One of which, Frodi, is hot on the tail of the escapees. And he’s got seven God Saints to help him do it. He’s popular with the people, but Lyfia says he has a hidden agenda that’s not in line with what Lord Odin wants - namely raising the Yggdrasil tree, which is apparently not a good thing. Something is definitely up in Asgard, with Hilda (a character from the anime) being seemingly usurped as Asgard’s Earth representive by Andreas Lise. The two escape to a rural area and catch up over a Ploughman’s (I don’t think it’s actually a Ploughman’s) where Lyfia lets him know what’s going on.
Naturally it doesn’t take long for Leo to break them both out, the guards being no match for his abilities as a Saint. She too is captured by Asgardian guards as she is apparently wanted, and thrown into the same cell as Leo. At the same time a woman named Lyfia is canvassing the Asgardian populace, asking them to fight with her (as in, on her side, not just looking for a fight, which providing me put my understanding on an amusing tangent a few times while watching). Weak and confused he is captured by Asgardian guards and put into a cell. The audience viewpoint throughout this episode is pretty firmly with Leo Aiolia, and we even get some nice flashbacks of his story to help along those of us who aren’t familiar with his journey. Leo finds himself not dead, but somehow revitalised, and in Asgard. It’s a nice touch as it doesn’t necessitate familiarity with the original material. This sacrifice is revisited in the prologue at the beginning of the first episode: Gold Legend, Revive. But how’s the new Saint Seiya: Soul of Gold looking? Again, it’s an original anime, but this time its taking place after the Gold Saints sacrifice themselves in the original Hades arc against the Wailing Wall.