God of War All Kratos Boat Stories with Atreus
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- Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2024
- God of War
LIVING AS A MAN OUTSIDE THE SHADOW OF THE GODS, KRATOS MUST ADAPT TO THE UNFAMILIAR NORSE LANDS, UNEXPECTED THREATS, AND A SECOND CHANCE AT BEING A FATHER.
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"There was once a chicken, who wished to cross a road."
"Ok...then what happened?"
"He did so."
"So why did he want to cross the road?"
"To get to the house of the whiny person."
"What..?"
"Knock knock."
"What?"
"Someone knocks on your door, what do you say, boy?"
"Uh.. who's there?"
"It is the chicken."
"the chicken who?"
"yes."
swiggydiggy this deserves more likes
I just laughed so fuckin hard at this lmfao
@@Boricua4lifeAC Saaaameee, a I read it in kratos voice
And then the horse shout, Areeesssss! Destroy my enemies and my life is yours!!
Out
@@adamsatanaels9413 then the horse shouted "the gods of olympus have abandoned me. now there is no hope"
@@dennisnedry8126 Ooooooooowwwwwt
@@adamsatanaels9413 and the hunter said: " that night..... i was trying..... to make you..... a great... warrior"
@@dennisnedry8126 You are testing me. 👿
"There once was a man named Zeus, who lived on a mountain."
"Ok... Then what happened?"
"He died"
Atreus: how did he die?
Kratos: You are not very observant
Atreus: "How did he die?"
Kratos: "That is another story. You may hear it when you're older. Much older."
You mean a man named ZOOOOOOOOOOOSSSSSSSSSS
"There once was a man named Zeus, who lived on a mountain"
"Ok... Then what happened?"
"He saw a Goat on the road"
"And then everyone died. The end."
All Mimirs stories are to give context and lore about this new world
All Kratos stories are analogies, to teach Atreus something
and then there's atreus who's really all cheek and doesnt learn till he gets a good spanking
Kratos' horse story is really just a recap of the prologue to GoW 1.
@@aftabkhan-EAEB Atreus is the real deal! My fave boi🤣
@@aftabkhan-EAEB You mean, a realistic BOI
@@krabbykat9918 Kratos: What I tell you about thieves, ears, and consequences boi?
"There once was an ugly Barnacle, he was so ugly everyone died. The end."
Thanks, u made my day
That didn't help at all
Why did I read this in Kratos' voice....
@@AsaCoCo_PH why wouldn't you.
what is a barnacle?
Kratos: "Your mother always spoke the truth"
Laufey when met kratos: "My name is Fey, just Fey, and I am 100% a normal human person"
Yeah right..😒
More like she held the truth instead of lying. Faye might be how she shortened her name like Chris.
Probably a pre-emptive measure against the Aesir, who were seeking her out
You know who starts conversations like that? A synth.
@@alistairwalker2850 yeah! Like if she had straight up went around telling everyone her name was Laufey it might've been easier to find her. It was also just a nickname, so she's not necessarily lying there
Atreus: “Got another story?”
Kratos: “Very well. Once, there was an angry Spartan. He was so angry that everyone died. The end.”
Kratos: expect for a hot and sexy goddess
"And then the Spartan moved to another land. Everyone there died too."
@@haddy106 *"Everyone there _will_ die too."
"That didn't help at all."
Hunter: “That night... I was trying to make you a great mare!”
Horse: “You succeeded.”
underrated comment
This is by far the best comment😂😂
Lmao
Kratos tells 5 minutes of stories but Mimir tells half an hour worth of stories , 10/10 Kratos
I just realized that Kratos is older than Odin
@@hypnoticskull6342 omg that's right
@@hypnoticskull6342 alot think he's 150
EJM
He’s a lot older than that
@@hypnoticskull6342 well my evidence is limited at the moment. Who knows, maybe Corey will reveal him to be thousands of years old instead of hundreds. Maybe age is irrelevant.
Is it just me, or was anyone else thinking of Kratos’s fight with Hermes during the tortoise and the hare?
