<div>Apollo Justice is a defense attorney who has operated in the United States and Khura'in. He started off working for Gavin Law Offices, but after his first trial, he was taken under the wing of Phoenix Wright at the Wright Anything Agency. Along with co-counsel Trucy Wright, prosecutor Klavier Gavin, and mentor Phoenix, Justice participated in a test trial for the Jurist System in 2026, which was an effort to reintegrate the jury into court proceedings. In 2028, Justice was an instrumental figure in the final days of the conflict between Queen Ga'ran Sigatar Khura'in and the Defiant Dragons. Afterward, he established his own firm in Khura'in to help rebuild the country's legal system.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Apollo grew up not knowing about his mother or his half-sister. Instead, he was found and raised by Dhurke Sahdmadhi, husband of the reportedly now deceased Queen Amara, alongside Dhurke's own son, Nahyuta. However, Dhurke was falsely accused by Amara's sister and the new queen of Khura'in, Ga'ran, of being the arsonist. Although Dhurke, a skilled defense attorney, managed to prove his innocence in court, Ga'ran subsequently accused him of falsifying evidence and he was forced to flee to the mountains, taking Nahyuta and Apollo with him. Dhurke went on to form the "Defiant Dragons" rebel group to oppose Ga'ran and repeal her Defense Culpability Act.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>download apollo justice ace attorney</div><div></div><div>Download:
https://t.co/lhW0udRerI </div><div></div><div></div><div>As an adult, Apollo passed the bar exam, obtaining an ID of 29003, and came to work for Kristoph Gavin's law firm, Gavin Law Offices, where he was able to watch Gavin conduct cross-examinations on many occasions prior to his own debut as defense team leader. The defendant for Apollo's first trial was none other than disgraced former lawyer Phoenix Wright, with Gavin initially acting as the rookie defense attorney's co-counsel. At this point, Apollo knew Wright as a lawyer "of some renown" whom he respected, and while he had heard rumors of his alleged misdeeds, he held Wright in great regard. While cross-examining Olga Orly, he felt a sensation that he had never noticed before, and discovered that he was able to focus on the witness's tells. The trial would only get stranger when Wright began to accuse Gavin of being the real killer. Wright helped Apollo to figure out the truth about the case, securing a not guilty verdict and resulting in Gavin's arrest.</div><div></div><div></div><div>After the trial, Wright told Apollo that he had faked a key piece of evidence. Horrified that someone he respected so much would openly admit to forgery, Apollo punched Wright and then left, intending never to see him again. Gavin Law Offices was consequently dissolved, and Apollo was left without employment. Although Wright invited Apollo to work for the Wright & Co. Law Offices, the latter refused. At the time, Clay Terran was preparing for his screening exams to become an astronaut at the Cosmos Space Center, and he encouraged Apollo to continue being an attorney despite recent events.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Three months later, Apollo participated in a test trial for the Jurist System, defending Vera Misham against the charge of her father's murder, with Klavier once again prosecuting the case. Although Phoenix promised Apollo a "simple" case, it quickly escalated into a complex monstrosity, as the murder weapon, a Troupe Gramarye commemorative stamp laced with atroquinine, was tied to the defendant's secret life as a forger, as well as to the case that had cost Phoenix his attorney's badge. It was revealed that Phoenix had continued his investigation into his last case for the intervening seven years, and that the forged evidence he had presented during said trial had been given to him without him knowing it was fake.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Phoenix, having been exonerated, regained his attorney's badge and took on his first case two months after the Nine-Tails Vale case. While Cykes accompanied him to the crime scene at Shipshape Aquarium, Apollo was left behind to look after the office. During the course of the investigation, Phoenix found a suspicious pill and gave it to Apollo to research. Apollo dutifully went to the Hickfield Clinic to investigate and found out that the pill was a powerful sleeping drug, which the aquarium's vet, Dr. Herman Crab, had bought a large quantity of. This information would later prove important to solving the case and finding both defendants innocent.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Apollo, who was finally rid of his doubt, was asked to join Phoenix and eventually Athena back at the defense's bench, which he did after shedding his bandages and jacket. Via a bracelet read on Fulbright, it was revealed that the evidence that had supposedly pointed to Athena had been forged. Eventually, it was discovered that "Fulbright" was an impostor, as the real detective had died a year earlier. The three lawyers of the Wright Anything Agency worked together and managed to finally bring the phantom to justice after a long battle. After the case's resolution, the three attorneys agreed to do their best to help put the so-called "dark age of the law" behind them. Apollo was later present at the HAT-3 rocket launch, where he encouraged Solomon Starbuck as the astronaut finally returned to space.</div><div></div><div></div><div>After the trial, Apollo decided to temporarily stay in Khura'in, re-open Dhurke's law office, and help the kingdom get back on its feet. However, being the only defense attorney in the country, he soon found himself inundated with clients.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>The whole matter takes a surprise turn when Kristoph is summoned to testify and it transpires that he was Zak's original attorney before being fired after losing a game of cards with the defendant. In truth, he was the one who had requested the creation of the false evidence from the Mishams in order to win the high-profile case and become famous. Apollo accuses Kristoph of setting up Phoenix with the false evidence out of both revenge and jealousy before attempting to kill everyone related to the case out of fear of being found out. Following the final arguments, the player takes control of Lamiroir, who is one of the jurists for the case, and must decide whether or not Vera is guilty. If "Guilty" is chosen, it triggers an alternate ending in which a hung jury forces the court with no choice but to delay the verdict. Vera's condition worsens and she dies soon after, resulting in the case receiving no conclusion and an uncertain future for the Wright Anything Agency. If "Not Guilty" is chosen, then Vera is declared innocent by unanimous vote and ultimately recovers from the poison. With his name cleared, Phoenix considers applying for readmission to the bar and assures Lamiroir, who is really Thalassa in disguise, that he will watch over Apollo and Trucy.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Of course, this isn't totally universal with him. He begins Case 1 as a Phoenix Wright fanboy, raising objections that effectively amount to "there's a contradiction because Phoenix Wright would never do that". Clearly the idea that his hero lost his badge for evidence forgery years ago never made Apollo doubt in the kind of person he believed Phoenix to be, and throughout this case, as the ex-attorney pushes him along a path that eventually sees his own boss indicted for Shadi Smith's murder, Apollo (while confused and unsure) does put his trust in Phoenix right up to the verdict. Of course, he comes to regret this on some level after the trial's end, when he learns that the final, critical piece of evidence he was handed was a fake, crafted to trap Kristoph in a situation that left him unable to escape his crime in spite of his calculating efforts.</div><div></div><div></div><div>And with Phoenix, while Apollo is clearly still feeling burned by the events of his first case, he eventually begins to regain the respect he once had for the legendary ex-attorney. There's something missing here, though - in Case 4's last trial segment, Apollo's inner monologue indicates that at last, after months of secrecy, Phoenix finally came forth with explanation for his actions before and since hiring Apollo, opening up to him. Sadly, the way this is presented means that this hugely impactful interaction between the two happened entirely off-screen, and we only see Apollo talk with Phoenix one single time more afterward.</div><div></div><div></div><div>One thing I do like about Apollo's part in the finale is his last few lines in the trial. He doesn't give one of Phoenix's grand, idealistic inner monologues about law and his role as an attorney, but instead admits to himself that he just hasn't seen enough in his career yet to really understand either of those things. It's easy to miss, but I think it's a very important footnote to his role in this game.</div><div></div><div></div><div>The issue of motive is something people often bring up with Kristoph. We never do explicitly see his black Psyche-Locks break. Some have accused this of meaning that, to this day, we still don't know why he murdered Zak Gramarye. I don't think I can agree with that, since his motives seem pretty cleanly spelled out by the case's end. Kristoph saw the Gramarye trial as his ticket to success and notoriety as a defence attorney, and to ensure his victory, he prepared the forged diary page. But then, following what was, to him, a simple card game that he lost, his chance was taken from him and given instead to Phoenix Wright.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Now, Kristoph is clearly an exceedingly prideful man. As indicated by his unhinged rant at the end of Case 4, he views himself as the only one worthy to stand at the defence bench. In his twisted, warped worldview, the man who solved the DL-6 and SL-9 cases, who defeated Miles Edgeworth, Manfred and Franziska von Karma, Damon Gant, and countless other criminal opponents, is "a second-rate attorney who relies on luck and bluffs". Nothing could ever be good enough for Kristoph to view anyone else as his equal. The idea is an impossibility to him. And what this highlights is that Kristoph Gavin's motive is one very simple, and very human thing, taken to its absolute worst form.</div><div></div><div></div><div>The respect he's come to have toward Phoenix is a great touch, as well. In the Gramarye trial, he's clearly shaken by idea that the attorney he's watched mature from a nervous rookie to a courtroom veteran may have actually stooped to forgery, and even after seven years, he still seems to be holding onto the belief that Phoenix is a good, honest person worthy of the attorney's badge he once lost. It reveals a level of humanity we don't normally see from the Judge.</div><div></div><div> df19127ead</div>