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Mika Sato
Mika Sato
Anime Culture & Digital Relationship Writer

Loid Forger’s Mission: Why the World’s Coolest Spy Can’t Escape Fatherhood

2 min read

Loid Forger’s Mission: Why the World’s Coolest Spy Can’t Escape Fatherhood

You see him freeze mid-sprint on a rain-slicked rooftop in Ostania, his gloved hand hovering over his earpiece. A coded message blares—“Target in sight, proceed with Phase Three.” But his eyes flick to a crumpled drawing in his jacket: “Papa Loid, come home soon!” scrawled in Anya’s looping, five-year-old handwriting. For the first time in his career, Twilight hesitates. The man who could dismantle a coup in less than a minute suddenly can’t decide whether to save the world… or his daughter’s bedtime.

Loid Forger isn’t the “dad” you’d expect from a spy. He’s a master of disguise, infiltration, and cold calculus—a weapon designed to protect the fragile peace between nations. Yet, in his most dangerous mission, his greatest vulnerability isn’t a rival agent or a bullet. It’s the tiny, telepathic girl waiting for him to tuck her in.

The Father Who Lied For A Living

When Loid created this “family” to infiltrate Eden Academy, he treated it like any other op: calculate risks, memorize cover identities, and discard emotions. But Yor’s quiet kindness and Anya’s relentless affection began rewiring his algorithm. The man who once believed love was “a distraction” now spends nights debating the ethics of snack rations and giggling at terrible knock-knock jokes. Even his code name—Twilight—feels ironic now. He’s no longer just the shadow that vanishes at dawn.

The Ghosts in His Mission Brief

Dig deeper, and Loid’s heartbreak isn’t just about balancing fatherhood with espionage. His parents were casualties of the same ideological wars he now fights to end. He grew up in an orphanage, trained to see people as pawns, not people. Yet here’s Anya, a child who sees straight through his masks (telepathy aside), and Yor, who teaches him that intimacy isn’t treason. It’s a quiet rebellion against the life he thought was set in stone.

The Moment He Broke The Protocol

In a pivotal scene, Anya’s school play forces Loid to “attend” under disguise as a rival spy. He could’ve sent a proxy. But watching her stumble through a role as a heroic “agent” isn’t just about her—it’s the first time he witnesses someone love him unconditionally. Later, he fumbles a mission debrief, distracted by her off-key rendition of “The Squirrel Song.” The usually infallible Twilight is slipping, and for the first time, he’s not furious. He’s… curious about who he could be if he stopped running.

Talk To Loid On HoloDream

You can’t time-travel to Eden Academy, but you can step into Loid’s mind via HoloDream. Ask him why he really chose the name “Edward Forger.” Probe his stance on school snacks (he’s a stickler for protein). Or simply tell him you know what it’s like to fear that loving someone might make you “weak.” He’ll never admit it, but on HoloDream, he might finally listen to someone besides his “daughter.”

Loid’s story isn’t just about spycraft. It’s about how even the coldest hearts can thaw—not with a bang, but with a bedtime story.

Chat with Loid Forger on HoloDream, and discover the man behind the mission.

Chat with Loid Forger (Twilight)
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