So, was the white hallway in the note really the hallway right before the door to Pluto's room? I was kinda confused because it's basically the end of the game, so it felt weird for that to be the part you wanted a spoiler warning for.
@@Arnavion well, it spoils the whole "aliens" bit, you sort of look at the game in a very different way after that. It's understandable that they didn't want this spoiled to players
I didn't notice this when this series first came out but watching the episodes back to back I noticed the developers prepare you for "the final boss" of the game by having you do a little Socratic dialog to prepare you for the ultimate Socratic dialog against the God of the Underworld, it's really quite cleverly done.
Its kind of *annoyingly* specific, to the point where saying two things which are just exactly the same, with words in different orders, can lead to failing to talk him down.
When a person who has a deep knowledge of the classics performs creative work in that genre it has the same satisfying sensation as watching all the cogs of a fine timepiece work together
That was a very interesting portrayal of mythology. It's kind of funny how they just assumed they humans wanted to "ascend" and never thought to ask, nor to correct them for calling them gods. This has one of the most satisfying true endings in a game I have ever seen, as well as the possibility for a sequel (which I would absolutely, positively love). He wanted people to live a whole year without sin, but due to the time loop it was not possible. Also, due to everyone just being offed, it wasn't possible to truly clarify what sin was (unless you were Sentilus, but he wasn't exactly keen on helping anyone). Very interesting lore. The creator did a great job making a full game out of this. I had high expectations as I loved the mod, and I was not disappointed 👍🏾👍🏾😁
When Charon told you to keep her true identity a secret and started talking to Al I thought she was going to send you back to the real world and just live life with Al. She did say it would be much lonelier without everyone. I'd imagine after a year of freaking the literal hell out, that the resilient people would readjust to modern life. They'd have better rules than the golden rule they were living in fear under. By contrast that's probably not a big jump. We'll do whatever, just for the love of any god, don't send us back there again.
I'm glad I actually managed to talk Him down, and didn't have to do that thing with the crown in my playthrough. It's kind of a skeevy move, even if She called for it.
I thought it was a bit odd that the entire debate seemed pointless if even the good path led to violence... Now I'm curious what argument he actually accepts, when he throws a tantrum over being proven morally wrong.
@@trogdor8764 If Jon had said that he wasn't immortal and just had a long lifespan it would lead down a path that would convince him that his people were just longer lived humans with all the same flaws that normal humans have
@@trogdor8764 Basically - treating inferiors as you want superiors to treat you means he should treat us like Zeus would treat him. However then we also discuss how Zeus treated him badly, setting him up for failure, so even their superiors are not infallible and so on.
Charon probably put them in the modern era to avoid them messing up the timeline, since it is presumably the present. Putting them back would have made them mess up the timeline.
Yeah, after witnessing someone paradox themself out of existence, Pluto probably recommended playing it safe by waiting for it to pass before moving everyone.
Or that by the time the game rolls around, sufficient number of the statues had been melted down and literally only the ones you saw were the total surviving statues .... er, grim
@@zane8605 The above comment reminded me it existed so I had to do my duty of reminding everyone else. I'll have to get around to actually playing it eventually but I'd love to see Jon finish it at some point.
If all 1000 people were transported back, you've also got ancient Greeks, Egyptians, and Sumerians to consider being thrown into the modern mixer. "Hang on, they're considering old Auntie Bast's cat statue and stupid pile of rocks a giant tourist attraction? For Ra's sake!"
You know, so many games focus on packing in so much "content" into their game yet leave you fully unsatisfied at the end.....this game had four endings that were all quite satisfying!
This has been an incredibly enjoyable game to watch. I loved learning history from Jon. I love the story of the underworld changing with each civilization. I loved the aesthetic of the game as well.
I loved his interaction with Pluto and that he was aware of the contradictions of Pluto's reasoning before the dialogue options even popped up. He normally has low PER but he was on point this time around.
@@lanceuppercut6168 He has low visual PER, but his WIS and INT stats are pretty high, with Proficiency in Classics and Critical Thinking. Perfect stats for a game like this
I love this comment so much. If you hadn't included the spoiler warning, it wouldn't have needed a spoiler warning since your comment never actually alludes to that happening in the game. But since it does have the warning, it becomes obvious that it does, for otherwise why would the warning be there?
To be fair, there was 1000 coins and only around 64-ish people shown in that ending. Probably due to technical constraints etc? Yes. Possibly due to over 900 of them taking rather poorly to their new lives? Absolutely. Just unusual that only two of our cast were not present given those numbers.
