He has discovered he has some incurable, terminal illness due to his absorbing so many powers in the fashion he has, compounding to his insanity. The part of him more desperate for salvation emerges more and more often.
He sees what's going on around him, that others are being used as pawns in some grand scheme by arrogant asswipes. In a stunning reversal, he chooses to burn out defending some form of innocence (Say, Micah).
He turns and faces another ubermutant (Not Linderman or Peter). Then this starts playing. Yes it does.
He gets his own personal salvation despite being a monster.
Notice how many of the reoccurring characters can be interpreted as heros for a variety of reasons. If despite all of the horrible things he has done he can be depicted as a hero for one moment, and well, then I'd be impressed.
He sees what's going on around him, that others are being used as pawns in some grand scheme by arrogant asswipes. In a stunning reversal, he chooses to burn out defending some form of innocence (Say, Micah).
He turns and faces another ubermutant (Not Linderman or Peter). Then this starts playing. Yes it does.
He gets his own personal salvation despite being a monster.
Notice how many of the reoccurring characters can be interpreted as heros for a variety of reasons. If despite all of the horrible things he has done he can be depicted as a hero for one moment, and well, then I'd be impressed.