That’s what the story is analogous to.
...something tells me the Hare couldn’t walk after that...
Daym, I forgot about that, thanks
House Hankins it's a double entendre. It's about the tortoise and the hare, but die-hard god of war fans can immediately place it back to that fight. as a matter of fact, I'm pretty sure all of the stories are of kratos' adventures. The horse and the stag is about kratos selling his life to ares, thus the "it was not" at the end, there may be others, but I haven't played the other games in the while.
Yall dont know the tale of the rabbit and the tortoise? (Same as this one but with no hare). This is where it came from
I halfway expected Kratos to say "There once was a man from Peru, Who dreamt he was eating his shoe. He woke up in a fright, in the middle of the night, to find that his dream had come true."
😂😂
Atreus: so, the lesson is: don't confuse your dreams with reality?
chatotalks I’m from peru... jut thought it was funny don’t mind me
god damn it XD
I dont get it
“If you continue to interrupt, I will end the story.”
“Okay. Okay.”
RUclips commercials: "and I took that personally"
I swear to Zeus I will turn this boat around.
Ok, maybe not Zeus.
This really made me laugh haha
@@renanferreira3314 I swear to me
Atreus: Dad. Can you tell me a story?
Kratos: fine. Listen carefully.
In the first age, in the first battle, one stood...
LOL
When the shadows first lengthened, one stood. He chose the path of perpetual torment...
And those who taste the bite of his sword name him...
@@bosscraftx8507 The Doom Slayer
Maybe Kratos is the Doom Slayer's super old and cool god grandpa
The story of the horse, the stag and hunter is of Kratos, the barbarian and Ares. Kratos the horse, the Babarian the stag and Ares the hunter. Very cool
I'm glad you caught that, i thought it was great they did that.
and the saddle is the chains
Or was Kratos, ares and Zeus?
Bonesjuones melo who's the barbarian?
@@larrypoppins6273 Early on in the God of War timeline (not Kratos's childhood early, but when he still had a family in Sparta,) Kratos was waging a campaign of conquest to spread the glory of Sparta. This campaign met with resistance from a barbarian army, and Kratos came face to face with a barbarian general. This general disarmed him, and was about to finish Kratos off, but Kratos appealed to Ares for aid, offering his life in service to the god of war in exchange for the destruction of his enemy. Ares accepted these terms, re-arming Kratos and thus allowing him to decapitate the barbarian general, but as the story in question indicates, it came at a great cost.
Atreus:got another story?
Kratos : there once was a god who killed a bunch of other gods and then bled all the way to another land, had children and said BOY a lot.
Super underrated
Lol
Lol
Atreus: that's sound familiar. Was the god bald and crumpy and angry all the time?
@@quocbinh6674 kratos: [Grunts]
Kratos voice is so soothing that he could make a great story teller
Your profile picture looks alot like me.
Are we twins?!?!!
Why does the character in the profile picture look familiar
I want him to read me a bedtime story
Id pay him to say....Questionable things xD
I cant get over how he was in sg1 !
Atreus: Want to try another story?
Kratos: Fine, listen carefully. There was once a man inside a tavern. Three men walked up to him. The man had slain the three men with only a quill.
And then he became excommunicado
I see were you got that John wick reference good one
Double quill! Triple quill!
@@llamathecooldude691 now thats a good joke
Kratos: With a FFFFFUCKIN' quill!
Wait... the thief story.... I wonder if that’s symbolic for Baldur and Freya
noticed it today Jan 15th, 2019
The reverse is also true of kratos and atreus. A child who receives nothing but discipline will also grow up damaged, unsympathetic, and angry at their parents.
@Diamond Bourne Kinda is true, actually. There's a happy medium to be reached.
AngelicusEXperiment exactly and i think thats the medium kratos is trying to reach with atreus
@@Vesperitis Agree. it should be both love and discipline
Atreus: "So getting revenge cost him his freedom." "Hope it was worth it."
