life, not lift them up. Because it does imply a certain hierarchy in our society that we shouldn't believe in.
@@Dragon_Lair Same principle applies though? Asmodeus is the Lord of Hells and he has a problem with arrogance. That's obvious because he followed up the statement with "I'm beneath nobody". It doesn't go against my point since the idea of "reaching down" is toxic. Zerxus has a saviour complex with a side of hubris. That makes him think he's better than people ie reaching down to help them up.
Yes it was a very powerful moment when it became clear that the Lord of Hell wasn't just some misunderstood being who got a raw deal. Another one as when he talked about regretting that he only had eternity to punish everyone
Storytelling AND improvisation AND voice acting. The line had to be improvised, since Brandon couldn't know beforehand about Zerxes attempt of Atonement. And he doesn't just pronounce "wrong" differently - the whole line had a progressive change in tone and the manner of speaking. To improvise a climax line to a deep narrative and paint in in all the colors on the fly is exceptional.
@@KidoKoin Yeah, you can hear that quietly enraged snarl building up throughout the entire sentence, until he practically spits the last words at Zerxus. Masterful work.
The cast of EXU : Calamity is getting betrayed by the devil in an extremely serious campaign setting up the apocalypse of that world. Lou got his heart broken by a piece of cake in striped pantaloons. Lou know Brennan's siren song.
@@Tiredchef I just did both seasons of Unsleeping City, the lore is mostly great (some jingoist NYC stuff tho, like the subway fight) and so are the PCs
Zerxus being tugged in with promises of finding Evandrin, Anakin desperate to save Padmé... both Asmodeus & Sidious spinning a web of fake-frailty and twisted truths... yep that's a raw deal if I've ever saw one XD What I find unnerving & fascinating tho, is how Zerxus' worldview hinged on extending compassion to redeem those considered irredeemable. That idea is ultimately his downfall here, but under different circumstances it's the ultimate *triumph* of Luke extending the same hand towards Anakin. I didn't expect Brennan to take this route in the game but by god he executes it to perfection
@@digitaldevil696 THAT would've been interesting to see - and probably would've ended up something like this. Luke would've taken Vader down and replaced him as ol' Palp's right hand man.
"...And he rips the skin off of your skull" "Cool. He counterspells it with a 9th-level spell slot and smashes you into the floor and breaks your spine" Brennan says it so casually because it's that fucking easy for Asmodeus to do.
@@spartaneternal8423 spoilers if u havent watched C1, but I really like this power display of a fully realised evil god Azmodeus compared to Vecna's obviously weaker power scale in the end fight of C1 due to him not understanding the full potential of his godhood just yet, Vecna had only access to 2 9th level spell slot I think and could be defeated by a group of highly trained and dedicated mortals. Vecna feels like he's just starting out as a level 1 god and Asmodeus is out there swinging with his level 10 god-class features
@@spartaneternal8423 Makes sense when you think about it. High level clerics get their spells from the gods. Granted the number of 9th level casting clerics for each god isn't SUPER high, the gods aren't going to be handing out all of their own power either.
Brennan weaponizing that light, breathless romantic voice is so cruel and so Right. He plays up Zerxus' romantic obsession with redemption so beautifully. Maybe, just maybe, love will heal the King of Hell. But no, that tenderness is as much a lie as everything else. Bait that hook with a love song and crush him, Brennan. Damn. Masterful.
Interestingly, Luis said in the Twitter meeting of the casts that Zerxus had daddy issue. As in he is the dad who miss his son and emotionally latched on to Asmodeus as a son figure. Luis said that he didn't try to be romantic about it.
@@Blue_Lunacy I think he meant romantic in the "romanticised" sense, not as in the "romance subplot" sense. We romanticise the past a lot, but that doesn't mean we want to bone the Victorian age as a concept.
Swear to god, Brennan did such an amazing job as Asmodeus. His playing of Asmodeus in the first episode, 'WHO DID WE BETRAY! WHO ARE THE BETRAYERS!', I think you'd be hard pressed to find anyone not at least second guessing themselves Asmodeus. He knew he had to play the 'misunderstood evil doer', he knew how he had to spin it. But to go through with it with such emotional intensity? No doubt many DMs which would know how they would have to spin the lie to make it convincing, few would be able to sell it like Brennan did.
If you know anything about manipulation or if you've seen Brennan DM at all the warning bells would've been going off. Ozzie's opening dream sequence gives us no context, which is a flag redder than his complexion.
