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((THIS KEFKA HAS NOT BEEN TO DISSIDIA))

"Read my lips - mercy is for wimps! There's a reason "oppose" rhymes with "dispose"...If they get in your way, kill them!"
—Kefka Palazzo


Kefka Palazzo (ケフカ・パラッツォ, Kefuka Parattso) (spelled as Cefca Palazzo in the Japanese version), also known as Lord Kefka upon ascension to Godhood, is the main antagonist of Final Fantasy VI. The prototype to the Magitek Knights, Kefka acts as Emperor Gestahl's court mage carrying out the emperor's orders, but behind his back schemes for his own ends.

While previous villains in the Final Fantasy series were distant, cold, ruthless, and bent on their goals, Kefka is loud, short-tempered, maniacal, and destructive. His popularity among Final Fantasy fans as a villain is rivaled only by Sephiroth. Kefka is known for his many one-liners, his final almighty appearance (which has become something of a tradition in the series), as well as his sociopathic hatred of everything in existence. His dark humor and jester-like appearance have earned him the nickname "The Psycho Clown" among fans. Kefka's most defining character trait is arguably his laughter, a high-pitched whooping cackle that is heard numerous times throughout the game.

According to the Final Fantasy VI Ultimania, Kefka was born November 19th, he is 5'4, 106 lb, and his blood type is AB.

Appearance and Personality

Kefka's appearance is that of an outlandish jester. In his original concept artworks, and in Dissidia Final Fantasy, Kefka wears an outfit composed of primarily red and yellow fabrics, a mismatched jumble of stripes and polka dots. He wears a red and white striped ruffle around his neck and a red cloak with a yellow and red inner lining. In his field sprite in Final Fantasy VI as well as alternate artworks and, to a lesser extent, an alternate costume in Dissidia 012 Final Fantasy, Kefka wears green robes with gold linings and red clothing. Universally, Kefka's face is covered with white make-up, red make-up around the eyes and white make-up on his hands, as well as gray hair. He has blond hair tied back into a tight ponytail, accentuated by an extending feather. In his "god" form, Kefka appears as a demonic angel with purple skin and a red loincloth. His limbs are more muscular than his human form, and he bears six wings -- four light, angelic wings and two dark, bat-like wings (although the Final Fantasy Anthology model replaces the bat-like wings with light angelic wings). In this form, the only resemblance Kefka retains to his human self is his ponytail, which is longer, with strands flowing upwards, and the feather that remains in his hair as a final reminder of Kefka's once-extravagant dress sense. In Dissidia Final Fantasy, his appearance is altered slightly, with Kefka gaining a wide grin resembling a Glasgow smile accentuated in purple lip make-up.

Kefka is maniacal, short-tempered, flamboyant, destructive, and cruel. He is a psychopath with no regard for human life or remorse for the atrocities he commits, and finds amusement in the suffering of others. He cracks dark jokes at times, breaking out into hysterical laughter upon causing mayhem, and possesses a hatred of everything in the world; Kefka's only joy in life comes from causing death and chaos wherever he can. What begins as simply a disregard to human life develops into nihilism - at the end of Final Fantasy VI Kefka declares the lives of mortals insignificant finding no meaning in things like love and hope, and thus seeks to destroy the bonds of existence itself. His bio in Dissidia 012 also stated that he lacks self-control, which shows itself in the various wanton destruction he commits throughout both Final Fantasy VI and the Dissidiasubseries without any apparent restraint on his part.

When the Returners infiltrate the Magitek Factory Kefka claims he is all-powerful, and intends to fully become a god by reawakening the Warring Triad, suggesting that Kefka suffers from megalomania. According to the Final Fantasy VI creation guide he has narcissistic traits, being fascinated with the image in the mirror and dressing up for mirrors. This is further implied in Dissidia with Kefka's mirror match quotes being compliments on the other Kefka's appearance. Kefka is something of a manchild, referring to fighting as "playing" and treating Terra as a doll to be played with. In the Japanese versions of Final Fantasy VI and Dissidia Final Fantasy, Kefka frequently uses the first-person pronoun "boku-chin" when referring to himself, a pronoun usually reserved for young boys.

