"This Sacred Gear was created alongside Boosted Gear and Divine Dividing after the Great War, where Letus fought with Ddraig and Albion. Though the history extends before that. Before the Evil Dragon Letus, were two beings. The new dragon was a being on-par with one of the legendary Evil Dragons, it's body and power being a combination of the son of an Ultimate-Class Grim Reaper, and a dragon which was created using the DNA of one of the Five Great Dragon Kings."@en . "Scale Mail"@en . "Bracelet"@en . . "Drain Spiker"@en . "Thief Hand"@en . "Drain Spiker"@en . . "Supaik\u0101doren"@en . "This Sacred Gear was created alongside Boosted Gear and Divine Dividing after the Great War, where Letus fought with Ddraig and Albion. Though the history extends before that. Before the Evil Dragon Letus, were two beings. The first was Thanatos, the son of the Grim Reaper Pluto, and a servent of Hades. During the early stages of the Great War, he was ordered to investigate a group of rouges from each faction who had been conducting strange reasearch. What Thanatos found was an artificial dragon, created by the rouges, who intended to profit off the War. Intending to stop them, he was heavily injured, along with the dragon. Lying in a collected puddle of their blood, Thanatos used a magic circle and conducted a last resort: fusion. Combing his body with the artifical dragons, both became one, a humanoid-dragon who would be called Letus. The new dragon was a being on-par with one of the legendary Evil Dragons, it's body and power being a combination of the son of an Ultimate-Class Grim Reaper, and a dragon which was created using the DNA of one of the Five Great Dragon Kings. The new combined mind of dragon instincts and normal knowledge clouded Letus' mind, causing him to rush out and find the nearest thing to fight. The things he encountered were Ddraig and Albion."@en . "Spike Creation"@en . "\u30C9\u30EC\u30FC\u30F3\u30FB\u30B9\u30D1\u30A4\u30AB\u30FC"@en . "Drain Enemy Power . "Chaos Drive"@en . "Sacred Gear"@en . "Gauntlet"@en . . . .