@@belindaluna2067 I've been watching his stuff since Fantasy High Season 1. Bells were going off, sure, but I didn't know, I wasn't confident enough to say, most DMs don't keep up the lie like this for as long as Brennan did. Personally, I've been seeing comments like this every now and then. It feels to me more like reflexive 'I don't want to admit I was fooled' vibes. Sure, maybe in retrospect, now that the twist is revealed. Not in the week to week wait though. When he dropped exposition, it felt like a DM simply dropping exposition as the DM does through an NPC, in a manner that signals to us, as players, in a meta way, 'this is the truth' ergo 'this person is wholly speaking the truth'. In the space between episodes, it made doubt percolate in just the most lovely way, and frankly, what isn't tantalizing about the Lord of Hell being the good guy?
@@scolkereybel that's a good distinction. I have comments around from week to week stating that this would happen, but not because I knew. It was because I had trust in Brennan not to stick to the trope of the misunderstood devil and to uphold the cosmology of Matt's world. Not to make Asmodeus the villain who's secretly good, but the villain whom has good reasons why he is bad. Even then, it's a microcosm of the miniseries. We knew the Calamity would happen, and in the last episode we knew they would avert the primordials, and observable people knew the continent would be destroyed, but not how they would get there. Same goes for me with Asmodeus' heel turn. It was really masterfully done.
@atombrain111 ....The Calamity was a foregone conclusion, (unless they made those 4 natural 20's in a row) and anyone who wasn't going into this new to Critical Role should've known that. So there's no reason I can pick up on why people who watch CR should be upset about that. Also I don't know what that has to do with Asmodeus's characterization. Vespin's role in the Calamity was also a foregone conclusion, but we got more insight into his character and got to see he was really trying to do something good (even if wizard hubris caused him to fail spectacularly) which is more than we knew about him before this miniseries. Brennan (and Matt) could've done the same with Ozzie if they wanted and still have the Calamity happen. They just didn't want to.
Was not fooled in the least, and I doubt any DM of any experience was either. Asmodeus is the god of hell. He's literally titled "The Lord of Lies", and all good lies share one trait - that they are "mostly" true.
This is exactly why Brennan doesn’t care when a player wipes the floor with low level grunts. He always has a bigger monster. “Oh you want to show off your character by blowing up some skeleton? Great, here’s a CR 35 god that can cast wish 3 times a day.”
@@thedarkness125 they learned their lessons from the prior versions and the 5e versions all have god* with that asterisk being pretty huge. They're either weakened in some way or just avatars thereof and other "you couldn't handle my true powers" going on.
@@orwin5445 I think straight up no stat blocks is kinda lame, you might as well be fighting a cutscene. They should give gods stat blocks, just make them ridiculously op compared to even max level characters that they're nigh impossible to beat, but at least there's a fool's chance
Brennan did such a great job fleshing him out that even his cruelty is charismatic, and now I’m over here thinking “Could I play a warlock of Asmodeus in my next campaign?”
11:56 the whole cast reaction is amazing obv but i especially love how INTO IT luis is... just nodding like yes finally ive fucked around enough to find out
Some people were pissed that the beefy paladin with like several hundred HP could speak after getting stabbed in the heart, but c'mon man, that monologue alone was worth it. It finally revealed why Zerxus palled around with the rest of the ring of brass: he was just as arrogant and full of pride as the rest of them. Also, he's a beefy paladin with like several hundred HP.
Zerxus actually did not have "several" hundred HP, I think he only had like 147 HP. That said - the dialogue (especially from Brennan) makes up for the discrepancy.
I'm confused are they saying that he could survive a blow that Asmodeus wanted to be at least almost lethal? Cause holy fuck if basically mega satan impales you, I don't care how much hp you have. In the end, us as an audience don't get to decide what mega satan can do. The dm does.
I am never over the way Lou preemptively and calmly reacts at 11:56 and dusts himself off as if divesting himself of all the bad energy happening, amazing
God, I know a million people have said this, but the way Lou and Aabria react at around 8:18 just is a beautiful representation of people who know what it's like to play at Brennan's table and I love how Marisha and Travis both look around wondering what's going on before Brennan pulls the rug out from under them... UGH the tension, it's beautiful
It's always looked like the CR mains are all have this "why are the D20 mains acting so weird? Oh, this must be the famed BLM rug pull. Wonder what he's gonHOLY SHIT" thing going on. Like, Travis and Marisha are distinctly aware something nutty is about to go down. Sam has his calculating face on. They just don't know it's going to be such steel chair. But Lou is 100 percent "this mother fucker" and all he can do is watch Rome burn.
