Kamen Rider Zeztz 28 – Rider Tears
Watch Analysis
Kamen Rider Zeztz Episode 28 Sieg Is the Most Dangerous Type of Villain
Not just because he is powerful, but because of what he is.
He is a fallen hero who knows the truth about Code, and he is willing to seize power for his own reasons. We do not fully understand those reasons yet, but they clearly are not good.
And that combination changes everything.
Sieg Is Not a Fallen Hero. He Is Something Worse
Sieg is not a fallen hero in the sense that he used to be good.
He seems to have always been dangerous.
In the flashback, when he and the Lady are approved as Code agents, she immediately objects. She asks for him to be removed from the project because she does not want him to have power.
And the reason is extreme.
He is serving a thousand-year sentence.
That alone tells you what kind of person he is. Whatever he did, it was serious enough that even Code, a morally questionable organization, is taking a risk by using him.
So when Sieg later calls Code the real nightmare, it lands in a very strange way.
Because he might not be wrong, but he is also the worst possible person to say it.
The Real Nightmare Might Be Code Itself
Sieg claims that Code is the real nightmare.
That idea matters.
Code takes people, erases them, reuses them, and throws them back into normal life like nothing happened. They are willing to use even someone like Sieg, a clearly dangerous individual, if it serves their goals.
That raises a real question.
Did Sieg plant that idea in the Lady’s mind?
Because later, when Code tries to take her baby, that is the breaking point. That is when she turns on them.
And you have to wonder if what she saw in that moment confirmed what Sieg had already suggested.
That Code does not protect people. It uses them.
Sieg Has Knowledge the Hero Does Not
What makes Sieg especially dangerous is that he knows more than Baku.
He was there at the beginning.
He understands Code in a way the hero does not. He has seen the system from the inside, from the earliest stages, and that gives him an advantage.
He also mirrors the hero.
He fits the mold. He has the look. He has the presence. He even has his own system that feels like a prototype version of what Baku uses.
But he is not the same.
And that difference is where the danger comes from.
Sieg Does Not Need the System
Sieg can use Nightmare power without a system.
That alone sets him apart from everyone else.
While others rely on drivers and structured systems, Sieg seems to absorb and control Nightmare power directly.
That raises a fascinating possibility.
Maybe using Nightmare power requires something in the mind. Maybe it requires a kind of instability, a kind of madness.
And Sieg lives right on that line.
If that is true, then his past is not just backstory. It is the reason he is able to do what no one else can.
Episode 28 Proves His Power Is Real
The episode does not just tell us Sieg is dangerous.
It shows it.
He overpowers the situation, recreates the moon, shuts down Catastrophe’s destruction, and captures Nox.
Those are objective markers.
He is operating on a level above everyone else.
Why Sieg Works So Well
Sieg works because he combines three things:
- He has knowledge the hero does not have
- He has power that breaks the system
- He has a mindset that embraces the darkness instead of fighting it
That makes him unpredictable.
And that makes him dangerous in a way that feels earned.
Final Thoughts
Episode 28 positions Sieg as a uniquely dangerous villain.
Not just a strong enemy, but a character who challenges the entire structure of the story.
He forces us to question CODE-even more.
He mirrors the hero.
And he operates outside the rules.
I was super entertained by him throughout the episode, and I am very curious to see what he does next.