What a wonderful experience, and thank you Jon for finishing it as well, as I know you tend not to do with story focused mysteries and puzzle games like this, but I super appreciate it.
33:38 my take on the golden rule not being interference is it's more like law. No one aside from loopers have seen everyone die for breaking the golden rule in a literal sense, so it's more like a stern law.
SPOILERS Is it weird that my first thought about bringing them into current timeline was that we'd be able to hear how Latin was spoken and to get some more accurate history? lol
The fact that you can not use Duli is an argument against Hades is interesting. Since he is simple and everyone knows that would anything he does be considered a sin? The game shows that intent is the sin. Duli does not have malicious intent when he takes things.
I tried this on a whim since it's on Xbox game pass and it hooked me super hard, I beat it in one sitting! Really cool concept that's executed really well. I enjoy it even more now having watched your series and seeing how many different ways there are to reach each objective.
@@thatguy5040 it's italian. Rome stil today uses SPQR in its coat of arms, and italians jest the acronym stands for "they are crazy, these romans". It is also a joke used often in the Asterix & Obelix comics.
@@rrs_13 although afaik in the comics Obelix does indeed say "These Romans are crazy" very frequently, just without the SPQR because that makes sense only for Italians.
Plouton was an alternative Greek name for Hades used by some people (like Plato). Hades, by contrast, eventually came to refer to the Underworld rather than the god of the Underworld in pre-Roman Greece. Pluto is the Latinized version of the name, so if it had said Basileus Pluto, then yeah, that'd be incorrect. (Though as a side note, Pluto was still considered the Greek god of the Underworld by Romans, even if they also sometimes venerated him - the Roman god of the Underworld was Dīs Pater, and while he eventually came to be considered an alias for Pluto, that wasn't always the case.)
@@BewareofTarps Thank you. I study chemistry and biology so I know a bit Latin and Greek as a byproduct, but I have no idea about historic and cultural context. Hence my confusion
I could be wrong, but I think the reason you couldn't persuade him to leave is because you didn't exhaust all dialogue options with him. I usually go down the same route you do, but for some reason the dialogue option about how "you made a mistake and aren't so different from humans" didn't show up alongside the "you've committed atrocities and need to own up to it" option.
Really really enjoyed that i hope this has a sequel or even just another similar game from the developers And spoiler warning Love the ending more games should end with a philosophical debate where the player learning about the story is rewarded
You said under any system of morality what you did was a bit on the dicey side but I'd argue that under a utilitarian POV what you did is probably the best act one could ever do.
Depends on your view of time loops. If each murder in each loop counts, that's infinite murders in exchange for saving 1,000 lives. Of course, it only took one crown to convince him, but if that didn't work, presenting several to show that you've done it several times already might be more persuasive. Also, it was risky as heck, for if Hades doesn't care about aborted time loops, he can just let you kill her every day for the rest of your limited lifespan.
There were only 50 people in that small crowd at the end, so including the group we met in the city, less than 10% actually managed to adapt to modern life, which is more than you would think, but not out of the realm of possibility. Especially if there was a crash course Charon gave them, but that’s pure conjecture and common sense.
You have the Vergil votel by that Rufus thing. You just have to actually tell him at the end to finish the quest, not just stop Rufus doing it. I stumbled over this technicality.
Won't lie, I bought the game while slightly inebriated....just so I could finish the game before you did. Thanks for showing me this, it was a great time.
Assassin's Creed, Stargate, The Ancient Future, the whole "gods are aliens" idea is a well tread one. But I think this game handles it pretty excellently.
Jon, Im wondering if you found this historical rubix cube of a game, fascinating to you and making some interesting fantastic imagination on your love for history. Curious if this brought your love of history to the surface from its storytelling.
I remember thinking how vague "The white hallway" sounded. Like, there are a lot of white places here. Its not very helpful. But now its totally obvious what they meant XD
My headcannon now is that the devs, distraught that Jon didn't play the mod during is Skyrim playthrough, decided to make it a fantastic standalone game.
Great game though I wish there was an ending where you could be a jerk and side with Sentilus getting fed grapes till you gotta loop again and again but I guess you could just not finish the game for that.
So for whatever reason you didn't get the option to challenge Hades about the price-gouging of medicine that occurred. That's the only difference I noticed for getting the ending without using the crown.
You actually _can_ talk him out of it without threats, but iirc you need to go to The Philosopher and talk about the situation with him first. (Or maybe that's just a way to get hints?) Also, I must say, I kind of loved the ultra-cheesiness of ending 4 lol.