If you pay attention to how exasperated Lou looks while the rest of the group is watching in anticipation, you can tell that Lou already knows where this shit is going. He's dealt with Brennan's DM shenanigans for far too long.
@@yukito098 You can tell Luis knows too, he's just extremely good at staying in character. That's probably the most impressive thing about this whole sequence to me, not having seen him play before. I know people like Brennan are fucking incredible at this, but as an audience member seeing Luis play for the first time, seeing his ability to stay so profoundly immersed in a character and really get sucked into amplifying that character's core flaws to unimaginable extremes was so cool. Luis jumped headfirst into the most dramatic actions possible through pure instinct, completely shutting down any sense of self-preservation or better judgment he has a player would have in this situation, because that's what his character would do and that's what would be the most interesting at the table and in the story arc. It's like the platonic ideal of what a player should be doing in a situation like this. And holy crap did it pay off. That entire episode is one of my favorite actual play episodes ever made.
"My greatest heartbreak is that when I have collected every last mortal soul, and all of my siblings into my pit, that I will ONLY have eternity to punish them." Is the coldest BBEG line I have ever heard.
What about Brennan's "You think people make choices? No. People think they make choices, they think they're going to turn right or left, but they didn't build the roads. The big choices already got made for them a long time ago."
Watching Aabria during this exchange was a drama unto itself. She never stopped waiting for that other shoe to drop and then was sooo excited when it did.
Probably ecstatic and, in a small tiny place, jealous. I can't think of the last time Matt put so much raw, believable emotion into a performance. The player characters have. Travis, Sam, and Liam, specifically have had high peaks imo. Matt is a great world builder, though.
@@Promance2300 It all comes down to different DM styles. Matt's performances are endearing and really quirky, but they arent meant to build drama or suspense. He lets the plot, the storytelling and the worldbuilding do that. Brennan engages much more with the players and lets the characters make the "GOT YOU" moment. Both are amazing and masters of their craft.
I can't get enough of the "to reach down and help somebody they need to be BENEATH YOU" and then the whole ripping off the face thing and the group's reactions. This tickles the hell out of my funny bone
6:24 "Most exceptional", yeah most exceptionally proud. The father of lies is dangerous, not because his lies are the most elaborate or creative, but because he works by muddling the truth. He never says anything that is devoid of truth. Its always there, and he conveniently shapes it, twists it, makes it do his bidding, and its fucking terrifying.
Zerxus is not a himbo, he was just very prideful and arrogant. A himbo must be dumb, actively stupid and lacking common sense. Zerxus gave someone the benefit of the doubt and was betrayed for it, which is more of a mistake than actively being stupid.
@@thevoidlord1796 If thinking the actual, literal devil, lord of lies, creator of all evil in the world, is redeemable because he looks like your husband ISN'T actively stupid, you'll kinda have a hard time finding something that is. It's hot, it's good storytelling, it's understandable in a way, it's thoroughly entertaining - and also really fucking stupid. And stupid and arrogant aren't exactly mutually exclusive.
Lou: Here we go again with this bullshit. Marisha: That kid watching a scary movie with one eye from behind the couch. Luis: It's hard to catch him out of character during this clip, but it seems like he's 100% committed to pulling this thread until the entire sweater unravels. Sam: Completely enraptured by all the acting and storytelling going on. Aabria: Knows another shoe is going to drop, keeps trying to figure it out, but keeps getting sidetracked by the show going on in front of her. Travis: Doesn't see that Brennan's setting us up for a heel-turn, is mildly bored right up until he's giggling like a little boy at how surprised he is.
I was really happy with Luis throughout this entire mini-series. Brought such a nice flavor with Zerxus and he and Brennan had great chemistry! I'd love to see him in more actual plays.
If you’re familiar with Vampire: the Masquerade, and especially with the Bloodlines PC game that was made like twenty years ago, Luis made some guest appearances in the VtM live play series LA By Night as Nines Rodriguez. He was excellent there, too.
