![]() ![]() Does he challenge Urizen as revenge for taking his arm? As a way of proving himself to Dante and company? Out of guilt for losing Yamato and enabling a demon invasion? Urizen defeating Dante a month ago suggests he has little chance of winning anyway, so by pressing ahead, is he recklessly overestimating his own power, borderline suicidal, or simply desperate and out of time given the threat Urizen poses? Surprisingly, the game itself almost seems to say yes to all of them, though Nero wanting revenge is portrayed as his initial reason until later on. A third opinion claims that the Doppelganger has a will of its own, separate from Vergil, V, and Urizen. Others believe that V didn't truly disappear and he's the one taking over the Doppelganger just to make it dance. From this interaction, some fans believe that Vergil's Character Development as V helped bring out the wacky side in him just like his twin brother, but by striking down his Doppelganger after it made a funny dance, he's just keeping his stoic persona intact. In the Special Edition, Vergil's EX Provocation taunt makes his Doppelganger dance to Dies Irae, causing him to strike it down afterwards. ![]() The fact that he seems pleasantly surprised that Nero is his son, and the gentle way he says Nero's name at the start of their fight make him seem like he's changed his future goals for the better, but he and Dante leave for the Underworld to destroy the Qliphoth immediately afterwards, making it impossible to know for sure.
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