If the many-eyed giant still lives, then we hope he has managed to find happiness despite the horrors of the past. Though Zeus and Hera used Argus the most often, certain other Olympians would also use him in their schemes.
Though he didn’t seem to mean anyone any harm, he was forced to do terrible things for the Olympians, and if someone were to free him from his slavery then he would likely to be extremely grateful to them. As for his personality, Argus was a rather tragic figure, forced to become a tortured slave to the Olympians and thus extremely fearful of them. This not only allowed Argus and his ilk to heal from wounds inflicted by other Kaiju by stealing their opponents’ organs, but also allowed them to easily take new and more dangerous abilities. Due to this power, many fossils of Argus’ species where initially believed to be chimeras, made up of the mismatched parts of various other Kaiju. He did possess one unique power, rather similar to the Fusionemteuthis and Fusionemcheli which infest Scylla, wherein Argus could use various special nerves throughout his body to connect with and fuse with the severed body parts of other monsters. Argus was a purely melee-based fighter, utilising his sharp claws, powerful jaws and knife-like teeth to eviscerate his enemies. Naturally, the finger has been pointed at Argus due to these signs, though time will tell as to whether the many-eyed giant continues to survive. MONARCH agents on the scene recovered giant varanid scales (and some very closely resembling Godzilla’s, curiously enough) that had fallen off of their owner, as well as traces of various eye fluids. Though for a long time this theory was believed to be nonsense, recently compelling evidence has been unearthed in Papua New Guinea, of all places: in the December of 2018, Inagos emerged in a panic from a Hollow Earth tunnel near the city of Mount Hagen, having evidently just had a brush with something very big and very threatening. Some even point to Argus as the mysterious Kaiju that fought alongside Zeus against Godzilla and Typhon at the very end of the War of the Gods. For many years, it was believed he had been deceived and slain by Hermes in the messenger god’s attempt to rescue Io (some hapless human princess somehow caught up in one of Zeus’ schemes who Hera got decidedly envious of and thus had Argus take prisoner), and that is still mostly the view of MONARCH operatives, but some agents believe that Argus somehow survived, being saved at the last moment by Zeus and kept on Olympus in secret to serve the King of the Gods if he ever needed him. Argus was sent out to attack the enemies and victims of the Olympians, with Hera using him the most frequently. In order to keep him in line, the abused Kaiju was frequently scarred by the Olympians and essentially used as a living trophy room, the Olympians taking advantage of Argus’ powers to insert the eyes of slain foes into his body, transforming him into the iconic many-eyes giant he is now known as.
When he emerged, Argus was soon set upon by the Olympians, with Hera trapping him in a grotto on Olympus itself so that these self-proclaimed Gods could use poor Argus as a weapon against their enemies.
A colossal variety of monitor lizard (yet again found in Quaternary Greece), most of Argus’ kind were offed by the Ice Age, unable to survive in a rapidly cooling world, with Argus himself retreating into the warm Hollow Earth tunnels beneath Greece to survive. The enigmatic Argus Panoptes was a bizarre and fascinating Kaiju which many MONARCH agents speculate may still be alive to this very day.