I loved watching this moment after everybody after episode 3 was like “HiStoRy iS WriTtEn bY tHe ViCtoRs, tHe BeTraYeR gOdS wERe gOoD, tHe pRiMe DiEtIeS wEre BaD”
Some people don’t want to listen to reason. A being known as “the lord of the hells” is a being you probably shouldn’t trust under 99.999… percent of the time
@@jaredsousa9356 if the title FATHER OF LIES wasn't a dead give away. PPL are forever trying to find fault in the "good" because we are ashamed of the "bad" within themselves. Until we can accept and forgive yourself and others, we'll always be chumps for this kinda manipulation.
Há...ppl often forget that in the greek mythology, Hades was considered a bad god, something evil, shunned even by the the others Olympians, and yet, he was forced to rule the underworld, to become the god of death... Stories can go the usual, boring good and evil and black and white, or they can be a little more mature and go to the gray zone, where there's no villains and hero...just interests. Now, what's better, that's up to personal taste but, at that point, the story could go anywhere, no one had enough information, asides from legends, so chill bro...
@@Daggerom In the DnD and Axandria Mythos , and in this very session: Asmodeous even refers to himself as "The Father of Lies" . Furthermore Devils in this genre are well known to be smooth talking masters of manipulation . Exactly everyone had enough information to make the call. lol.
Some people nowadays want every villain to be redeemable or have a reason for their villainy, when some villains neither want nor deserve redemption. Brennan’s Asmodeus was a more complete version of the Devil than I ever learned about growing up in a religious family.
2:05 I will admit that I haven't seen much critical role and that I'm mostly here for Brennan Lee Mulligan and Lou Wilson as a Dropout subscriber, but there's something about (having seen already the Asmodeus monologue that's to follow) the juxtaposition of hearing this line and seeing the top video under this one being titled "the end of the world" that makes me at least want to binge the entirety of EXU, even if I never become a full-fledged critter
One thing I didn't notice until now: at 8:52 and onward, Brennan stops rolling for effects done to him/Asmodeus. That much was obvious, but he also makes a motion as if he was GOING to roll, but then he stops and says "he... laughs UPROARIOUSLY" I imagine, as a player, that pump-fake has got to be extra demoralizing too. "Oh, you casted Curse? Too bad, bitch, I'm the Lord of the Hells. I don't roll for shit if I don't want to."
Except for Lou whose thousand yard stare and positioning to get out of his chair is the posture of a man who has been burned too many times. He knew EXACTLY what was coming. He tries to tell Marisha right before, but she was too wrapped up in Brennan's performance.
This was a FULLY REALIZED GOD, not one that had truly just became one and still had to make a mark on the world to be widely known. If he wanted too the Ring of Brass wouldn’t have gotten a chance to recover. I’m glad they did, but there was no way they were fighting him directly.
@@emmarod8746 I actually like how, gamewise, the Big Bad that they fight wasn’t Asmodeus directly. That would have been either a curb stomp or some canon-breaking victory. Instead, Asmodeus leaves to go destroy the world, and they fight his most powerful servant, who didn’t have a canonical fate yet.
@@GrndAdmiralThrawn Yup, thats probably one the best ways to go about having a strong NPC be in your game, but not underming its power or your player’s agency by having them face a minion/ally of the character that they can win against.
@@benjaminmatheny6683 they should have been level 20 the outcome would have been the exact same, but it would have driven home how powerful asmodeus is
When his face shapes to be like his as he is brought into the world- master class moment in showcasing the character's ego finally outdo his love for his partner
Seeing people talk about the amount of power of Asmodeus holds vs Ascended Vecna at the End of C1. This is Asmodeus himself come forth to the Material plane not some half baked Avatar. Nuts and Brennan kills it with the casual shows of complete control
Actually, Spoilers for Campaign 1 That was ALSO Vecna as a real God on the material plane, not an avatar from beyond the Divine Gate, that was the whole problem lol. But he was a brand new god and hadn't fully realized his true potential. He was still learning his full powers and hadn't yet amassed a follower base to give him more power (as we have learned, the gods get at least some portion of their power from people's knowledge and or worship of them, hence the plot to destroy Vasselheim as a symbol to strike fear and awe into people's hearts). Matt made it _Very_ clear that the longer they waited to confront Vecna, the stronger he would be. They had to banish him beyond the Divine Gate before he grew too powerful. Eventually he would have (and presumably HAS in the intervening years since C1) gotten fully in control of his powers (like the Raven Queen) and been just as devastating as his original counterparts. So a fully realized God like the Lord of Lies himself, yeaaaaaaah you're Fucked lol. -Sorry to be _That_ Nerd. I just like the lore and world building a lot. 😆
@@mayaenglish5424 I don't think Vecna could grow in power at this point. He's *shackled* somewhere in the outer planes, much like the chained Oblivion, but weaker.
