As above

  • Ashbandit@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Rather than a dream it was more like a test. The events of the game actually happened. The test is whether you’d make the same decisions again or choose a better/worse path. Then you’re evaluated on that.

    It’s one of only cases I can think of where a “just a dream” style ending actually works instead of being a cop out.

    • Blubbpaule@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      That wasn’t the test directly - they always tried to combine humans with typhons. Which didn’t work out.

      So they infused a typhon with human material and made a typhon live through morgans lofe on talos to see if it behaves like morgan or like a monster to evaluate if its safe to keep as ally.

    • Big-Demoniac-607@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      This would be true, but they already used the “it was all a simulation/test” at the very beginning of the game, in the very first setting. You can’t use the same trick twice, it just doesn’t have the same impact.

      • Ashbandit@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        I actually think that’s exactly what makes the ending acceptable. They set the stage and open up that possibility in the very beginning of the game. Then they drop hints regularly throughout, allowing players to solve the mystery before the big reveal if they’re observant enough. If the developers had not done it this way, it would have actually felt more like a copout. But you can tell they planned it from the start. The game was built around the ending, not the other way around.

        My only real criticism with the ending is that there were only two outcomes, with the player getting to choose between them (usually). The events of the game only affected their dialogue at the end, and little else. If they fleshed that scene out with more endings based on your moral score, then it would have been much better received. A simple “yes or no” decision was too simple compared to the rest of the game.