Professor Agasa had the potential for completing truly revolutionary work, but... Some would say he lacked the ability to see the big picture. He was a truly intelligent man, and while most would describe the workings of his mind as overly-complicated (who builds a machine to cut sculptures out of watermelon?), in reality he's rather simple. His inventions solve the immediate troubles of those he cares about, a method which sometimes yielded grand results... But he lacked the knack for seeing a world-view of things when it came to inventing. His thoughts were whimsical, lovable, but not usually too practical.