Jon. The golden rule does indeed work - just so long as you dont try to force people with different believes to mix. Or at least not so different that their believes compell them to force the others whoever those others may be, to conform to their believes. As soon as you try to establish something like a nationstate, yes, then it all falls apart. And no, of course that is not the only way for it to fall apart, either. We may have vastly different believes in some areas, jon, but i know you are capable of understanding that as long as all association with other people be voluntary it doesnt matter what someone who does not want to associate with you and/or vice versa believes.
Day 522 of requesting Zoo Tycoon. It's good to see a well thought-out story, and an interplay of cause and effect like this. You don't see enough games involving lost mythical civilizations
Developer here: Glad you enjoyed the game, Jon! Thanks for sharing it with your audience! :-)
Drop us an email whenever Charon finishes up whatever she's getting on with :)
@@ManyATrueNerd Haha, will do! :-)
You guys did an amazing job with this.
So, was the white hallway in the note really the hallway right before the door to Pluto's room? I was kinda confused because it's basically the end of the game, so it felt weird for that to be the part you wanted a spoiler warning for.
@@Arnavion well, it spoils the whole "aliens" bit, you sort of look at the game in a very different way after that. It's understandable that they didn't want this spoiled to players
"They cannot possibly all adjust to the modern world"
I mean there clearly isn't 980 people there Jon
"Charon is constantly bringing people in and out of the underworld like" A ferry??
I didn't notice this when this series first came out but watching the episodes back to back I noticed the developers prepare you for "the final boss" of the game by having you do a little Socratic dialog to prepare you for the ultimate Socratic dialog against the God of the Underworld, it's really quite cleverly done.
If you fail to convince Pluto and need to reset the day, the quest log even prompts you to return to the philosopher to ask for rhetorical help :D
just so you know jon you can actually persuade him to leave earth but you got to be super specific in what you say
Yeah, and it's very satisfying, to debate him into eating crow instead of having to resort to threatening Prosperina.
Its kind of *annoyingly* specific, to the point where saying two things which are just exactly the same, with words in different orders, can lead to failing to talk him down.
When a person who has a deep knowledge of the classics performs creative work in that genre it has the same satisfying sensation as watching all the cogs of a fine timepiece work together
That's a marvellous metaphor!
Brazenly carrying weapons no mortals were meant to wield sounds pretty par for the course for our species really, Hades.
(laughing in nuclear weapons)
For someone who's been watching us for "over 3000 years" and considers themself a god, he's slow to catch on, isn't he? 😬
@@henryviiifake8244 he has been waiting for 3000 years because he is a dumb dumb
That was a very interesting portrayal of mythology. It's kind of funny how they just assumed they humans wanted to "ascend" and never thought to ask, nor to correct them for calling them gods. This has one of the most satisfying true endings in a game I have ever seen, as well as the possibility for a sequel (which I would absolutely, positively love). He wanted people to live a whole year without sin, but due to the time loop it was not possible. Also, due to everyone just being offed, it wasn't possible to truly clarify what sin was (unless you were Sentilus, but he wasn't exactly keen on helping anyone). Very interesting lore. The creator did a great job making a full game out of this. I had high expectations as I loved the mod, and I was not disappointed 👍🏾👍🏾😁
When Charon told you to keep her true identity a secret and started talking to Al I thought she was going to send you back to the real world and just live life with Al. She did say it would be much lonelier without everyone. I'd imagine after a year of freaking the literal hell out, that the resilient people would readjust to modern life. They'd have better rules than the golden rule they were living in fear under. By contrast that's probably not a big jump. We'll do whatever, just for the love of any god, don't send us back there again.
I'm glad I actually managed to talk Him down, and didn't have to do that thing with the crown in my playthrough. It's kind of a skeevy move, even if She called for it.
I thought it was a bit odd that the entire debate seemed pointless if even the good path led to violence... Now I'm curious what argument he actually accepts, when he throws a tantrum over being proven morally wrong.
@@trogdor8764 If Jon had said that he wasn't immortal and just had a long lifespan it would lead down a path that would convince him that his people were just longer lived humans with all the same flaws that normal humans have
@@trogdor8764 Basically - treating inferiors as you want superiors to treat you means he should treat us like Zeus would treat him. However then we also discuss how Zeus treated him badly, setting him up for failure, so even their superiors are not infallible and so on.
Charon probably put them in the modern era to avoid them messing up the timeline, since it is presumably the present. Putting them back would have made them mess up the timeline.