Dissidia Final Fantasy shows a more tragic view of Kefka's nihilism and insanity. Once he is defeated in Shade Impulse Kefka laments on the futility of life in a soliloquy mirroring his speech in Final Fantasy VI, and fades with a sad laughter. Afterwards, Terra says Kefka destroyed as an attempt to fill his broken heart, and in Dissidia 012 Final Fantasy before the battle, Terra wonders if Kefka is being tormented when he repeatedly chants "destroy". Kefka's Dissidia 012 Museum profile mentions that he self-destructed to make himself feel better. Thus, in Dissidia Kefka is presented as a man so twisted all that can bring joy to him is mindless destruction.

Story

Early Life

Many details of Kefka's early life are unknown. He is thirty-five years old by the time of Final Fantasy VI, and Emperor Gestahl's right-hand man. At least sixteen years prior to the start of Final Fantasy VI, Kefka was the first experimental Magitek Knight, which gifted him incredible magical power, but shattered his sanity as a side effect of the process not being perfected yet. As a result of the loss of his sanity Kefka became a cruel, destructive madman and acquired a reputation as one of the most dangerous men in the Gestahlian Empire. About six years after the procedure, a restructuring of the Gestahlian Empire's military occurred, with Kefka and Leo Christophe being two of the individuals involved. The exact circumstances are unknown, but sometime prior to the game, Kefka used a Slave Crown to control Terra Branford and, as a test of whether the free-will dampening effects of the crown were effective, had her burn fifty Imperial soldiers alive.

The Empire

"Hee, hee! Nothing can beat the sweet music of hundreds of voices screaming in unison!"
—Kefka, about to poison Doma's river

Just prior to the events of the game, Kefka sends Terra to Narshe to acquire the frozen esper Valigarmanda, sendingBiggs and Wedge with her. The mission fails when Valigarmanda awakens in response to Terra's power, dispatches Biggs and Wedge and damages the Slave Crown, restoring Terra's free will but leaving her with amnesia. In her subsequent attempt to flee Narshe, Terra's memory is temporarily restored and she remembers Kefka ordering her to kill his own men and enslaving her before she blacks out.

Kefka's first appearance in person is when he comes to Figaro Castle seeking Terra under orders from Gestahl and presumably as part of reconnaissance mission. He complains about Figaro's location in the middle of a desert, and makes his soldiers to wipe his boots from sand. King Edgar, who is sheltering Terra in the hopes she will join the Returners against the Empire, conceals her whereabouts. Kefka doesn't believe Edgar and sets the castle on fire. When the castle burrows under the desert, Kefka has his bodyguards attack the fleeing Edgar, Terra and Locke Cole. The trio dispatches them and leave Kefka fuming.

Kefka comes to the kingdom of Doma as part of a battalion led by General Leo Cristophe. During this time, a rumor is going around that Kefka is intending to replace Leo as the general of the Imperial military, to which at least one soldier declares that he'd quit his position if Gestahl ever let Kefka become the head of their military. Although Leo is attempting to win the siege against Doma with minimal casualties, Kefka is secretly plotting to poison the river and kill the population of the castle. After Leo is called away by Emperor Gestahl, Kefka takes command of the Imperial forces and orders them to dump the poison. One of the soldiers is reluctant to use the poison because there are captured Imperial personnel within the base and Sabin Rene Figaro and Shadow attempt to stop him, but Kefka dumps the poison himself, killing everyone in the castle except for Cyan Garamonde and a Doma Sentry, all the while musing about the music of the unified screams of hundreds of voices. Until his ascension to Godhood, this act of genocide was considered Kefka's worst crime. This sends Cyan into a deep depression, which has potentially disastrous complications for him later in the game.

