User blog comment:Hitsuji Mamoru/Servant Creation Room 2 : Guess of the Who/@comment-30241447-20171104064920

I think I should start making stats for Greek and Roman heroes I want to be in FGO, lul.

Musician of the Gods

Summoning (True Name Concealed): “Hello, Master. May I bother you for some music? Perhaps, waltz?”

ATK/HP: 1003/10344; 2454/14433

Grail ATK/HP: 13233; 18454

Class: Caster

Rarity: ★★★★★

Deck: QQAAB

Active Skills

Blessing of Apollo A: Applies three-times Evade to party; Increases all Command Card performance for 3 turns [Cooldown: 6-4]

Material Notes EX: Charges party’s NP gauge by 40%; Increase party’s attack for 5 turns [Cooldown: 8-6]

Performance Continuation (Mortal) A-: Apply Guts to self for 3 turns; Apply one-time Invincible to party [Cooldown: 6-4]

Passive Skills

Endorsement of Nine Muses B++: Charges NP gauge by 4% per turn

Divinity A++: Increases damage by 230

Noble Phantasm: Epivlitikí Lýra: Divine Lyre of Commandment

Arts-type; deals heavy damage to all targets; very high chance to apply Death (80%) [Overcharge: Increases Arts card performance for three turns]

A demigod. Son of Calliope and King Oegrus of Thrace. His nine divine aunts taught him in the arts and music. Famous for the lyre, he once journeyed into the Underworld to fetch back his wife to which he lost again. Heartbroken, he was torn to pieces on the island of Lemnos, where his mother and aunts buried him at the foot of Olympus.

Bond Level 1:

Born out of an unlikely romance, the musician was raised in Thrace. There, he grew up hating his harsh father. Because of this, he spent much of his time in Olympus, training in music and the arts from his mother and aunts. Picking up the lyre of Apollo, the musician began to gain fame and fell in love. However, his wife died and the musician journeyed to the Underworld to bargain with Hades for her soul. He was ordered not to look back while guiding his wife’s soul to the mortal world. Unable to resist, he turned back and lost his wife again, this time, forever.

Bond Level 2: Blessings of Apollo A

Of course, the musician’s endorser is Apollo, the god of music. Apollo even went to say that Orpheus was his mortal counterpart. Donning many blessings on him, he coaxes them out one by one. With this and his EX luck stat, the musician is a very hard one to kill. Unless his opponent also has EX luck, it may be impossible to kill the musician as long as he has this skill.

Bond Level 3: Material Notes EX

Practice makes perfect, right? Oh wait, that does not apply to the musician. Having been taught by a god and nine goddesses and inheriting a god’s instrument, you would say practice isn’t needed for the musician. This skill gives the musician a boost in mental and physical prowess.

Bond Level 4: Performance Continuation (Mortal) A-

Quite offensive, giving the musician a skill that crudely commemorates his own death. Similar to the Battle Continuation skill some Servants have, this skill allows the musician to survive even the most fatal wounds. No doubt this skill was given by the Holy Grail because of the legends that swirl around the musician. It is said that after he lost his wife for the second time, he did not eat for forty days and nights. Even then, he did not die. He tried killing himself in so many different ways, to no avail. That is, until the maenads of Dionysus, god of wine, took it upon themselves to tear the musician to pieces.

Bond Level 5: Epivlitikí Lýra: Divine Lyre of Commandment

A Noble Phantasm that takes full advantage of the musician’s power over his lyre. The legends say that nothing could resist him. Nothing. Not even the gods could resist when he sang the longest elegy to his wife after her death. His music even had the power to shift the environment. Trees pulled up their roots to get closer; rocks rolled to him; clouds stopped overhead to hear him; even birds settled around him hoping to pick up hints on how to improve their own singing. The musician can use his lyre to serenade his opponents before killing them.