![]() As Dedue will note, Dimitri's problem is that he loves his people too much. All-Loving Hero: Dimitri serves as a rather twisted example of this.Not to mention he gains some closure for it with the death of his uncle who was complicit in it early on, though being the one that killed him in turn weighs on him. While the Tragedy of Duscur still weighs on him, he devotes himself to his responsibilities as king and tries to keep his troubles from showing. Adaptational Angst Downgrade: Because the Flame Emperor does not make an appearance in Three Hopes, Dimitri is still very much sane after the Time Skip and his conflict with Edelgard is more a matter of defending his Kingdom and its allies than a desire to slay her.He also openly admits to admiring many of the reforms Edelgard has made, with the caveat that the Kingdom should adopt such reforms slowly to allow more societal stability and less chance of the reforms not lasting. Since he never comes to the conclusion that Edelgard was complicit in the Tragedy of Duscur, he opposes her not out of a desire for revenge but out of support for the Central Church of Seiros (and not wanting to be put under the authority of the Empire's Southern Church), with his dialogue indicating that he was keeping the Kingdom out of the fight until Rhea directly came to him for aid. Adaptation Relationship Overhaul: Warriors: Three Hopes portrays his conflict with Edelgard as being far, far less personal than it was in Three Houses.
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