Wilhelm

Wilhelm is a character in the Xenosaga series. He is the founder and CEO of Vector Industries, making him Shion's, Allen's and Miyuki's employer.

Appearance and personality
Wihelm is a man with red eyes and white fringe-styled hair. Wilhelm wears an all black with gold decorations uniform.

Wilhelm is an unflappable person who rarely shows emotion. What emotion he does show is subtle. He is extremely manipulative, having guided humanity towards countless Eternal Recurrences. A perceptive man, he lures people to his side by offering something they desire or forcing them to watch those they care about suffer. Through all this, he speaks and behaves in a measured, calm way. Even when genuinely surprised he does not raise his voice or become animated.

History
Wilhelm is the founder and CEO of the interplanetary corporation Vector Industries. He also is the former Executive Committee Director of the Galaxy Federation. Wilhelm resides in the Dammerung, a giant spacecraft/colony that acts as the headquarters for Vector. In actuality, he is the Guardian of the Lower Domain and has lived for countless millennia.

Episode I
Wilhelm first appears in a scene shortly after Shion and the others make their way onto the Elsa. A mysterious hooded man, the Red Testament reports to him information from KOS-MOS. They discuss KOS-MOS' prime directive to protect Shion, as well as the data for the Rhine Maiden being complete. Wilhelm is pleased that all phenomena are moving forward as specified by his Compass of Order.

Later in the game when the Kukai Foundation is framed by the U-TIC Organization for the destruction of the Woglinde, Wilhelm personally contacts Representative Helmer, offering his assistance. Wilhelm claims he will make recommendations to Parliament, dispatch the Dammerung in the Miltian system and agrees to lend KOS-MOS to Gaignun. Wilhelm is later seen playing chess with the Red Testament when the Song of Nephilim starts being heard and a large mass of gnosis appear by the Kukai Foundation. Wilhelm orders the Dammerung to utilize the Rhine Maiden, a weapon that destroys a massive amount of gnosis. Wilhelm has one final conversation with the Red Testament near the end of the game where they talk about Albedo being the one who is able to open the door to Abel's Ark. Wilhelm is doubtful of Albedo's ability to link with U-DO however.

Episode II
Heinlein is a Cardinal within the Immigrant Fleet and Ormus. While not seen, Heinlein is mentioned in several conversations within Episode II. During Margulis' first conversation with Sergius, Sergius speculates that Heinlein has manipulated the Federation military's upper ranks to influence the Federation's offensive against Second Miltia. When the party makes its way into Labyrinthos and investigates the data being held by Canaan, it is determined that the U-TIC Organization is being supported by a corporation called Hyams, which is led by Heinlein. After Sergius takes ahold of the Zohar and Proto Omega, establishing the Omega System, he is betrayed by Margulis and Heinlein, who seizes control of Ormus.

Trivia

 * Wilhelm's motives and nature are similar to Xenoblade Chronicles 3's main antagonist, Z.
 * Neither are real beings: Wilhelm was created by the Collective Unconscious to protect the Lower Domain from collapse, while Z is a manifestation of the fear of the consciousnesses stored within Origin.
 * Both treat the world as if it were entertainment, with Wilhelm treating it like a play, and Z like films.
 * Both want the world trapped in a time loop to avoid a perceived catastrophe in the future. To prevent the destruction of the universe, Wilhelm resets time to a point before the universe's collapse — a cycle known as Eternal Recurrence. Z has frozen time at the point where the two universes collided, creating Aionios, the "endless now".
 * Wilhelm is likely named after Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche. Eternal Recurrence was proposed as a concept by Nietzsche in a form very similar to how it appears in Xenosaga, and the subtitles of the mainline Xenosaga games — respectively Der Wille zur Macht, Jenseits von Gut und Böse, and Also Sprach Zarathustra — are named after various works of Nietzsche.