Yeah, after witnessing someone paradox themself out of existence, Pluto probably recommended playing it safe by waiting for it to pass before moving everyone.
Id say its the main way to avoid the paradox.
"they cannot possibly all adjust to the modern world." Well... It looks like only fifty out of a thousand made it to the party...
the game engine limitations kicked in, it would probably self-destruct if anywhere near that many NPCs were on-screen at the same time
Or that by the time the game rolls around, sufficient number of the statues had been melted down and literally only the ones you saw were the total surviving statues .... er, grim
Honestly assumed Jon was just done with this game and moved on - totally forgot about it but happy to see Jon finish it!
If only the same could be said for Return of the Obra Dinn
@@pluto3194 You just reminded me of this! Ugh I really hope that he at least played it on his own time because it's so up his alley.
@@zane8605
The above comment reminded me it existed so I had to do my duty of reminding everyone else. I'll have to get around to actually playing it eventually but I'd love to see Jon finish it at some point.
Also glad to see Jon did the Sentilla ending before doing the Perfect Ending.
This was very 'Stargate' -esque. Anything that combines SPACE! and mythology and big ideas are my cups of chai.
Even has French Horns in it's main theme.
but thankfully it was the infamous "white hallway" not a stargate.
If all 1000 people were transported back, you've also got ancient Greeks, Egyptians, and Sumerians to consider being thrown into the modern mixer.
"Hang on, they're considering old Auntie Bast's cat statue and stupid pile of rocks a giant tourist attraction? For Ra's sake!"
Thats kinda funny in a way, seeing what's normal on their era is something people admires nowadays
You know, so many games focus on packing in so much "content" into their game yet leave you fully unsatisfied at the end.....this game had four endings that were all quite satisfying!
This has been an incredibly enjoyable game to watch. I loved learning history from Jon. I love the story of the underworld changing with each civilization. I loved the aesthetic of the game as well.
I loved his interaction with Pluto and that he was aware of the contradictions of Pluto's reasoning before the dialogue options even popped up. He normally has low PER but he was on point this time around.
@@lanceuppercut6168 He has low visual PER, but his WIS and INT stats are pretty high, with Proficiency in Classics and Critical Thinking. Perfect stats for a game like this
Who else is getting Goa'uld System Lord from the Stargate SG-1 universe vibes from "The God of the Underworld"?
Stargate was my first thought too.
This is unironically the best Stargate game ever made.
@@alphaone-one411 seriously
Indeed. ;)
i think the question should be who didnt?
(Spoilers)
I'd love to hear a dissertation from Jon about what kind of culture shock Romans who were transported into the modern era might experience.
I'm showing them New Vegas immediately.
@@ManyATrueNerd Ave, Jon. Ego vere similis haec "Legion" factionis, sed quid est "Atomic Bomb?"
@@MrMessiah2013 "Atomic Bomb" horribilis est. Hoc fatum peius est quid mortem.
(and the only thing worse is my latin 🤣)
@@ManyATrueNerd _Bellum. Bellum nunquam mutat._
I love this comment so much.
If you hadn't included the spoiler warning, it wouldn't have needed a spoiler warning since your comment never actually alludes to that happening in the game.
But since it does have the warning, it becomes obvious that it does, for otherwise why would the warning be there?
So, you're telling me Mr Clean was Galerius all along?!? xD
I hope the devs get the chance to work on a sequel or a completely different project, The Forgotten City is magnificent
Kudos to whoever spearheaded the time loop story telling for this game. Just brilliant. I'm going to watch it again from the start!
Hooray, been excited to see Jon play the last bits of this.
Wow. What great writing and execution. Well done to all the devs!
To be fair, there was 1000 coins and only around 64-ish people shown in that ending. Probably due to technical constraints etc? Yes. Possibly due to over 900 of them taking rather poorly to their new lives? Absolutely. Just unusual that only two of our cast were not present given those numbers.
What a wonderful experience, and thank you Jon for finishing it as well, as I know you tend not to do with story focused mysteries and puzzle games like this, but I super appreciate it.
33:38 my take on the golden rule not being interference is it's more like law. No one aside from loopers have seen everyone die for breaking the golden rule in a literal sense, so it's more like a stern law.
I bought this game after watching you playing it in the first episode. I'm glad you finally finished it! I hope we get more games like this.
I thought Hades was pretty badass. The introduction and the story behind it was very well done.
Ya-ay! THAT was a great playthrough. Thanks, Jon for showing ALL the possible endings. :)
I'm 15 minutes in and I'm very interested to see how the game keeps going for 45 minutes after the villain reveal.
