Instead what if at the beginning of the game Ori was given the chance to join with Seir, and Ori rejected the call. I've been thinking about it over and over and I can accept this outcome but it was just done so poorly. The problem I have with this narrative is not the narrative itself but its execution. Ori fused with Seir and became an entirely new being. Not to mention they went from clever show not tell storytelling to an exposition dump which I also find insulting.īy all intents and purposes Ori is dead. Yes there is a little bit of foreshadowing but its right before the final boss. (Yes, it's an ending for 6 years old kids, but I'm 28 years old kid and I need happy endings.) She can teach Ku a lot of being a big bird, and Ku have a lot to teach her about love. Shriek afraid to be shunned again, but she want to trie once more to have a family. After a little bit of time, Seir get enough power to heal Ku's wing, she rejoices with her family, and in that moment Shriek comes back, humbly looking at them all. Ku wakes up, Ori, Naru and Gumo plant the last SEED and watch it grow. Well, in my happy world, the ending is a little different - Willow awakens by Ori and give him last seed, for him to plant, grow and protect, Shriek attacks, Ori win, but instead of the last blow he give her a little bit of light from Seir, so Shriek heals and flee, panicked. (And why owles didn't fly away from decay? What is the story of that graveyard?) Really.īut if Ori did heal Ku in the end, why can't he do the same for Shriek? She was the way she was because of decay, so why not heal her? There a lot of unspoken things in the end. But she failed and goes back to her dead parents, the only ones who didn't shut her out. She didn't know tiny piece of kindness or love for her entire life, and of course she didn't want it for everyone else. She "chose" to stay in the darkness? The hell she did. Why nobody talking about her? Why did they leave her for her misery? By the way, Ori did find the seed of the TREE, so why can't they make him plant it and guard it until it mature? Oh, yes, it won't take so much of our's tears that way. You killed him anyway, this TREE is not Ori, so it's still sucks. I really hate recent custom to "not" kill the Hero, by making him something MORE. It had a better story for one.Ĭouldn't agree more. That angered me so much it changed my opinion of the game being better than blind forest, I now consider the original game to be superior. Instead of making me sad the ending just fills me with rage. But the Story feels cobbled together and disjointed. Have no issue with the gameplay, that is still amazing. I'd still be fairly mad about it but damn. They could've made that infinitely more interesting if Ori rejected the idea at first much earlier in the game and had no choice but to do it in the end. Yeah its sad, its supposed to be sad but this whole situation feels incredibly poorly told. It also feels like I lost the game at the end, after that climactic battle you see Ori about to die and struggling to reach the wisp. It feels like there's something missing here and no its not that Ku got injured halfway through. Story starts out with Ku and Ori going to seek answers, and ends with Ori dying and turning into a tree. There was no hint of a sacrifice being required until you got to that worm shrine and then it was like, oh no, don't tell me you're going this way. I also hate the ending, I really really do.I too feel like this sacrifice comes out of nowhere.Įspecially considering Ori didn't need to sacrifice in the last game to save the forest.
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