

There, he ruled Uruk as a wise king until he finally passed. Gilgamesh, realizing his journey had all been pointless, laughed hysterically, and returned to Uruk, having accepted his mortality and limited lifespan. But the herb, carelessly set aside in Gilgamesh's impatience and vanity, was eaten by a snake, gaining the immortal property of shedding its skin. He found this herb, and while he bathed, he felt true satisfaction and happiness in his own actions and successes for the first time in his life. But he told Gilgamesh of another method, a herb that would make him immortal without having to depend on the gods or giving up his humanity in such a way. He searched for decades, but only discovered that Ziusudra had joined the gods to become immortal, becoming half-plant in the process. He searched out the sage Ziusudra, an immortal who hailed from an era before the Great Flood that had wiped out most of humanity. At that moment, seeing the only person to ever equal him die, Gilgamesh became obsessed with his own mortality, and set out to become immortal. He died, returning to nothing but mud, and a distraught Gilgamesh cursed the gods, swearing that he would never call another his friend. Enraged and humiliated, Ishtar begged for them both to be put to death, but only Enkidu was punished. After the goddess Ishtar fell in love with him and he rejected her, the Bull of Heaven was unleashed on Uruk.Īfter the seven years of destruction caused by the beast, he and Enkidu bound it with the Chains of Heaven and defeated it. They worked and adventured side by side for years, battling against monsters side by side and protecting Uruk. He emptied out his vault fighting against Enkidu, and when the battle eventually ended, the two of them had become great friends. He faced off against Enkidu outside the Temple of Uruk, and for the first time in his life, he was challenged. While in his youth he was an earnest and kind boy, he grew highly arrogant as he matured, becoming a tyrant, and though Uruk's people suffered, the city prospered. Two-thirds a god and one-third human, and born from the union of King Lugalbanda and the goddess Rimat-Ninsun, he was a despot that ruled over and protected Uruk from all things, eventually turning against the gods themselves. He is the King of Heroes (英雄王, Eiyū-Ō), the hero of the oldest epic poem in human history, who possessed all things in the world. After Tokiomi's death, he forged a new contract with Kirei Kotomine that lasted until the Fifth Holy Grail War.

Gilgamesh (ギルガメッシュ, Girugamesshu) is the Archer-class Servant of Tokiomi Tohsaka during the Fourth Holy Grail War.