@@shanedsouza189 Right, although I'm not sure of the logistics because Spoilers for C2 Those shackles aren't stopping the chained oblivion from sowing seeds of chaos and having followers, I'd Imagine it would be a thousand million times worse if he _wasn't_ locked away somewhere. So does being in God Jail stop them from gaining power or is he just doing Godly bench presses in solitary? lol
Note that Brennan masterfully described looking as Asmodeus as seeing a being more real than your own self. A true god should be beyond comprehension. And of course casually break the rules mortals exist within.
I could see Al Paccino in Brennans portrail of Asmodeus. "WHO AM I????" So awesome! This campaign might very well be the best dnd I have ever seen in an actual play format.
I know, right? Like, I thought this was going to be one of those “The gods were bad, the Devil was good all along”🙄 But nope, he’s just evil, and he played Zerxus like a fiddle.
Treating with the devil is always a bad bad thing. I now get why D&D was a witch-hunt back in the 60s. But now I’m more glad if I ever have kids, that they always make characters that are aware of the lesson in this series. There’s a mighty fine line: You can’t fix the devil if God already tried that, but a Vespin Cloras, still worth a shot.
"You are a child, and you are lost... how do you not see that?" Hurt so bad man. Just shows that zerxus knew the whole thing was coming and saw through the lies to asmodeus' core the whole time, and still thought he could 'fix' him.
I guess this is what happens when you try to "redeem" a devil: he rips off your skin and stabs you through the heart. Edit: I know Asmodeus is the main Devil of the Nine Hells, but when I was writing this, I was including the others too.
@@RashaundaSpears considering the fact that this dude literally sends himself to hell almost purely by the conviction that Asmodeus Can Be Redeemed, dude's gonna fuck around for a very long time
@@zacharybosley1935 Asmodeus was able to convince Sarenrae, the goddess of redemption, he wanted to be redeemed. Then he turned around and massacred her followers. Let’s be honest, Zerxus never stood a chance.
You know, going up someone called Father of Lies and thinking that out of all the people *you're* the one that he's not going to trick is industrial grade hubris. Road to hell is paved with good intentions, indeed.
You know the villian is going to be absolutely terrible when Brennan uses his real voice with no accent. Lou was just *waiting* and it makes me laugh every time - I can't help it.
Honestly: I think this is the best episode of CR ever. Brennan's storytelling is just masterful! The way he gets into character, the emotion of it all! It's art!
Aabria *waiting* for the mask to drop and being FULLY FUCKING PUMPED with her "YES! YES!" in the way only a fellow DM could be. *all of the chefs kisses*
This revised your view of another completely fictional antagonist from Christian mythology? That doesn't make sense. That's the same silliness as when Christians started viewing Hell as literal fire and brimstone after reading Paradise Lost.
My favorite line is, "My greatest heartbreak is that, when I have collected every last mortal soul and all my siblings into my pit, that I will only have eternity to punish them."
Such was Xerxes' fault. He spoke with authority because no one could challenge him and his godless paladin status in Avalir, where it was seen as a source of pride to avoid the gods and grow in power on their own. In the face of an actual god Xerxes was so certain he was right that he could not accept that he was wrong, and was too proud to accept that fact. His beliefs, his power, probably even the source of it, he is just wrong. Xerxes even called Asmodeus a lost child because he could not accept that mortals are nothing compared to the gods, and their lives only mattered to the gods that he himself rejected, the Prime Deities. It was a beautiful portrayal by Luis, to roleplay a man who felt so certain that he knew more about the nature of divinity and creation than even the gods themselves that he though he could teach them a lesson about it and about their own existence that he ultimately doomed his soul to the hells and to be a champion of Asmodeus during the calamity. Xerxes' name is probably going to be remembered throughout time by scholars as the most vicious of villains, a mortal who helped Vespen bring the Lord of the Hells into Exandria and fought in his name for who knows how long.
My favorite part is, when Asmodeus finally turns and reveals his true nature, everyone at the table is shocked and frightened except Lou, who regularly plays at Brennan's table. You can see Lou just waiting for Brennan to do something pants-shittingly terrifying the entire time Asmodeus was having that moment with Zerxus after being pulled through to Exandria.