Jagi
Jagi | |
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Jagi as he appears in the manga. | |
Name in Kanji | ジャギ |
Name in Romaji | n/a |
Alternate spelling(s) | none |
Fighting Style | Hokuto Shin Ken, Nanto Sei Ken |
Allegiance(s) | n/a |
Family |
Raoh (adoptive older brother) Toki (adoptive older brother) Kenshirō (adoptive younger brother) Ryuken (adoptive father/sifu) |
Position(s) | The Third of the Four Brothers of Hokuto (北斗四兄弟の三兄) |
Appearances | Manga (ch. 38-44), Anime (ep. 29-32), Legends of the True Savior series, Jagi Gaiden and more. |
Voice actor(s) |
Kōji Totani Chikao Ōtsuka (1986 movie) David Itō (Legends of the True Savior) |
The second-youngest of the four Hokuto brothers, Jagi (ジャギ) was looked down on for his underhand tactics, which dictated victory at any cost, such as relying on a shotgun or spitting needles. His desire to cheat was only rivalled by his contempt for Kenshirō, his younger adoptive brother. Jagi believed that younger siblings must respect their elders and that it would be unforgivable for a younger brother to surpass him.
Hearing the news that Kenshirō was named successor, an outraged Jagi confronted him and ordered him to step down. Failing that, Jagi tried to kill him but was defeated, only to be spared at the last moment. Escaping with a disfigured head, Jagi had to use metal implants to relieve the swelling and adopted a helmet to hide his now hideous face. He exacted his revenge by manipulating Shin of the Nanto Sei Ken into defeating Kenshirō and kidnapping his fiancée Yuria. Shin had always loved Yuria from afar, and Jagi convinced him that Kenshirō wasn't worthy of protecting her in the violent wasteland.
Jagi became a ruthless gang-leader, and lived only to hate his younger brother. His wounded pride and disfigured appearance also made him violently paranoid and even caused him to murder his own minions. He attempted to defame Kenshirō by impersonating him, intentionally scarring himself to replicate the seven scars on his chest. He terrorized villages in Kenshirō's name, killed Rei's parents and kidnapped his younger sister Airi, selling her into a life of slavery. Kenshirō finally caught up with Jagi, who was outmatched and outfought. He even tried his own style of Nanto Seiken, which Kenshirō remarked was 'slow' and an insult to Shin's style. Kenshirō insisted that an ugly death befitted Jagi, before obliterating him once and for all. However, before dying, Jagi revealed to Kenshiro that both Raoh and Toki were still alive, and this started Kenshiro's quest to find his brothers and end the battle for the succession of Hokuto Shinken.
After his death, Jagi is usually unaccounted for in the manga when the Hokuto Brothers are mentioned.
The Jagi Gaiden manga expands Jagi's past history beyond what is shown in the original anime and manga, and does much to explain both his relationship with Ryuken and the Hokuto brothers and the events that led to him turning into a villain. When Jagi was an infant, his parents died in a fire from which Ryuken managed to save him, and Ryuken adopted Jagi as a son. Afterwards, Ryuken eventually adopted Raoh, Toki and Kenshiro, and Jagi was jealous of them for being taught Hokuto Shinken while he, Ryuken's son, was not. Ryuken eventually relented and announced to Jagi that he was not his son anymore, but just a student like the other three, and Jagi accepted. Jagi, however, was not as naturally gifted as Raoh and Toki, and this fed an inferiority complex in him, which Jagi took out on Kenshiro by tormenting him whenever possible. Jagi was also too headstrong and would escape the temple at times against Ryuken's orders, eventually joining a motorcycle gang. The gang's leader was impressed by Jagi's passion, and Jagi befriended the leader's sister, Anna, and developed romantic feelings for her. However, Jagi remained behind Raoh and Toki in terms of skill in Hokuto Shinken, and his hatred of them and Kenshiro made him leave the temple permanently.
