FunKay the Inevitable
People Like Me, We Don't Play
Basically I've been toying with this idea for a little while.
I recently was reading the Yu-Gi-Oh! manga and I was at the return of Seto Kaiba, a devious character who loses a card game to the protagonist Yugi Mutou. That's it, Kaiba enjoys the card game, and is a dick so Yugi defeats him and hands out some karma justice. He gives Kaiba a penalty game, essentially a punishment that Yugi hands out that is in some way ironic. In this case, Kaiba is tormented by the monsters in his card game (He believes they're going to kill him).
Now Kaiba returns and he's less than pleased to say the least. He's so enraged in fact that he decides to spend a cool 10 Billion Yen (Roughly $85 Million) on a giant indoor theme park that is called 'Death-T' and essentially is designed to kill Yugi & his friends, and also make them suffer. Yugi is also tormented by the fact that his grandfather has been taken to hospital after Kaiba delivered his own Penalty Game, a virtual version of the one he suffered at the hands of Yugi. There is also the underlying addition of the fact that Kaiba is determined to prove he is better than Yugi, and has in fact never lost before at anything.
Now this all seems a tad elaborate and pretty drastic, and while it does occur in a work of fiction, it did make me think; is there a limit to revenge? In the case I mentioned above, I think it's all a bit over the top. Yes Kaiba has never ever lost before and also incurred Yugi's wrath with the Penalty Game but it's all a bit over the top.
So the question is this:
Is there a limit to revenge, and if so, what is it?
I recently was reading the Yu-Gi-Oh! manga and I was at the return of Seto Kaiba, a devious character who loses a card game to the protagonist Yugi Mutou. That's it, Kaiba enjoys the card game, and is a dick so Yugi defeats him and hands out some karma justice. He gives Kaiba a penalty game, essentially a punishment that Yugi hands out that is in some way ironic. In this case, Kaiba is tormented by the monsters in his card game (He believes they're going to kill him).
Now Kaiba returns and he's less than pleased to say the least. He's so enraged in fact that he decides to spend a cool 10 Billion Yen (Roughly $85 Million) on a giant indoor theme park that is called 'Death-T' and essentially is designed to kill Yugi & his friends, and also make them suffer. Yugi is also tormented by the fact that his grandfather has been taken to hospital after Kaiba delivered his own Penalty Game, a virtual version of the one he suffered at the hands of Yugi. There is also the underlying addition of the fact that Kaiba is determined to prove he is better than Yugi, and has in fact never lost before at anything.
Now this all seems a tad elaborate and pretty drastic, and while it does occur in a work of fiction, it did make me think; is there a limit to revenge? In the case I mentioned above, I think it's all a bit over the top. Yes Kaiba has never ever lost before and also incurred Yugi's wrath with the Penalty Game but it's all a bit over the top.
So the question is this:
Is there a limit to revenge, and if so, what is it?