SPOILERS
Is it weird that my first thought about bringing them into current timeline was that we'd be able to hear how Latin was spoken and to get some more accurate history? lol
The fact that you can not use Duli is an argument against Hades is interesting. Since he is simple and everyone knows that would anything he does be considered a sin? The game shows that intent is the sin. Duli does not have malicious intent when he takes things.
This has been great to watch, picked it up on the back of this series, Jon.
Looking forward to exploring for myself.
These were great, & you were really good at it, wow! 👏
Why had I never heard of this game before now?! 😮
Oh yess! :) I have been waiting for that for so long! :) It is an awesome game and I am so glad I could experience it with Jon!
Well said :)
Really didn't expect that ending... Still, this was a really interesting game overall. Thanks for the great playthrough. 😊
"These Romans are crazy"??
I wasn't expecting an Asterix and Obelix reference, but I love it XD
Finally, I've been waiting for this!
This was an awesome ride, thanks for playing.
I tried this on a whim since it's on Xbox game pass and it hooked me super hard, I beat it in one sitting! Really cool concept that's executed really well.
I enjoy it even more now having watched your series and seeing how many different ways there are to reach each objective.
"These Romans are crazy" - Pretty sure that is a nod to Asterix, and I think that in turn is a nod to something else.
SPQR means: sono pazzi questi romani
@@rrs_13 So no pizza questing gypsies?
I obviously dont know latin but thats what i read it as the first time.
@@thatguy5040 it's italian. Rome stil today uses SPQR in its coat of arms, and italians jest the acronym stands for "they are crazy, these romans". It is also a joke used often in the Asterix & Obelix comics.
@@rrs_13 the author of those comics is french, so that re-imagined meaning of SPQR acronym comes from the translators
@@rrs_13 although afaik in the comics Obelix does indeed say "These Romans are crazy" very frequently, just without the SPQR because that makes sense only for Italians.
I literally just shouted "fuck yes!" When I saw this video. I love this game so much
Sorry but why does the plaque at 5:15 say Basileus Pluton if it is greek? Shouldn't it be Basileus Hades?
Plouton was an alternative Greek name for Hades used by some people (like Plato). Hades, by contrast, eventually came to refer to the Underworld rather than the god of the Underworld in pre-Roman Greece. Pluto is the Latinized version of the name, so if it had said Basileus Pluto, then yeah, that'd be incorrect. (Though as a side note, Pluto was still considered the Greek god of the Underworld by Romans, even if they also sometimes venerated him - the Roman god of the Underworld was Dīs Pater, and while he eventually came to be considered an alias for Pluto, that wasn't always the case.)
@@BewareofTarps Thank you. I study chemistry and biology so I know a bit Latin and Greek as a byproduct, but I have no idea about historic and cultural context. Hence my confusion
YES! Thanks Jon! Been waiting for this!
I could be wrong, but I think the reason you couldn't persuade him to leave is because you didn't exhaust all dialogue options with him. I usually go down the same route you do, but for some reason the dialogue option about how "you made a mistake and aren't so different from humans" didn't show up alongside the "you've committed atrocities and need to own up to it" option.
Thanks, Jon. I will also refer to advanced civilizations as those that just have fancier iPads!
Really really enjoyed that i hope this has a sequel or even just another similar game from the developers
And spoiler warning
Love the ending more games should end with a philosophical debate where the player learning about the story is rewarded
i have awaited for this moment
i shall enjoy it thoroughly
You said under any system of morality what you did was a bit on the dicey side but I'd argue that under a utilitarian POV what you did is probably the best act one could ever do.
Depends on your view of time loops. If each murder in each loop counts, that's infinite murders in exchange for saving 1,000 lives. Of course, it only took one crown to convince him, but if that didn't work, presenting several to show that you've done it several times already might be more persuasive.
Also, it was risky as heck, for if Hades doesn't care about aborted time loops, he can just let you kill her every day for the rest of your limited lifespan.
yadda yadda, "do unto others..." or as it's said in the modern day, "Don't be a dick."
There were only 50 people in that small crowd at the end, so including the group we met in the city, less than 10% actually managed to adapt to modern life, which is more than you would think, but not out of the realm of possibility. Especially if there was a crash course Charon gave them, but that’s pure conjecture and common sense.
I hope Jon will play Aquatics in Stellaris when it comes out. I mean the One Planet Challenge is in a whole other level with the Ice Mining Station.
Yes! Jellyfish for the win!
