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=Notes= | =Notes= | ||
* Aegir's Sacred Artifact first appeared in LifeWonder's previous game, Fantastic Boyfriends as a weapon to be used by Gordon. Despite it has the exact same design and the name of the weapon surely claiming it was Aegir's, it is uncertain if there is a relation here. | * Aegir's Sacred Artifact first appeared in LifeWonder's previous game, Fantastic Boyfriends as a weapon to be used by [[Gordon]]. Despite it has the exact same design and the name of the weapon surely claiming it was Aegir's, it is uncertain if there is a relation here. | ||
* Aegir's charge Skill makes reference to the wife of the giant [[wikipedia:Ægir|Ægir]], [[wikipedia:Rán|Rán]], the personification of the seas, for the Norse, and how she was, allegedly, fond of laying nets to catch the men who sailed the seas. | * Aegir's charge Skill makes reference to the wife of the giant [[wikipedia:Ægir|Ægir]], [[wikipedia:Rán|Rán]], the personification of the seas, for the Norse, and how she was, allegedly, fond of laying nets to catch the men who sailed the seas. | ||
* Curiously, even though all of Aegir's lines refer to drowning people, and getting their belongings, it was [[wikipedia:Rán|Rán]] who represented this sinister side of the sea for the Norse, while [[wikipedia:Ægir|Ægir]] personified the sea as a friendly power. | * Curiously, even though all of Aegir's lines refer to drowning people, and getting their belongings, it was [[wikipedia:Rán|Rán]] who represented this sinister side of the sea for the Norse, while [[wikipedia:Ægir|Ægir]] personified the sea as a friendly power. |
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