Kratos: "It was not..."
This is one of the most impactful scenes in my opinion because this is Kratos indirectly telling Atreus some of his past, and him making it into a story and telling Atreus and US that it was not worth it. I find that interesting.
Says it wasn’t worth it to his son ! Still ruthless as fuck 😎
You must be pretty dumb to feel smart about putting 2 and 2 together lmao
@@eyeofsauron7662 no need in any insults. He found it interesting, nothing more.
Many of Kratos's stories are references to things that have or will happen.
- "The Horse and the Stag" references how Kratos's deal to get revenge cost him his freedom
- "The Frogs and the Dried Pond" is a reference to how Atreus began to descend into madness when he learned he was a god, but his father's wisdom prevents it and ultimately nothing happens.
- "The Thief and his Mother" is a reference to when Freya's unconditional love for her son was the cause of both his wicked behavior, misfortune, and his eventual death
- "The Mother Crab Scolding her Son" is like when Kratos scolds Atreus when Kratos did and still kinda does everything he gets mad at Atreus for. Atreus was so quick to figure out the end of the story because he sympathizes with the son crab.
- "The Woodsman and the Trees" is probably a reference to how the greek gods dismissed Kratos, who then returned and killed them all.
- "The scorpion and the Frog" is pretty straightforward. Maybe it references a specific god killing someone and dying but probably best to just interpret this as the 'gods are evil in general' story.
Scorpion story might be about when kratos dove into hell with Icarus and ripped his wings off without a second thought.
Atreus: Hope it was worth it.
Kratos: It was not.
Atreus: So what happens next?
Kratos: The horse screams out “AREEEEEEEES”
Atreus: "How about another story?"
Kratos: "Very well. Once there was a lion, a witch, and a wardrobe........"
Kinda late but, is this referrence to Narnia?
Very nice, Ptilopsis-chan
and the audacity of this bitch
there once was a man who lives in a fruit under the sea
When the frog was stinged and he was dying , he said "You will pay for this Zeus , be certain of that."
I was wondering what that was referencing. Good catch
Nice one
Atreus: Father, tell me a funny story
Kratos: there once was a alchemist who turned himself into a pickle.
Funniest shit I have ever seen.
Atreus: I, uh... I don’t get it.
Kratos: You must have a high IQ to understand.
Mimir explains the joke to BOI
Boi: *confution
Im pickle rick
@@solomonally8678
Me: *eats pickle
🤣🤣🤣🤣
My favorite one is when Atreus tells the "underwater wheel" joke and Kratos laughs but adamantly denies it when Atreus calls him out on it.
The hunter and the stag, the father frog and son frog, and the mother and the thief. Three of the best direct reflections to the characters and the game.
1 Kratos past
2 Kratos and his son (who is mostly listening to him)
3 Freyja and Baldur.
no its all about kratos past if u play all the game from gow 1 in ps2 until 3
Don’t forget about the tortoise and the hare. It’s a reference to Hermès and Kratos fight.
Hermès immature behavior is what got him killed because Kratos was calm and disciplined.
@@andytorres6052 Calm??? Where did you see that?
@@SomeAngryGuy1997 You know, when Hermes was bitching and Kratos calmly looked at his shoes like, "I'm taking those". He looked pretty casual to me
I like that Atreus thinks his fathers stories are too simple or straightforward, yet he keeps asking for more.
It's one of his very few ways of directly bonding with his dad, so it's understandable why he does so
My mom's told me the one about the thief and his mother! I don't know if it's a common story but it was crazy to hear it almost the exact same way as I remember.
That's pretty cool!
Radicool21 haha lol same my mother told me this story to but instead of the ear she told me lips
what is the story?
Moral of the story, don’t be a greedy shithead
My father told me the horse and hunter story
He said it exactly like kratos,
My father is white and bald
"Got another story?"
"There was once a good boy, who were thinking he is mortal. But one day he finds out he is god and immediately turn into a douche."
"..."
"This boy is me, isnt?"
"Yes."