As the Returners reunite at Narshe, Celes Chere warns the others that Kefka has gathered a large force of Imperial soldiers and is leading them against the town himself. Kefka orders the troops to kill anyone in their way and leads them to the clifftops above Narshe to claim Valigarmanda. The Returners retreat to the mountains to guard the esper and, after fighting off his troops, confront Kefka in battle. Defeated, Kefka flees, but swears revenge.
Terra confronts Valigarmanda and is transformed into an esper herself. Tracking her down, the Returners meet the esper Ramuh, who tells them the true source of magic: magicite, an esper's remains, which can teach magic at a much higher concentration than Magitek. Armed with this knowledge, the Returners use Setzer Gabbiani's airship, the Blackjack, to fly to Vector and release the espers imprisoned by the Empire.

Acquisition of Power

" I'm a god! I'm all-powerful! Uwee-hee-hee... I'll collect more espers! I'll extract their magic... And then... ... ... I'll revive the Warring Triad!"
—Kefka in the Magitek Factory.

Within the Magitek Research Facility, the Returners spy Kefka torturing and beating espers, specifically Shiva and Ifrit. They overhear Kefka cackling over the power he has gained from the espers in the facility and his plans to restore the Warring Triad. After entering the heart of the facility and retrieving the magicite of the dead espers, the Returners meet Cid, who realises the true source of esper energy. Kefka, overjoyed to learn this, attempts to have Celes, who has betrayed the Empire, hand the pieces of magicite over to him, but Celes spirits them away so the Returners can escape, although not before Kefka hints that she is a spy under the employ of the Empire, making the Returners doubt her intentions. Kefka appears later in the Imperial Palace activating two large cranes to attack the Blackjack as the Returners flee the continent.

With Terra aware of her origins as a half-human, half-esper hybrid, she and the Returners go through a cave to the Land of Espers in the hopes of securing their support for an attack on the Empire. Kefka follows and declares that Gestahl has told him to let Terra ally with the Returners in order to have them open the gate. Kefka is defeated when the espers emerge from the gate and ends up blown away. It is unknown how he is returned to Vector, but Gestahl has Kefka imprisoned as a ploy to earn the Returners' trust so they would ally with him to find the escaped espers.

Ascension to Godhood

"And time will destroy all of those as well. Why do people insist on creating things that will inevitably be destroyed? Why do people cling to life, knowing that they must someday die? ...Knowing that none of it will have meant anything once they do?"
—Kefka upon the Returners confronting him at his tower, regarding life and existence.

Gestahl releases Kefka and he is dispatched to Thamasa, where he proceeds to have his soldiers attack both the Returners and General Leo's troops before killing all the espers and taking their magicite remains. When Kefka orders his troops to burn the town, General Leo steps in and fights Kefka, but he only succeeds in destroying Kefka's illusion; the real Kefka emerges moments later and slays the general. As if to pour salt on the wound, Kefka projects an illusion of Emperor Gestahl who "admits" he set up General Leo to allow the Empire acquire more espers. Kefka explains that he'll just cover up his murder of Leo by claiming he disposed of a traitor.

The sealed gate rips open and a second wave of espers flies into the village to attack Kefka, but Kefka has grown too strong and the espers' attacks have no effect. He implies, when the espers arrive, that his new-found strength is the result of collecting magicite prior to arriving at Thamasa, and easily slays them with his magic and takes their magicite shards, enhancing his already potent powers further.

((KEFKA WAS BROUGHT TO THE CITY BEFORE THE BELOW TAKES PLACE))

With the sealed gate open, Kefka and Gestahl cross over to the esper world, find the Warring Triad and raise the Floating Continent. When the Returners confront them, he has Celes attempt to strike the Returners down to prove her loyalty to the Empire. Celes stabs Kefka with the sword instead, cementing her loyalty to her friends. An enraged Kefka rushes into the field of the Triad and demands they bestow their power upon him, and that they demonstrate their true power. Ignoring the shocked Gestahl's warnings, Kefka has the Triad strike the Emperor down and pitches his body off the edge of the floating island. Celes then attempts to stop Kefka from misaligning the Triad, but her words fall on deaf ears. Kefka moves the Triad out of alignment, shattering their delicate magical field. Shadow and the Returners narrowly escape, but the damage is done; the Triad awakes from their slumber and the World of Balance shifts into the World of Ruin.

