Non voleva governare. Voleva possedere — Ruber

In the fortieth episode of Incompetent Antagonists, we analyze Ruber from The Magic Sword – Quest for Camelot. But Ruber is not an aspiring king. He's an inferiority complex wearing armor. He doesn't dream of Camelot. He dreams of owning it. He doesn't want to protect the kingdom. He wants to prove he's more worthy than Arthur. The problem is that he's never understood what it truly means to be king. From his first appearance, he's out of place: he enters from a side street, like an infiltrator. But he's not. He's a Knight of the Round Table. Camelot has given him trust, a title, honor. And he's turned it all into competition. In the video, we talk about: – Ruber as the embodiment of ambition without competence – Wounded pride as the driving force behind every choice – The difference between symbolic power and functional power – Excalibur as a moral judge, not an offensive weapon – Fusion with metal as the definitive loss of identity – Because those who want the throne as a trophy cannot bear its weight Ruber sees only the surface of power: glory, respect, control. He ignores the invisible burden: responsibility, balance, sacrifice. And when he finally gets what he wants... he corrupts it. Because Excalibur doesn't amplify who you are. It judges you. And if you're not worthy, it doesn't reject you. It annihilates you. If you enjoyed the video, tell me in the comments which antagonists you'd like to see in future episodes: I always enjoy reading them. See you in the next video. Bye-bye.