...seanzoz...
@@shayaneshghi467 Uh, i see you are man of culture as well
Yo when I was younger, my dad used to tell me those exact kind of stories in the same way whenever I was being an idiot and when I'd call him out on it, he'd be like 'nooo, I'm not talking about you, I'm talking about someone else,' lool
Yes Boi...
I didn't know Kratos was a fan of Aesop. These stories are from a Greek philosopher named Aesop. His stories are beautiful and meaningful that a lot of people should learn from. These days, it seems people have forgotten his kind of lessons.
They're also directly connected to previous games. The horse, the hunter and the stag was him directly pulling from his own deal with Ares, for example.
@@kylestanley7843 Indeed
All Greek people are like this ig
Kindergarten gave me an irrational fear of Aesop
"These days". You seem to forget that children learn from their parents. Those parents give their awful ways of teaching to their children and their children pass 'em on the next generation, creating a cycle of the same bs until the cycle breaks, but those inter-generational traumas are hard to break and leave the people within it devastated.
"Have you ever heard of the Greek gods boy"
"No, father"
*"Exactly"*
" Your mother always spoke the truth..."
I wish we could've met the woman Kratos chose to love.
This time around, obviously.
she'll always be in kratos memory, and in kratos heart, and in kratos arms-
Atreus : “How about another story?”
Kratos: “Very well. In a distant world, in time immemorial. There was a young boy who lived in the desert with his aunt and uncle. He was attacked one day, but recused by an old man, who informed the boy about his father and his connection to a sect of holy warriors, as well as their fall from betrayal. After receiving a message from a princess begging for help, he returned home to find his family killed by an all controlling army. Together, the boy, old man, mechanical servants, a traveler and his companion went to a manmade moon capable of obliterating worlds to rescue this princess, only to lose the old man to a dark lord. The princess took them to a rebellion fighting against the empire, and destroyed the moon, receiving honors for their victory.”
Atraeus roasting Kratos' storytelling abilities is a lot funnier in light of the Big Spoiler at the end
Clearly hearing all of those stories inspired him to do better.
Kratos' stories are like
"There was a man. He died"
Atreus: So, got another story?
Kratos: Very well, there was once a Sea Captain...
;-P
Never forgeti, rest in spageti
Rip to him
well let me correct myself... there was thrice a sea captain
"He always comes back boi"
You can find his ship somewhere in the game
The Hunter: Ares
The Horse: Kratos
The Stag: The barbaric enemy
Gotta love the GOW1 reference 🙏🏾 and the story of Kratos
Many of Kratos's stories are references to things that have or will happen.
- "The Horse and the Stag" references how Kratos's deal to get revenge cost him his freedom
- "The Frogs and the Dried Pond" is a reference to how Atreus began to descend into madness when he learned he was a god, but his father's wisdom prevents it and ultimately nothing happens.
- "The Thief and his Mother" is a reference to when Freya's unconditional love for her son was the cause of both his wicked behavior, misfortune, and his eventual death
- "The Mother Crab Scolding her Son" is like when Kratos scolds Atreus when Kratos did and still kinda does everything he gets mad at Atreus for. Atreus was so quick to figure out the end of the story because he sympathizes with the son crab.
- "The Woodsman and the Trees" is probably a reference to how the greek gods dismissed Kratos, who then returned and killed them all.
- "The scorpion and the Frog" is pretty straightforward. Maybe it references a specific god killing someone and dying but probably best to just interpret this as the 'gods are evil in general' story.
@@Greg-ku7rn Gotta love how although Kratos stories seem boring and brief compared to Mimirs, they are very important life lessons that happen all the time all around them
@@Greg-ku7rn Last story seems like zeus betraying kratos after killing the "statue of liberty" idk what its called so imma call it that
And the hare and the tortoise is about Kratos and Hermes
@@MK-fz6il GOW3: Fantastic/Epic game 🙏🏾
Kratos: There was once a spider, who crawled up a water spout, but it began to rain and the spider died.