In the aftermath of the end of the world, Kefka drains the Triad of their power, turning them into weakened husks and himself into a God. Kefka builds a gigantic tower, fittingly called Kefka's Tower, from the rubble of the world he had destroyed. With the entire world living in fear of him, Kefka rules over the World of Ruin from atop the tower, smiting anyone who dares defy him with the Light of Judgment: a beam of magical energy that can destroy entire towns. A cult rises, worshipping Kefka (likely out of fear more than anything else). It is unspecified what Kefka spends his time doing, though he implies during his dialogue with the party before the final battle that he created numerous new monsters to fight them and guard his tower should they rise up against him.

"Life... dreams... hope... Where do they come from? And where do they go...? Such meaningless things... I'll destroy them all!"
—Kefka during the final battle.


A year after the Apocalypse, Celes awakes on a deserted island and journeys to reunite the scattered party members, and the reformed Returners assault Kefka's Tower. Battling their way to the summit to confront him, Kefka reveals his goal: in his view, life is meaningless and everything will only end up being destroyed. The Returners deny his claims by citing how, despite the world being in ruin, they have found positive things on which to hold on, such as learning what love is. Kefka finds their examples sickening, comparing them to a "self-help booklet", and decides to destroy everything, even the essence of life itself. Upon confronting Kefka in a golden skyscape, he utters one last nihilistic vision about life, dreams, and hope, and laughs maniacally as he states that he'll destroy everything.

In a final battle, Kefka is defeated and since Kefka had become the God of Magic, magic vanishes from the world along with Terra's powers. Terra, due to her connection with the children of Mobliz, is spared and becomes a human, but magicite and espers vanish and Kefka's Tower collapses as peace is restored unto the world.

((It is safe to read ahead now.))

Abilities

Kefka is a rarity among Final Fantasy villains in terms of power; while most other villains are consistently powerful, Kefka's power improves dramatically as the story progresses. He attacks Sabin in the Imperial Camp with a simple Morning Star, and could be injured by any attack (although he remarks after the second battle that he was holding back during those two attempts). In Narshe, he knows spells strong for that point in the game, but are overall weak in the scope of the entire spell list - his strongest spell at this time is Blizzara. Kefka acquires his power slowly, by absorbing the espers' strength. By the time he appears in Thamasa he is able to project realistic illusions, can single-handedly kill dozens of espers in one blow, is immune to their powers, and presumably capable of using Banish. He can also disable the espers' powers, an ability strongly implied to result in the destruction of anyone in close proximity, as evidenced by the disappearance of the three Magitek Armor troopers that accompanied him when he used it. He is still vulnerable at this point - Celes stabs him aboard the Floating Continent, and Kefka is shocked and enraged by the sight of his own blood, although he seems more angry than hurt.


((KEFKA WAS BROUGHT TO THE CITY BEFORE THE BELOW TAKES PLACE))

