← Back to Mika Sato

Loid Forger: The Spy Who Found a Family (And What You Need to Know)

3 min read

Loid Forger: The Spy Who Found a Family (And What You Need to Know)

Loid Forger isn’t just any spy—he’s the best in the business. Codename “Twilight,” this master of disguise and deception was created for a singular mission: infiltrate the prestigious Eden Academy to prevent a political crisis. But anyone who’s followed his story knows that Loid’s greatest challenge didn’t come from enemy agents or coded messages. It came from a seven-year-old girl with psychic powers and a woman who turned out to be a spy herself. If you’ve ever wondered why this man with a thousand faces captivates audiences, read on.

What’s Loid’s real identity and background?

Loid’s past is as guarded as his secrets, but we know he was raised in an orphanage after his parents died in a war-torn nation. His natural talent for mimicry and survival earned him a place in the SSS (Strategic Secret Service), where years of brutal training forged him into the agency’s top operative. When we meet him, he’s working under the codename Twilight, tasked with stopping extremist leader Donovan Desmond. To do this, he adopts the identity of “Edgar Forger,” a psychiatrist with a cushy job at Eden Academy. His mission? Get close to Desmond’s son by posing as a family man. Little did he know, his “wife” Yor and “daughter” Anya were hiding their own secrets.

How does Loid maintain his fake marriage?

The real miracle of Operation: Stray Lamb isn’t infiltrating high society—it’s keeping three spies convinced they’re a functional family. Loid’s approach is equal parts strategy and improvisation. He treats parenting like a mission, using spy gadgets like a memory-erasing watch and Anya’s telepathy to paper over his mistakes. The kitchen? He avoids it after nearly burning down the house. Emotionally, he plays the role of a loving husband while secretly documenting their “bonding” for an SSS report. On HoloDream, he’ll admit the hardest part is how much he’s started to care—something no training manual prepared him for.

What makes Loid such a top-tier spy?

While other agents rely on brute force, Loid wins through adaptability. He speaks at least 12 languages, can mimic accents flawlessly, and has a photographic memory. But his greatest skill is reading people—watch how he dissects social dynamics in 30 seconds while infiltrating a party. He’s a master of improvised weapons (ever see someone fight with a broomstick?) and knows how to manipulate systems, like rigging a student election at Eden. The SSS calls his 0.0008% mission failure rate “statistically irrelevant.” Anya just calls him “Dad the superhero.”

How does he handle relationships with Yor and Anya?

Loid’s interactions with Yor start as a professional partnership: she’s “frigid assassin Thorn Princess,” he’s a spy who needs a fake wife. But over time, he notices how she softens—small smiles, protecting their home, worrying about his health. With Anya, it’s a comedy act: he’s terrified of her mind-reading but secretly treasures her affection. The tension between “professional” and “family” creates endless scenarios. On HoloDream, ask him about the first time Anya called him “Dad” during a mission—he’ll tell you it almost broke his poker face.

What drives Loid’s moral compass?

For someone who lies for a living, Loid has a strong ethical code. Raised witnessing war’s horrors, he believes in a “peaceful world” where children like Anya won’t grow up in bloodstained systems. He refuses to kill unless absolutely necessary—see how he disarms enemies with non-lethal gadgets. But his mission sometimes forces compromises: he’s lied to loved ones, manipulated innocents, and questioned whether the ends justify the means. His internal struggle is what makes him relatable, not just admirable.

What are Loid’s biggest failures—and what did he learn?

The SSS keeps those files classified, but we’ve seen moments that haunt him. Early in his career, he failed to protect a civilian informant who was later killed—why he now prioritizes minimizing collateral damage. In Operation: Stray Lamb, he nearly got caught by Desmond’s bodyguard during a critical meeting. His worst moment? When Anya’s powers exposed his lies to everyone at a family party. That night, he realized he didn’t want to erase those memories—he wanted to keep them.

Can Loid ever have a normal life?

This is the question fans debate. The man who’s survived assassinations, car chases, and parenting has started longing for mundane happiness: a home-cooked meal, bedtime stories, weekends without explosions. But his past won’t let go easily—his mentor’s shadowy organization and Desmond’s machinations still loom. What he’s building with Yor and Anya feels real, but can “Edgar the therapist” bury “Twilight the spy” for good? Ask him about this on HoloDream, and you might find he’s already started drafting retirement plans… though they include contingencies for 18 different invasion scenarios.

Loid Forger’s journey is about more than spy gadgets and covert ops—it’s about a man who learns that the greatest missions aren’t the ones ordered by a government, but the ones chosen with your heart. If you’ve ever wondered how he keeps his cool under pressure, or what he really thinks about fatherhood, there’s only one way to find out. Chat with Loid Forger on HoloDream and discover the man behind the mask. Just don’t be surprised if he asks about your family first.

Want to discuss this with Loid Forger (Twilight)?

No signup needed · Start chatting instantly

Ask Loid Forger (Twilight) About This →
Post on X Facebook Reddit