Eventually, Anna was kidnapped by a rival motorcycle gang, and was raped and murdered by them. This drove Jagi into despair, and he attacked the rival motorcycle gang, breaking the iron-clad rule of using Hokuto Shinken unless chosen successor. The members of the gang, frightened and amazed by Hokuto Shinken's power, vowed allegiance to Jagi, but Jagi was suicidal with grief, and any pleasures he sought as leader of his own gang did not fulfill him. In suicidal despair, Jagi resorted to self-mutilation to escape reality, but then his henchmen informed him of something that led him from despair to rage: Kenshiro was chosen as the successor of Hokuto Shinken. Mad with anger, Jagi attacked Ryuken's temple and confronted him, but as he was going to attack him, Kenshiro stopped Jagi and disfigured him, but spared his life. This was the defining moment that led to Jagi dedicating his entire life to destroying Kenshiro, and from then on every one of his action's was with the intent of making Kenshiro suffer.
Hokuto Mosou
Jagi shows considerable development in his scenario in Illusionary Mode in Hokuto Mosou, as well.
Getting a fortune that Kenshiro would kill him on his current path, Jagi goes into hiding for several days, only to emerge weeks later with his men having abandoned him. Angered by this, he finds a kindred spirit in Amiba, and the two set out to once more to tarnish Kenshiro and Toki's reputation by terrorizing a village, with the two posing as Kenshiro and Toki respectively. Things become complicated when, after taking control of the village, Zeed and Boss Fang invade, forcing Jagi and Amiba to fight them off. In an ironic twist, Jagi and Amiba wind up saving the village, and ergo, inadvertently wind up helping Kenshiro and Toki's reputations.
Former raiders and some locals from the village wound up joining their army, and Jagi and Amiba wind up pressing on in an attempt to cause more trouble for Ken and Toki with their newfound army. Disaster occurs when they encounter Juda, and against all advice, Jagi engages him in a fit of rage. Amiba repeatedly tries to get Jagi to back off, to no avail; Jagi and Amiba are forced to break through Holy Imperial Army territory, and wind up enfuriating Souther in the process - made worse by Jagi screaming at the defeated Juda to "Tell Souther he's next!"
Explaining in detail to Jagi the act of monumental idiocy he just accomplished, the two seek refuge with Raoh's army, and Jagi is forced to beg Raoh for protection, which he grants on the condition that Jagi and Amiba assist in dealing with the burgeoning Nanto army. Engaging Raoh's enemies, Jagi and Amiba unwittingly cause a disaster when they throw everything they have into stopping what later turns out to be a diversionary operation. Raoh is furious and gives the pair one last chance to stay alive by killing Souther and stopping his army.
Initially, Jagi and Amiba come up with the idea to lure Toki and Kenshiro to fight Souther, but as the fight progresses and the Nanto army gets ground down, Jagi begins to awaken to his own power and realizes how effective it was. He elects to engage Souther on his own, dropping his posing as Kenshiro and proudly announcing his name. Taking pride, for perhaps, the first time in who he is, he defeats Souther, causing Toki to state that perhaps, for the first time, Jagi actually may be beginning to understand the tenets of Hokuto Shin Ken.
Trivia
- Jagi's mask is believed to have been inspired by the manga Sukeban Deka and its TV series, Sukeban Deka II: Shōjo Tekkamen Densetsu.
- His "What's my name?" line is attributed to Muhammad Ali, who shouted this to Ernie Terrell.
- In Hokuto Musou, Jagi appears to have become more overconfident than he is depicted as in the anime/manga. When the player selects him in Fist of the North Star: Ken's Rage, he laughs and then says, "Say my name, bitches!"
Gallery
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Jagi, before he was disfigured by Kenshirō
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Jagi in Ten no Haoh
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Jagi in Toki Gaiden
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Jagi in Jagi Gaiden
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Jagi in Hokuto Musou (game original outfit)
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Jagi in Hokuto Musou (source material outfit)
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Jagi in the TV animated series.
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Jagi in the 1986 movie