You have the Vergil votel by that Rufus thing. You just have to actually tell him at the end to finish the quest, not just stop Rufus doing it. I stumbled over this technicality.
Won't lie, I bought the game while slightly inebriated....just so I could finish the game before you did.
Thanks for showing me this, it was a great time.
So the interaction with Pluto/Hades/etc is basically just Dr. Strange & Dormammu. I like it.
I've been waaaaaaaiting for this! The game is so engrossing!
That was unexpected but it's something I have heard before. Really good game and a wonderful playthrough
god of the underworld has some badass theme music.
Yes! I was waiting for this
Just played this recently on Game Pass honestly what a good time. Can’t wait to see what the developers do next
>tfw the game went full History Channel At Midnight at the end
And you managed to pull it off and make it actually good! Congrats, devs! :D
Omg, it went full Assassin’s Creed. I love it.
Assassin's Creed, Stargate, The Ancient Future, the whole "gods are aliens" idea is a well tread one. But I think this game handles it pretty excellently.
This was a fantastic story to watch, almost as good as the original mod.
Glad I finished the game before this so I can enjoy your video without worrying about spoilers!
Yes I’m been waiting for this
Jon, Im wondering if you found this historical rubix cube of a game, fascinating to you and making some interesting fantastic imagination on your love for history. Curious if this brought your love of history to the surface from its storytelling.
Oh boy, finale already?!
I remember thinking how vague "The white hallway" sounded. Like, there are a lot of white places here. Its not very helpful. But now its totally obvious what they meant XD
This was Epic!
My headcannon now is that the devs, distraught that Jon didn't play the mod during is Skyrim playthrough, decided to make it a fantastic standalone game.
I know I talked him into undoing the golden rule without stealing the crown, but I don’t remember what I said.
Don't pay the ferryman
Don't even fix a price
Don't pay the ferryman
Until he gets you to the other side
Sooo good !!
Great game though I wish there was an ending where you could be a jerk and side with Sentilus getting fed grapes till you gotta loop again and again but I guess you could just not finish the game for that.
Imagine what this would mean for history research for those four periods of time.
i was hoping we would get a finale for this
25:00 No Jon, he lied.
So for whatever reason you didn't get the option to challenge Hades about the price-gouging of medicine that occurred. That's the only difference I noticed for getting the ending without using the crown.
After the spoilers, is that Mikel Arteta?
It turns out violence and the threat of violence were the basis for our morality all along!
That's Hades's mistake. He's confused laws and morality. Laws can be (and arguably are always) enforced by violence, morality cannot be.
Hah he is save-scumming a game that is literally designed around save-scumming. Truly a masterpiece
Now all that's left is to play the Skyrim mod that started it all (with the same name)
Okay, but I still want Jon to play the mod, because it was also pretty great. Not as great, but still great
was not expecting scifi in my historical time loop mystery game, but bloody hell was tis amazing.
Actually, amending my thoughts. It's still pretty damn good story writing I'm just personally biased against the spoiler stuff I can't say
very nice
I’d just like to point out that this was originally a Skyrim mod with a slightly different story.
You actually _can_ talk him out of it without threats, but iirc you need to go to The Philosopher and talk about the situation with him first. (Or maybe that's just a way to get hints?)
Also, I must say, I kind of loved the ultra-cheesiness of ending 4 lol.
Also how do you obtain the cannon ending?
But, what happened to Duli in the future? O_O My mans needed retribution
Jon. The golden rule does indeed work - just so long as you dont try to force people with different believes to mix. Or at least not so different that their believes compell them to force the others whoever those others may be, to conform to their believes. As soon as you try to establish something like a nationstate, yes, then it all falls apart. And no, of course that is not the only way for it to fall apart, either. We may have vastly different believes in some areas, jon, but i know you are capable of understanding that as long as all association with other people be voluntary it doesnt matter what someone who does not want to associate with you and/or vice versa believes.
That ending really just reminded me of doctor strange and his dormammu I’ve come to bargain
We didn't see Duli at the end?
*Spoilers*
Oh my god, he's a Goa'uld
A what?
@@Lady_Amelia-Eloise it's a Star Gate reference. The Goa'uld were aliens that came to earth and were worshipped as gods in ancient Egypt.
Boy... that ending really came out left field huh?
Day 522 of requesting Zoo Tycoon. It's good to see a well thought-out story, and an interplay of cause and effect like this. You don't see enough games involving lost mythical civilizations
Yay
This game gave me the same vibes the ARK Survival Evolved story has