Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-6192846-20140612134000/@comment-6986530-20140726200022

I didn't say he was a troll, I said he would be one if it turned out it wasn't the host for wath. Don’t you quote-mine, you mine-blowing person you! >8I

After all, the title of the song is Muzzle (as in gun muzzle, some translate it as gunpoint) of Nemesis. The album is titled after the song, not Last Revolver. If the character pointing the muzzle of the gun on the album cover isn't the character featured in the song then it nonetheless is a deliberate point on mothy's part to make us think it is. Since we don't work on the assumption that "mothy is trolling on this information" when applying our "so obvious it hurts" rule, I think there is definitely enough evidence to assume this is the host for wrath.

What it means that the outfit is similar (I don't know if that skirt or the "sleeves" were part of it) to The Last Revolver character's, though, we can only speculate. It could be that Last Revolver isn't canon, and was just an exercise with the character by mothy. It could be it doesn't take place when we think it does, and the two characters are the same. It could be the wrath song takes place in the Sloth era and what significance that holds will probably be presented soon enough. Both characters could be Gumillia, and she just didn't change her outfit much from Last Revolver to whenever Muzzle of Nemesis is.

But regardless, the two songs have been given a definite connection in this outfit, the use of guns, mothy's Nemesis poem (whether or not it's canon it is drawing on both songs), etc. It's just a matter of how they're connected, and if it's in-universe or just symbolic.