Kashiko: If someone is a conqueror of gods, can we consider them a god?
Daisy: Kashiko’s asking the real questions here, and I like it!
Corrin: By Kashiko’s logic fighters like Kirby, Joker, Bayonetta, and possibly Cloud would be considered gods
Zelda: Normally god conquerors are just known as heroes. But considering that they have conquered literal gods, they definitely deserve to be considered a god as well
Lucina: Wait a minute. Did Corrin just call Sephiroth a god?
Daisy: Pardon?
Lucina: Earlier, Corrin stated that Cloud could possibly be considered god, but then there’s the fact that Cloud had to defeat Sephiroth, which had to have meant that Corrin indirectly referred to Sephiroth as a god
Kashiko: If you think about it, Corrin isn’t particularly wrong. It may have had something to do with absorbing the Lifestream, but do you also remember when Sephiroth supposedly sliced Galeem in half?
Zelda: Yeah, I remember that
Kashiko: Technically, Sephiroth’s ability to kill Galeem in just one slice technically also makes him worthy of being considered a god, taking into consideration how much longer it took for someone like Sayori to defeat that same god 6-ish months before Sephiroth stepped in and killed the god once and for all
Daisy: Even if it took Sayori a lot longer to defeat Galeem, it still doesn’t change the fact that Sayori conquered a god, so what does that make Sayori?
Corrin: At first glance, it would only make sense to just call her a hero. But remember the time when Sephiroth made her catch up on her math and do even more math. Not to say that I’m an expert mathematician or anything, but I’m sure Sephiroth taught Sayori enough math for both of them to be able to manipulate the reality at will. Logically, just being able to manipulate something like that already makes you a god
Lucina: *rolls eyes* That’s enough theology for today