Saturday, November 15, 2025

Ascent

(Spoilers about the ending of Hades II ahead!  Read on with caution!)

To finally see the gleaming peaks of the temple of Zeus in Hades II felt like a real victory.  Granted, it undoubtedly took me much, much longer to defeat Typhon, the father of all monsters, than it should have.  I was actually very surprised that I had taken him down because the run had not gone very well--I had been sloppy on Eris and lost at least one instance of death defiance.  The boons I had cobbled together on that particular run had felt pretty epic though, so I guess it balanced out.

Actually making it to the Temple of Zeus feels epic.
Of course once you take down Typhon you are only partially done--it's back to Erebus and the underworld to finally take down Chronos.  Luckily though, I had the Chronos fight down pat (although I was surprised when he launched into a new third phase that I hadn't encountered before--apparently it's just part of the story though as I quickly noticed that I wasn't dying and my death defiance had an infinite symbol).  The actual ending surprised me a bit--I figured Melinoë would slay Chronos and it would be (mostly) game over.  Instead, it's up to Zagreus to convince past-Chronos to reconcile with the family who cut him into tiny pieces and sprinkled them throughout Tartarus.  Shockingly, Chronos decides to take the reconciliation path and in the current-time Melinoë experiences a rush of memories about what her childhood with this kinder, gentler, and grandfatherly Chronos would have been like.  She also finally gets to meet the entire Hades clan in the flesh--it's a fun jog down the original Hades path to be back in the House of Hades and be chatting with the old crew--Achilles, Nyx, Zagreus, Cerberus, and Persephone.  After that the credits roll--there's a great song to cap it off (I take back what I said about the music, it's definitely up to the Hades standard).

This doesn't mean that Melinoë's adventures are done--there's still the matter of the missing three fates.  Grandfather Chronos, who has slipped into a helpful role, has no idea where they ended up...he just cast them out into some random point of time and space.  So now it's up to Melinoë to continue investigating random pockets of time (a nice story mechanic to keep you fighting against the big bads that you have already defeated) in order to locate the three fates.  I have no idea how long it will take and there haven't been many conversations with other characters about the potential of finding them.  I guess I'll just keep on clearing until it happens...or until I get bored.

Overall, I've greatly enjoyed my experience with Hades II.  I can definitely see how it is a contender for game of the year.  I think the boss fights were slightly easier--that three phase fight with Hades in the original game always felt like a toss up--but I can generally take down Chronos and Typhon without a ton of consternation.  The story (so far--I'm waiting to see if things take a turn when/if I finally locate the three fates) has a happy ending and I like the way they managed to make re-playing the runs tie-in with the story aspects.

Hopefully next week I can report on finding the three fates and whether or not Chronos is legitimately the friendly, grandpa-sort that he seems to be.  Happy weekend and happy gaming!

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.