RG Veda: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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** The Spanish manga went with "King" and "Queen". And yes, {{spoiler|Naga's mother}} is always referred to as King Dragon/King Ryuu.
** The Spanish manga went with "King" and "Queen". And yes, {{spoiler|Naga's mother}} is always referred to as King Dragon/King Ryuu.
* [[Homoerotic Subtext]]: Besides the (canon) relationship between Yasha and Ashura, the {{spoiler|Taishakuten/Ashura-ou}} relationship is just dripping with subtext. Two words: Hair stroking. Also Kendappa and Souma, which crosses the line from subtext and keeps going.
* [[Homoerotic Subtext]]: Besides the (canon) relationship between Yasha and Ashura, the {{spoiler|Taishakuten/Ashura-ou}} relationship is just dripping with subtext. Two words: Hair stroking. Also Kendappa and Souma, which crosses the line from subtext and keeps going.
* [[I Know You Are in There Somewhere Fight]]
* [["I Know You're in There Somewhere" Fight]]
* [[Ill Girl]]: Karyoubinga
* [[Ill Girl]]: Karyoubinga
* [[I'm a Humanitarian]]
* [[I'm a Humanitarian]]

Revision as of 12:07, 7 June 2014

A 10-volume manga series by CLAMP, notable for being their debut work, and named after the ancient Hindu hymn collection the Rigveda. The series borrows elements of Hindu and Buddhist mythology for its setting and characters.

300 years ago, the general Taishakuten rebelled against the Heavenly Emperor, killing both him and the guardian god Ashura-ou and installing himself as the king. The Ashura clan was thought to be destroyed until the god Yasha-ou found the remaining child sealed in a forest and began to gather the Six Stars, a group of individuals said to be the prophecied bringers of a celestial revolution.

Included one non-serial OVA. Several characters from RG Veda have made appearance in other CLAMP works, mostly in Tsubasa Reservoir Chronicle as alternate universe counterparts.

Note: Ashura is technically without a physical sex, but will be referred to by male pronouns in this article for simplicity's sake.


RG Veda contains examples of: