

Sinbad is an idealist who engages in big-picture thinking. She also describes him as cherishing his family and friends and having a sensitive nature. On her death bed, Esra describes him as curious, energetic, and reckless. Along that same vein, he also brings Alibaba, Aladdin, and Morgiana to Sindria, providing them with a place where they are safe from Kou and Al-Thamen. The people no other country wants, Sindria accepts. Even before he founded his country, he has provided homes and livelihoods to refugees with nowhere else to go including Ja'far, Mahad and Vittel, Serendine and Drakon, Masrur and the other slave children without family, and Sharrkan. After seeing the state the Balbaddian people are in, he aligns himself with the fog troupe, going back on his promise to King Ahbmad to help eradicate them. While guarding a mansion in Balbadd, he looks the other way after a starving woman attacks him, allowing her and those with her to plunder it on the condition they do not hurt anyone. Sinbad concedes to himself that “ happened before.” ĭespite his tendency for irresponsible behavior toward women when drunk, he generally acts in ways that, on the surface, appear genuinely selfless. When drunk, his womanizing ways are severe enough that when accused of taking advantage of Kougyoku, his vassals instantly believe it. He enjoys drinking and partying as well as flirting. On the surface, he is an extremely likable man whose ego is as big as his smile. It primarily manifests in his ability to wield words to move people toward a goal, whether in writing or with a speech.

Sinbad’s charisma draws in the people around him and makes them want to follow him.