Following his taking control over the Warring Triad, Kefka becomes the God of Magic and his strength increases exponentially. At this point he is able to exploit the abilities of reality warping and other features including: elemental manipulation, power bestowal, and magical absorption. He utilises telekinesis, as evidenced when he levitates two of the Returners to demonstrate his power when they arrive to stop him. When the Returners encounter Kefka at the top of his tower, he utilizes a pyramid-shaped magical field around him, although it is not specified whether it was intended to be a magical barrier or a projection of his power. Now knowing the most powerful magical attacks in the game, including Ultima, Kefka levitates debris from around the world to form his tower, a bizarre patchwork of terrain and rooms. He uses his Light of Judgment to smite those who do not acknowledge his ruling of the world, and at least half a dozen towns are hit by the Light and devastated. Kefka creates various new monsters to guard his tower, including the revived, but weakened, Warring Triad themselves. Kefka creates a new magical spell called Forsaken, (known as "Goner" in the original U.S. SNES release) his signature attack with a magic power of 220, the highest in the game. However, Forsaken does not ignore defense, limiting its potential power. Kefka can use his wings to attack his enemies, appropriately referred to as Havoc Wing. It's shown in Dissidia Final Fantasy that he can use Havoc Wing in his regular form in addition to his god form, although he needs to partially transform into his god form in order to sprout the wings. He can summon angels to sap characters of their strength, called Fallen One (Heartless Angel in the GBA remake).

((It is safe to read ahead now.))

Other than his skills in magic, Kefka is a technological genius, as evidenced by his manning two cranes to stop the Returners from leaving Vector. A scene in the FMV opening for Final Fantasy VI implies he is responsible for the maintenance of the Magitek Armor.

- Info courtesy of the Final Fantasy Wiki: finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/Ke…
((COPIED OVER FROM THE LATE VAS'S ACCOUNT! Would you all say I'm a worthy member of the group, or have I fallen short? GIVE ME NO QUARTER, PLEASE Character list! ~The-Insane-God (https://www.deviantart.com/the-insane-god) Kefka (inactive) :iconevil-lord-from-moore: Exdeath (inactive) ))
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It had been three days of utter Hell for Kefka. He was too ashamed to have even tried communication with anyone else, and if they tried, he would've killed them...but now the damned silence lifted, and Kefka finally took advantage of this golden moment to scream to the heavens with all of his incalculable fury that had built up over the course of this event. "FUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU
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Silence

0 min read
Kefka awoke in his quaint house this morning with a yawn...I said with a yawn...where's the goddamn yawn?! Something was very wrong here...Kefka tried to yawn, but there was no sound. Very much angry, he stepped to his front door to find a note in the space between the door and it's frame...it said 'Negative' on it, and there was a description of why he was now mute, and that there were no perks to this either. Kefka was now beyond outraged, and if anyone, and I repeat ANYONE tried to communicate with him, he'd very likely try to kill them outright due to all this rage. He mentally (and VICIOUSLY) cursed the Mayor, then went out and started a
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((Hey, Kefka! Wanna rp with an awesome robot?))
((Hey it's the same guy behind Lavos here))
((Answer please?))
"Kefka Palazzo. I have heard about you, you are a twisted man with a unique sense of humor. I believe I can find something to relate too in that."

Kefka had been approached by a rather strange man; he stood at 6'1 and wore clothing reminiscent to that of people from Kefka's own world. With slicked back pale blonde hair and a unique golden face mask, he looked down upon Kefka who had more than likely minding his own business until this stranger showed up.

"If you would allow me the pleasure - a moment of your time, please."
Kefka was minding his own business at the time, trying to blast an anthill from the inside with Flare. He jumped when he heard the voice, and wheeled about to face the man. He was pleased to see someone who could have fit nicely into the Empire.

"Sure, sure, have a moment, not like there's anything else to do around here."
Relius smirked, apparently pleased to see that Kefka would allow Relius a moment of his time, "Looking at you, I can make the assumption that you too are tired of how this world is ran - by The Mayor - I can tell that you would enjoy nothing more than to eradicate his existence from this playground of worlds." Relius grinned slowly.

"My name is Relius Clover, and I am currently attempting to remove The Mayor from this plane of existence, so much forth that myself and those who work alongside me can decree how this world will continue to exist. So what do you say?" Relius' grin widened.
((THESE OLD COMMENTS ARE STAYING UP IN MEMORY OF THE ANCIENT DISASTER THAT UNFOLDED HERE, KNOWN AS RELIUS'S PLOT THAT COULD HAVE BEEN AWESOME BUT ENDED UP BEING SHITTY))