Atreus: Is that it?
Kratos: Yes.
Chris Judge was such a great choice to take over doing the voice. I kind of view it like a "What if Teal'c was an angry Greek guy" game, and it amuses the shit out of me.
DashCat9 fairly certain, some of the go’aul who kept him as slave was Greek gods
The stag and the horse story though... 💀
Atreus: Got another story?
Kratos: Long ago the four nation live together in harmony, then everything change when the Fire Nation attacked...
Seriously, and F.B.I open up
What an epic game
Complete change for the series but executed perfectly
Long live kratos and atreus
The hunter and the horse story is the story about Kratos and Aries. Kratos is the horse, and Aries is the hunter.
Kratos chose revenge, but it cost him his freedom and his family.
Atreus: "He chose revenge over freedom. Hope it was worth it."
Kratos: "It was not..." :(
:Kratos: It left really uncomfortable chain marks that really messes with your OCD
I thought it was Gaia for some reason
Ares*
I think Ares is the Stag. And the Hunter is Zeus.
Many of Kratos's stories are references to things that have or will happen.
- "The Horse and the Stag" references how Kratos's deal to get revenge cost him his freedom
- "The Frogs and the Dried Pond" is a reference to how Atreus began to descend into madness when he learned he was a god, but his father's wisdom prevents it and ultimately nothing happens.
- "The Thief and his Mother" is a reference to when Freya's unconditional love for her son was the cause of both his wicked behavior, misfortune, and his eventual death
- "The Mother Crab Scolding her Son" is like when Kratos scolds Atreus when Kratos did and still kinda does everything he gets mad at Atreus for. Atreus was so quick to figure out the end of the story because he sympathizes with the son crab.
- "The Woodsman and the Trees" is probably a reference to how the greek gods dismissed Kratos, who then returned and killed them all.
- "The scorpion and the Frog" is pretty straightforward. Maybe it references a specific god killing someone and dying but probably best to just interpret this as the 'gods are evil in general' story.
Atreus: " You got any stories?"
Kratos: "Very well. There was once this man who had transformed himself into a fermented vegetable. It was the most humorous thing that I have ever seen."
Pickle Rick lol
Mimir: I don’t know the one about two rocks being identical was funnier
“How about another story? Can you make it a long one this time though?”
“Very well. A long time ago, I’m a galaxy far far away..”
"Ever heard the story of the Trojan Horse Boy?"
"No... another horse story?"
"Yes, but this horse was a wooden construct built by my people for the Trojans to take into their city. After 10 long years of war."
"So, like a gift? To end the bloodshed and find a peaceful resolution?"
"Yes... in a way."
I like the story of the father frog and son frog. For me it's an analogy to Krato's and Atreus relationship in the beginning of the game. The father frog (Kratos) tries to protect his son from everything, but in doing so he denies his son the chance to grow (to create his own story).
Atreaus: Got any more stories?
Kratos: There was once a man, with a spade of steel, he fought with this spade agaisnt a god and despite all his hardships....he won
Atreaus: seems strange father, i mean a Spade?
Kratos: Yes it was quite.....odd..
If only they had given us that kind of easter egg
Who did Kratos kill with a shovel?
Shovel Knight babyyy
@@PaGie DUDE! I just found out that this is canon, confirmed by Cory... I guess I'll have to play that Shovel Knight game
I do like how all of these have some sort of values or are at least an attempt to reach his son.
Atreus: How about a funny story?
Kratos: Fine. There once was a boat captain...
This is the best one here
Kratos' second story hits hard, especially when he says, "It was not."
I love how the stories reflect kratos past, and the lessons he wants to teach atreus, in order for atreus not repeat his steps.
The game was supposed to be a soft reboot, but there is so much meaning everywhere, that people that did not played previous games would miss
atreus: anymore stories?
kratos: yes. once i was walking and two men approached me.
atreus: why?
kratos: idk if they wanted gold or silver or something of a more feral nature. but its a good thing i hade my pieces.
atreus: your pieces?
kratos: my blades of chaos! so anyway i started slashin, BANG, BAH!
