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Asterix And | Obelix The Middle

He then eats the latrine’s decorative olive branch.

When Obelix arrives to remove the latrine with a single punch, he finds a problem: you can’t punch a line. Nauseus points to a parchment, stamped by the Roman Senate, defining “The Middle” as a demilitarized administrative zone. Any attack on the latrine is an attack on the concept of halfway—punishable by having to fill out Form XLII (“Declaration of Aggressive Intentions in Triplicate”).

Obelix, in a flash of uncharacteristic brilliance, says: “If the middle is here, then it’s also the middle of nothing. Because my house is there, the sea is there. But the real middle of my day is between breakfast and second breakfast. And that’s in my stomach.” asterix and obelix the middle

The Romans pack up their marble seats and march away, defeated by pedantry. Nauseus is last seen requesting a transfer to a lighthouse in Britannia, where “at least the fog makes the boundaries unclear.”

Back in the village, a great feast is held. The wild boar roast. The wine flows. Cacofonix is untied just long enough to sing one verse of “The Middle is a Lie” before being re-tied. Obelix, for his part, declares the adventure “too much thinking and not enough hitting.” Asterix agrees, but adds with a wink: “Sometimes, the hardest enemy to defeat is the one that doesn’t fight back. But a little geometry—and a very large appetite—saves the day.” He then eats the latrine’s decorative olive branch

Asterix seizes the moment. He challenges Centurion Nauseus to a duel—not of strength, but of geometry. “You say this is the middle by Roman measure. But Gaulish law,” Asterix says, pulling a dusty scroll from his tunic (courtesy of Getafix’s research), “defines the middle as the point equidistant from three things: the village, the sea, and the last standing menhir. And since Obelix just moved that menhir over there…” (Obelix, catching on, casually shoves a 12-ton stone ten feet east) “…the middle has shifted. Your latrine is now in the wrong place. By law. Read the fine print.”

Unlike previous adventures, the Romans do not attack. They do not build a palisade. They simply… are . Nauseus, a former logistics officer, has no desire to conquer Gauls. He wants a quiet posting, a functioning sewer, and a transfer to Sicily. His soldiers, the infamous Legio Sessilis (the “Sedentary Legion”), are equipped not with pilums and scuta, but with mops, incense, and scrolls of plumbing diagrams. Any attack on the latrine is an attack

Logline: When a Roman centurion suffering from an existential crisis builds a fortified latrine exactly halfway between their village and the sea, Asterix and Obelix must navigate a war of attrition, bureaucratic tedium, and their own short fuses to discover that sometimes, the most dangerous enemy isn't a legion—it’s a compromise.

Getafix brews a special “Potion of Ambivalence,” which makes anyone who drinks it see both sides of every argument. He gives it to Vitalstatistix, hoping for a diplomatic breakthrough. Instead, the chief spends three days staring at a bush, muttering, “On one hand, it’s a bush. On the other hand, it is also a collection of leaves.”

But not just any latrine. This is the Latrina Media , a gleaming, three-seater marble monument to bureaucratic geometry. Centurion Gaius Nauseus, a balding, sweaty, deeply neurotic Roman officer, has been assigned the most pointless task in the Empire: to mark the exact midpoint between the Gaulish village and the sea, and build a “rest stop” for imperial couriers. Why? Because Emperor Claudius, in a moment of bowel-induced clarity, decreed that “even the mightiest empire requires a place to pause.”