Epel runs away and explains how Vil has forbade him from speaking in his natural dialect and forces him to wear “frilly uniform shirts”.
While venting his frustrations to Deuce he receives a phone call from his mother--
--who reveals that Vil has promoted the apple juice produced by their village on his Magicam, saving them from a financially unstable situation.
Epel returns and tells Vil that while “Deep down, (he’s) always looked down on people who care about being cute or charming”--
--he finally understands what Vil meant when he talked about power.
Vil responds, “There is one form of power that can bring people to their knees. It is more overwhelming than violence, more eloquent than word. I speak, of course, of beauty…"
--"You were fortunate enough to be born with the weapon called ‘charm’. Whether you sharpen that weapon into something useful or let it rust away is up to you.”
Epel says he wants to get powerful enough to beat both Neige and Vil himself.
By the end of Book 5--
--Epel is asking Vil to allow him to take center stage, saying that he is “a legit poison apple now” and he wants to take Neige down, not see Vil embarrass himself in front of an audience by performing post-overbolt and running out of stamina mid-show.
Vil refuses Epel’s offer, saying that he stills expects Epel “to captivate the hearts of the audience”.
While event timelines can be kind of vague, by Halloween it seems that their relationship has improved: we see Epel try to protect Vil from--
--Magicam monsters who would have uploaded his picture without his consent, which earns him Vil’s gratitude.
During the Phantom Bride and New Year’s events we see that they are still butting heads—though perhaps less violently than before—and--
--in Epel’s dorm vignette Vil assigns him the task of designing a blastcycle for a film club project, knowing that Epel is passionate about them.
When Vil admonishes Epel for his initial design and bans him from the dorm Epel responds that--
--the situation is only so frustrating because Vil is right.
Epel manages to create a blastcycle design that is unique to himself and Vil rewards him with the task of driving it to the film club’s location, to Epel’s delight.
At the conclusion of the vignette, however, Vil strong-arms Epel into lead role of the film club’s next movie, despite his protests, with Rook insinuating that such a result was Vil’s intention from the start.
Vil comes up again in Epel’s school uniform vignette, where he impresses Seek with a bird carved from an apple at Vil’s behest, as Vil said he wanted to try one at its most beautiful.
• • •
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(thank you so much to #kyuberei004 for initial discovery and the link!)
*Disclaimer: This is a fan translation and is not endorsed by anyone associated with Twst.
Speaking on Yana's behalf makes me very nervous so I am very careful (and hire a professional proofreader for projects like this), but results may vary! Thank you for your understanding!
An original culture woven into costume
An element of Twisted Wonderland that has had the most heart poured into it is the costume design.
Toboso Yana explains the struggles behind creating entirely unique designs meant to reinterpret the worlds of the movies upon which--
(thank you so much to #kyuberei004 for initial discovery and the link!)
*Disclaimer: This is a fan translation and is not endorsed by anyone associated with Twst.
Speaking on Yana's behalf makes me very nervous so I am very careful (and hire a professional proofreader for projects like this), but results may vary! Thank you for your understanding!
The Passion of Toboso Yana, the Creator of the Game’s Concept and Characters
Where did the inspiration for the world and characters of "Disney's Twisted Wonderland" come from?
The person who painstakingly took care of every creative element and--
Vil’s first interaction with Epel is when Epel—deciding to be preemptively aggressive to keep from being bullied like he was back home—insults Vil by saying he is “feeble like a woman”.
On the NA-server these comments--
--(and Vil calling Epel “adorable”) were changed.
Vil beats Epel in a magicless, physical fight and explains, “In this school, the rule is that the weak obey the strong…since you lost, you will do as I say.”
Vil insists on Epel--
--improving his appearance, his impolite way of speaking and his attitude, saying “if you want to voice a grievance, you’ll have to beat me in a fight first.”
This interaction forms the foundation for the relationship between the two, where Vil--
Malleus seems to have a fondness for Vil: when he learns the player will not be participating in the VDC he follows up with, “But Schoenheit and Asim will be in it? Heh. That should be quite the spectacle”.
Malleus also banters with Vil after his overblot, saying, “You seems to have has a bit of sport, yourself. However did you become such a mess? You’re hardly living up to the Fairest Queen’s spirit.”
Vil concedes that he’s “not wrong”, and--
--Malleus repairs the damage done to the coliseum as a favor for Vil, saying, “You owe me, Schoenheit” and “I’ve set the stage for you, Schoenheit. I trust you will keep me suitably entertained.”
When Vil says he hardly need Malleus’ urging to put on the finest possible show--
Silver explains that in his younger days, “it never occurred to me just how much he did to keep me safe”, and shares an anecdote from when he was a child and he tried to cook on his own:
After falling asleep with the stove burning, Lilia came home to a burnt mess of a soup and a panicking Silver. Riddle asks if Silver was scolded, and Silver responds that no, his father was just glad he was unharmed, that failure was the mother of all success--
--it was okay as long as he learned something—and then ate the ruined mess of a meal. Silver says he is “proud to be his son”.