:Atreus: Know any good stories?
:Kratos: Very well. I will tell you a story all about how my whole life got turned upside down, just wait a minute, sit right there, I’m gonna tell you about how I came the Fresh Prince of Bel Air. In west Philadelphia born and raised, in the playground is where spent most of my days, chilling out, maxin, acting all cool, shooting some b ball outside the school. When a couple of guys who were up to no good started making trouble in my neighborhood, I gotten one little fight my mom got scared and said alright, you’re gonna life with your aunt and uncle in Bel Air
:Atreus: ...
Wow lmao
I read that in Kratos's voice
😂😂😂😂
The horse of sparta lmao
"There was once an ant looking upon a river, wishing to get across but no way pass in sight. The ant saw a butterfly, mocking the ant of its lack of wings and telling the ant to give up and turn back. But the ant didn't have any intention to turn back, so he leaped onto the butterfly and torn off it's wings and used them to glide across, the butterfly was left the die."
Kratos stealing Icarus' wings in GoW 2!
That actually sounds like a story Kratos would tell to Atreus...
"There was once a child named Calliope."
"Sounds familiar. Someone you know? What happened to her?"
"You'll find out if you keep interrupting."
"why would he do that?"
"He's a scorpion"
Atreus: "how about another story? It cant be worse than the last one!"
Kratos: "Very well":
Kratos: "A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away...."
For anyone having some time to spare:
The first story is that of Αισωπος(Aisopus,a wise man from Greece),who created many myths and short stories to give lessons to the smallest ones,by single examples of nature itself.Id recommend to anyone to search for his stories,they are really entertaining and you learn quite a lot.Cheers!
Kratos: Boy, I once killed a man who had an ability to turn anything and anyone to gold with a single touch.
Atreus: Why?
Kratos: For a ring, and a chest.
2:10 i feel like kratos was saying here " listen here you little shit"
Atreus: Tell me a story Father
Kratos: ''There was once a horse that walked into a bar'' he ordered his drink and left''
The horse story represents the origin of Kratos
The thief story represents Baldur and Fryea. Her blind love for his son eventually spoiled him
The Crab story reprsents Kratos and Atreus. Like the mother crab in his story, Kratos wants Atreus to live like a man, and not eaten by anger of himself.
But it is impossible for his father to show his son how to live that way as well as the mother crab can't show her son how to walk forward.
Kratos: Teaches Lessons…
Mimir: Teaches History…
The horse and hunter story is just Kratos' life.
2:15 The son that bit his loving mother's ear off is foreshadowing to Freya and Baldur.
The stories are nuts I love them but lmao so depressing sometimes. I think it's funny as hell you did a video for this high five bro loved it liked it!!
hah they are great huh. Thanks man! Got a couple of other ones like this i'll be publishing soon.
Atreus: Any new stories?
Kratos: There was once this named Bratos, in a land far from here, who killed his wife and daughter. He then proceeded to start a new life with a woman name Raye. And then had a son named Loki.
3:56 that story was actually interesting 💕
It’s an actual fable
"Father can you tell me another story?"
"Very well. There once was a ship that put to sea
The name of the ship was the Billy of Tea
The winds blew up, her bow dipped down
Oh blow, my bully boys, blow."
0:23 The Tortoise and The Hare
0:52 The Horse
1:33 The Frog and The Well
2:17 The Thief’s Mother
2:59 The Mother Crab
3:28 The Woodsman
3:59 The Frog and The Scorpion
Boy: Tell me a story!
Kratos: There once was a boy on a boat, who talked to much, and drown.
Boy: ....Nevermind
1:20 Wise words from Atreus. That spells everything about walking the path of Vengeance. There is always a price.
Thanks, the person I've been watching docks before they finish
No problem!
Will you posting anymore of these? After you get Mimir's Head?
I'm working on one for Mimir, just have a ton of footage to go through to find it all.
