The Adventures of Sucre
<infobox> <title source="title"></title>
<image source="image"></image> <label>Author</label> <label>Illustrator</label> <label>Published on</label> <label>Publisher</label> <group layout="horizontal"> <header>Publication order</header> <label>Previous</label> <label>Next</label> </group> </infobox> The Adventures of Sucre is a fictional comic series in Fuga: Melodies of Steel. The series follows an adventurer named Sucre and his sidekicks Crema & Miella as they solve their clients' mysteries.
History
The Adventures of Sucre comic series was written and illustrated by an artist under the pen name "Lunet", who is actually a human man named Count Nouvellune.
Only one story out of the series is viewable in Fuga 1, which is titled "-The Vanishing Key Arc-".
Characters
Sucre
The comic's titular protagonist. Sucre is a courageous 15-year-old boy with a sense of justice. When push comes to shove, his wit is his weapon.
Crema
Sucre's buddy and female pet owl that understands spoken language.
Miella
Sucre's lively, childhood friend. She tends to be a little too helpful.
The Doctor
An oddball inventor. He creates some amazing inventions even though they usually break right away.
Inspector Kafi
A friend of Sucre's father (whose whereabouts are unknown) who understands Sucre well.
Madam Assam
A widow of an antiques dealer.
Professor Burri
Previously an archeology professor, Burri was banished from the academic society after his fraud was discovered. He is a money grubber.
Count Nouvellune
A mysterious man in a mask. He persuades Professor Burri to come along and steal treasure.
Gallery
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Poster by Miyoshi
Trivia
- The comic makes a couple references to past Little Tail Bronx titles, with one being Professor Burri taking his design straight from Fool and the pendant looking very similar to the two medallions used to seal Lares and Lemures.
- Count Nouvellune is revealed to be a human in the comic's final chapter. When he takes his mask off, his silhouette does not possess animalistic ears nor a muzzle.
- A few village children throughout Gasco question Lunet's knowledge of certain aspects, mostly over the technology presented in the comic. They also make a point of the moon being a large theme.
- This is not the only time the moon is mentioned in Fuga, as Jeanne had wondered if humans were able to inhabit the moon within her archives. Moons are also much more prominent in Fuga 2.