Photoxels

When Devil May Cry 5: Special Edition landed on next-gen consoles and, crucially, when the Vergil DLC dropped for PC, PS4, and Xbox One in December 2020 (rolling into mainstream discussion in 2021), the community was set ablaze. But it wasn’t just the gameplay of wielding the Yamato that captivated fans. It was the text. Specifically, the .

This is Vergil admitting that his philosophy is flawed. His entire identity is built on "severance"—cutting away weakness (his humanity) to become perfect. Yet, here he admits the Yamato, for all its power, cannot cut away the memory of his mother’s scream. In 2021 gameplay, this is why his taunts sound hollow; he is talking to himself. 3. The "Urizen" Entry (The Demon He Became) The Quote: "I threw away my name. I threw away my face. I planted the Qliphoth. For what? To sit on a throne of plastic? No. To feel nothing."

Published: June 2021 | Update: Special Edition Analysis

For 20 years, fans believed Vergil rejected humanity because he was cold. The 2021 Codex confirms the opposite. Vergil suffers from survivor’s guilt. He didn’t seek power to be evil; he sought power to never run again . This single entry recontextualizes his desire for Sparda’s sword. It wasn't greed—it was a childhood promise made in a burning bedroom. 2. The "Yamato" Entry (Severing Ties) The Quote: "The blade separates darkness from light. But it cannot separate regret from the soul."