Thanks! With the similarities between them, I'm sure the SaGa Frontier development team consciously drew on Terra for Asellus' design and story. They're both coming to terms with an identity that straddles two worlds and seemingly belongs to neither. They both feel isolated from the world around them and want to know love, and they ultimately find it--but outside of the standard boy-meets-girl romantic archetype that you often see in RPGs. I can identify with both of them, and I like their storylines so much because they affirm that there's hope for weirdos.One thing I like about Asellus' story is that it gives the player considerable freedom in interpretation. Do we take Asellus at her word when she protests to Zozma that she only loved White Rose "as a sister and a friend?" Or do we agree with Zozma's assessment, "Maybe it's time for you to come out with it?" And what she does with her mystic heritage is up to us, as the players: she can embrace it, learn to live with it, or reject it in favor of a human life, however brief. SaGa Frontier's setup is itself all about freedom, and in a lot of ways, Asellus' scenario is what we make it.