God this theme hit me really bad. She was a fascist that wanted to murder these children in the name of said fascists, and despite that, the kids tried to be the good guys and be merciful. And she just squished that second chance, and let hersrlf be eaten alive by her own hatred
She was insane, Indoctrinated and blinded by hatred, especially for the kid who had nothing to do with her fathers death after seeing him on the tank that killed her dad.@@chmuk_pauk
@@Glaceonics Believe it or not, I literally see nothing wrong with this way of thinking and behavior. From my point of view, this is the most spiritually correct behavior, because there are some things that objectively cannot be forgiven. The readiness to die heroically for the revenge of a fallen father and great homeland, to lay down one’s head, but not to kneel before a stronger enemy, not to betray military glory, honor and valor is the purest manifestation of a moral feat. This is the manifestation of the spirit of Japheth in its purest form. To put it less pretentiously, this is an extremely based behavior that is not inherent to everyone.
@@chmuk_pauk Flam just ended up on the wrong side of morality. Unbeknownst to her, Pretzel, her adoptive father, was proud to be taken out by a bunch of children. After all, he was always against the idea of capturing children and harming them in any way. To him, their tank was his punishment for doing nothing.. She was still a criminal however, for she is still responsible for the murder of one of the kids dads who wasn't even a soldier. Also brutally enslaving and treating everyone in the factories. The only reason she even bothered to fight was because the Taranis killed her own father. If it was anyone else, she'd just ignore and destroy them using her platoon without bothering to appear.
I just realized that Flam Kish and Jin's entire subplot is exactly the same as The Last of Us part 2 Two people who tried to get revenge for their fathers and tried to kill each other to honor their memory. One of the characters had a second chance to keep going with their life and they wasted it. It ended differently in Fuga. Jin finally got his revenge, but he won nothing out of it, except the feeling of emptiness, as nothing could bring his dad back.
If you talk to Jin after the first fight with Flame he says "I did not got my revenge but perhaps its better this way." And after the second fight "I got my revenge but I feel so empty." Okay I dont remember exactly what he said after the second fight but it was somthing in that direction. Honestly I found it pretty cool how much of a level head Jin kept. Sure he was pissed and he wanted revenge but I say overall he handled this whole thing pretty well.
@@sofaris576 Just one of the several reasons why Jin's my favorite character. Especially once you get into the second game, and see the direction he developed from there.
@@sofaris576 That aside, I loved the way he matured from his experiences, and showcased that throughout Fuga 2. Which is symbolized quite extraordinarily by what you bring up. But elaborating would get into spoiler territory, and the sequel is still new enough for that to be a problem.
@@gurvmlkall we can say is Jin ends up being the mentor for the very same reason he went through. Slapping sense into those blinded by the very fires of hatred he dealt within.
She totally squandered that life and mercy
LieN somehow always create those beautiful pieces that shows the tragedy of wrath and revenge.
Screaming and Tears the Boss fight
Also if you hear this you better hope some affinities are high
@@shadedergu9921 acctually it would be Elegy of Winds that would play if some of your affinity are not maxed out. I I
@@liamborel1249 Kewl; my affinities were maxed when this played so I did not know
Thank you for posting all these unreleased tracks! A real shame it's not all in the soundtrack that comes with the deluxe edition.
God this theme hit me really bad.
She was a fascist that wanted to murder these children in the name of said fascists, and despite that, the kids tried to be the good guys and be merciful.
And she just squished that second chance, and let hersrlf be eaten alive by her own hatred
The confrontation between the children and Flam was like the yin and yang of war.
>She was a fascist
Okay, what are her negative qualities?
She was insane, Indoctrinated and blinded by hatred, especially for the kid who had nothing to do with her fathers death after seeing him on the tank that killed her dad.@@chmuk_pauk
@@Glaceonics Believe it or not, I literally see nothing wrong with this way of thinking and behavior. From my point of view, this is the most spiritually correct behavior, because there are some things that objectively cannot be forgiven. The readiness to die heroically for the revenge of a fallen father and great homeland, to lay down one’s head, but not to kneel before a stronger enemy, not to betray military glory, honor and valor is the purest manifestation of a moral feat. This is the manifestation of the spirit of Japheth in its purest form. To put it less pretentiously, this is an extremely based behavior that is not inherent to everyone.
@@chmuk_pauk Flam just ended up on the wrong side of morality. Unbeknownst to her, Pretzel, her adoptive father, was proud to be taken out by a bunch of children. After all, he was always against the idea of capturing children and harming them in any way. To him, their tank was his punishment for doing nothing..
She was still a criminal however, for she is still responsible for the murder of one of the kids dads who wasn't even a soldier. Also brutally enslaving and treating everyone in the factories.
The only reason she even bothered to fight was because the Taranis killed her own father. If it was anyone else, she'd just ignore and destroy them using her platoon without bothering to appear.
for me Blutwurst is the moment where the game became more hard, the second encounter with Flam is the moment where the game became serious
THE ALL IS SAD MOMENT!
I just realized that Flam Kish and Jin's entire subplot is exactly the same as The Last of Us part 2
Two people who tried to get revenge for their fathers and tried to kill each other to honor their memory.
One of the characters had a second chance to keep going with their life and they wasted it.
It ended differently in Fuga.
Jin finally got his revenge, but he won nothing out of it, except the feeling of emptiness, as nothing could bring his dad back.
If you talk to Jin after the first fight with Flame he says "I did not got my revenge but perhaps its better this way." And after the second fight "I got my revenge but I feel so empty." Okay I dont remember exactly what he said after the second fight but it was somthing in that direction.
Honestly I found it pretty cool how much of a level head Jin kept. Sure he was pissed and he wanted revenge but I say overall he handled this whole thing pretty well.
@@sofaris576 Just one of the several reasons why Jin's my favorite character. Especially once you get into the second game, and see the direction he developed from there.
@@gurvmlk Oh yeah when I saw that twist my reaction was "Hollyshit but looking back at the first game it makes so much sense."
@@sofaris576 That aside, I loved the way he matured from his experiences, and showcased that throughout Fuga 2. Which is symbolized quite extraordinarily by what you bring up. But elaborating would get into spoiler territory, and the sequel is still new enough for that to be a problem.
@@gurvmlkall we can say is Jin ends up being the mentor for the very same reason he went through. Slapping sense into those blinded by the very fires of hatred he dealt within.
Where's boss battle theme 2?
Flower on the Trails (Short Version) is the second boss battle theme
Btw Flam survived the explosion and Jihn is treating her in fuga 2
Whats the point of posting this spoiler? Honest question why did you post it?
why did you had the feeling to post spoilers just like that???
Dude really wanted to sour the mood