Only two survived: Guts and Casca. The rest became fuel for Griffith’s rebirth as Femto, the fifth angel of darkness.
In the end, the Band of the Hawk is the cruelest joke in BERSERK . They were a dream that almost came true. A family that was eaten by its own father. And a warning: In the world of BERSERK, the worst monsters are not the ones with claws and fangs. They are the ones you call your leader. BERSERK and the Band of the Hawk
For a moment, they flew higher than any hawk. But the sun they flew toward was made of hellfire. Only two survived: Guts and Casca
Because Miura did something remarkable: he showed us a family forged in chaos. The Hawks were not saints. They were killers, thieves, and war orphans. But they were loyal . In a world where the strong prey on the weak, the Hawks built a fragile sanctuary of mutual reliance. Pippin’s quiet strength, Judeau’s unrequited love for Casca, Corkus’ irritable but genuine devotion to Griffith—these small human moments made the Eclipse feel less like a plot twist and more like a personal violation. They were a dream that almost came true
The Band of the Hawk did not lose a battle. They were not defeated by an enemy army. They were used up by the very dream they served. The friends who shared campfires, who joked about Guts’ brooding silence, who celebrated victories with wine and laughter—they became a canvas of gore. Why does the Band of the Hawk continue to haunt readers, decades after the Eclipse?
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