Chya

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Revision as of 11:56, 10 July 2008 by Turaga Dlakii (Talk | contribs)

Chya was a servant of the Brotherhood of Makuta. For three hundred years, he was the archenemy of Toa Dlakii.

Chya
chyapromo.png
Chya, as seen in a flashback in Road to Darkness.
Title Brotherhood of Makuta Slave Driver
Element Unknown
Kanohi Infected Great Kakama
Weapons Venom Scythe
Status Deceased
Pronunciation chah

Contents

History

Chya's origins remain something of a mystery. His first recorded appearance on Destral occurred two thousand years prior to the Great Cataclysm, in which, according to Toa Iruini, he was being experimented on by Makuta Chirox. Right from the beginning, he was given the job of slave driver, a job where he had to force the large number of Matoran slaves to work around Destral. It was Chya's enthusiasm for this job that led to Toa Gaaki and Toa Iruini learning of the Brotherhood of Makuta's plots.

It appears that, at an undisclosed time afterwards, Chya was tasked with hunting down Toa Dlakii and his band, presumably after they escaped from Destral.

It is known that Chya died. How, where and when is unknown, though a flashback in The Unknown Turaga II: Land of Dragons implies that Dlakii killed him.

Equipment

Throughout history, Chya's only known weapon was a rusted scythe. He wore an infected Kanohi Kakama, the Great Mask of Speed; however, due to Chirox's mutation, he could not access its power.


Powers and Traits

Chya's pre-mutation powers are unknown. A side effect of the mutation resulted in a complete loss of any special powers he ever had, including use of his Kanohi.


Personality

Compared to other villains, even the Lord of the Shadow Dragons, Chya was downright brutal. He thought nothing of torturing and disposing of Matoran in ways he created himself in his spare time. Whether or not there is more to him is unknown, as he elects not to show any other emotion.


Trivia

  • Though he is not brown in colouring, Chya's name was derived from the Japanese word chyairo, meaning brown. Curiously, chya is the Japanese word for tea.
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