Raül and his friends are a group of young people united by an unusual sense of empathy in a world fragmented into kingdoms in constant tension. Their journey begins with apparent normality, marked by curiosity, coexistence, and a desire to help others, but they soon discover that even the most well-intentioned actions can trigger irreversible consequences.
As they venture into unknown territories and come into contact with realities they do not fully understand, they become involved in conflicts that exceed their capacity to make decisions. Their presence becomes the spark for uprisings, persecutions, and social collapses that end up affecting entire villages and, ultimately, entire kingdoms.
It is in this context that Frédor appears, a powerful and unsettling entity that does not hide behind false promises or conciliatory speeches. Frédor observes, calculates, and acts with an unforgiving logic: he destroys without denying it and offers the protagonists the chance to join him without ever lying about the true cost of power. His presence shatters any simple idea of good and evil and turns every decision into a profound moral dilemma.