True Name: Don Quixote de Vivar
Introduction: The protagonist of the 16th-century Spanish writer Cervantes' work Don Quixote. The story takes place when knights have long disappeared from Europe for over a century. However, the protagonist, Alonso Quixano (who later calls himself Don Quixote), is obsessed with chivalry and often fantasizes about being a medieval knight. He dubs himself "Don Quixote de la Mancha," imagining himself as the protector of the La Mancha region. He drags his neighbor, Sancho Panza, to be his squire, and they embark on a series of adventures, performing acts of chivalry that are out of place and absurd for their time, ultimately leading to many failures. In the end, he awakens from his fantasy, returns home, and dies.
His class is the extremely unique Alterego (a divergent form), a composite and irregular servant class. Don Quixote has been summoned using an illegal method by the summoner Saladin, incorporating fragments of the spiritual foundations of other Spanish knight servants.
Alterego Don Quixote has both a normal form and a fantasy form. Although his combat ability is low in his normal form, when conditions are met, his fantasy form can reach the limits of his imagination.
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Class: Alterego
Source: The novel Don Quixote
Region: Europe
Alignment: Neutral Good
Gender: Male
Height: 180 cm
Weight: 78 kg
Armament: Armor, lance, sword
Summoning Relic: None (due to the presence of multiple knight-type servants in the Holy Grail War)
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Ability Parameters
Strength: D (B+)
Endurance: E (B)
Agility: D (A)
Mana: E (C)
Luck: B (A+)
Noble Phantasm: EX
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Class Skills
Magic Resistance: EX (B)
In his normal state, he is unaffected by non-divine magecraft and cannot benefit from any ordinary magical enhancements, healing, or support. He is merely an observer in the Holy Grail War, enjoying immunity from magical attacks. High-level magecraft can affect him to some extent, but its effectiveness is greatly reduced.
In his fantasy state, his unique Magic Resistance ability is nullified, and his level is B, making him immune to magecraft of three verses or less. Even against grand magecraft or rituals, he can avoid harm and enjoy all magical enhancements, healing, and support.
Riding: D (A)
The talent for riding. In his normal state, he is only slightly better than the average person at riding horses. In his fantasy state, he possesses the extraordinary ability to ride even phantasmal beasts.
Independent Action: C
The ability to act independently even when cut off from mana supply. At rank C, he can remain in the world for one day without a Master.
Self-Preservation: C++
Allows Don Quixote to retreat from the battlefield at any time. As long as his Master is safe, it is almost impossible for Don Quixote to be eliminated. He is not a combat-oriented servant, and this ability ensures his survival to the end. In emergencies, Don Quixote can use his first Noble Phantasm to retreat into the book, evading certain death.
This ability is nullified in fantasy mode.
Battle Continuation: B
Derived from the exclusive ability of the famous Spanish hero knight "El Cid," known as "Protector of Valencia," though weakened. Originally an ability that allows for a burst of reversal power in a near-death state, it is now weakened to rank B.
Allows him to continue fighting even when severely injured.
Thirteen Knights Medal: C
A special ability from the Order of Santiago in the Spanish region. Don Quixote would not have originally received this honor, but due to the summoning process incorporating remnants of other knights' spiritual foundations, he gains this ability.
"Yes, I swear."
By making this oath, he activates it, gaining extensive combat experience without violating the knightly spirit, and his melee combat capabilities are significantly enhanced. This is especially effective in one-on-one duels, granting Don Quixote skills and courage he never possessed in life.
Illusory Knight: A
In his normal state, he claims to be a knight but can actually be considered an anti-knight.
Directly reduces the attributes of knight-class servants by two ranks. Even against knights with high magic resistance, it can still reduce their attributes by at least one rank, making him a countermeasure-type servant.
In his fantasy state, Don Quixote can increase the attributes of all knight-class servants by one rank, and all knight-class servants gain phantasmal beast-level mounts. (If they have normal horses, they temporarily become phantasmal beasts. If they already have phantasmal mounts, their abilities are enhanced. Even a donkey would be elevated to a phantasmal beast-level mount.)
Dual Form: -
Grants two different forms and allows autonomous switching based on the battle situation. It blocks other Masters from viewing his attributes, rendering True Name Discernment below A rank ineffective. Additionally, it provides immunity to certain mental-status effects.
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Noble Phantasms
Fantasy Knight (Joust Legend)
Rank: EX
Type: Self-Noble Phantasm
Range: -
Maximum Target: 1 person
Don Quixote reads from a book where he is the protagonist, recounting his brave battles against imaginary foes. This grants him a special ability to interfere with reality for a short time, switching himself to fantasy form.
He might already know that the so-called giants of the wind are merely stationary windmills.
Glory to All Knights (Gloria a los caballeros)
Rank: B
Type:
Range:300
Maximum Target: 50 people
Only usable by Don Quixote in his fantasy state and limited to a single use. After activation, he can no longer switch to fantasy form.
It gathers the abilities of all knight-class servants within the Noble Phantasm's range, reaching the pinnacle of fantasy in an instant. The power of the Noble Phantasm increases with the number of knights present. The more the target aligns with a boss-type monster in a knightly context, the stronger the Noble Phantasm's power.
Whether it's a holy spear that can break castles or a demon-slaying sword, Don Quixote can choose one as his fantasy Noble Phantasm for his mounted charge. He will ride forward like the protagonist among knights, defeating the invincible demon king.
"The protagonist always wins. Perhaps the readers are tired of it. But this time, it is still the victory of the protagonist, Don Quixote! Rocinante, charge!"