Thanks :)
Just uploaded all of Mimir's boat stories and also uploaded Mimir's Valkyrie's tales yesterday!
The story of the horse and the warrior was totally worth hearing after playing all the past God of War games just for this game
atreus: "do you have another story"
kratos: "well I have another"
atreus:"what is it?"
kratos: "well it started with the 4 gold weapons of the spinjitsu"
Atreus: That sounds... fun?
Kratos: Fun?! I was never fun! You take that back!
I understood that reference
He should have told the story of his fight with Hermes.
Kratos: Once upon a time there was a god who would not shut up................
Hare and the tortoise
:Kratos: A buff angry guy cut his legs off as punishment
The hare and the tortoise is a reference to that fight.
I think the story about the Frog and his son might indicate where Atreus's recklessness might lead him
About the frog story. It's moral is to trust the wisdom of elders.
The crab story ties in with this. Wisdom of elders does not mean they are infallible
Atraeus: "Do you have another story?"
Kratos: "A Serpent Guard, a Horus Guard, and a Setesh Guard..."
kratos: there was once a man wielding a blade unleashing his fury towards the god for his vengeance
altreus: why ?
kratos: if you continue to interrupt, I will end the story
Atreus: Do you know any limmericks, father?
Kratos: Just one: There once was a man from Nantucket....
Atreus: tell me a story father
Kratos: very well
"there once was a hero named Ragnar the Red,
Who came riding to Whiterun from old Rorikstead"
"Father, do you have any othe stories?"
"Very well. A serpent guard, a Horus guard, and a Setesh guard meet on a neutral planet. It is a tense moment. The serpent guard's eyes glow. The Horus guard's beak glistens. The Setesh guard's... nose drips."
I tried really hard to get more Kratos stories but never could. I’m glad you did!
Atreus: Got any other stories?
Kratos: Very well... In the grim darkness of the far future, there is only war.
Atreus: You got a story
Kratos: Have you heard of the tragedy of Darth Plageus the wise?
0:30 is when he fought Hermes. Hermes is fast but cocky while Kratos is steady. Well, you know the rest.
0:53 is when he made a deal with Ares to help him destroy the barbarians. Well, you know the rest.
Atreus:”so any good stories?” Kratos:”Ok one more, it starts in a ocean of blood…”
'But her son met him in rage, and bit off his ear.'
'Why?'
'Because he was Mike Tyson, boy.'
Some of these are asops fables
But wayyyyyyyy darker
Appropriate, since he’s Greek.
Well, they did meet along the way.
I love the frog story. It is literally a lesson about thinking before you make your decisions because you might not be able to take back your choice.
Atreus: how about one more story?
Kratos: *Very Well*
"There was a Horse"
"And then?"
"A woman named Aphrodite said the Horse was Blessed"
"So what happened?"
"The woman started Riding the Horse"
"Was she good at riding Horses?"
"She's good at riding"
"At riding Horses right?"
"... "
"Riding the Horse right •_•"
4:06 lol, said the scorpion, lmao
"Long ago in a distant land Aku, the shape shifting master of darkness, unleashed an unspeakable evil. But a foolish samurai warrior wielding a magic sword stepped forth to oppose him Before the final blow was struck, Aku tore open a portal in time, and flung him into the future where his evil is law"
-There was once a knight with a shovel.
-So?
-He kicked my *** with a shovel.
I like the incorporation of Aesop fables and the morals they contain. The Tortoise and the Hare, The Frog and Scorpion (learned that one from RWBY thanks to Tyrian). I am curious about the thief who bit his mother’s ear and the moral behind that though. A recurring theme I notice from Kratos is that his story speak of moral regarding three themes: Displine, Vengeance, Arogance, and Instinct. The horse (obviously) was about Kratos and warned against revenge. The Tortoise and the Hare speak of two: the discipline of patience and the folly of arrogance. The Thief Fable, along with the Scorpion and the Frog (in this context), cannot resist their natural instincts.
The story of the two frogs and the well felt like a story about the Underworld.