Kinda feel sad at the fact that the girl was fully conscious during all of this, her transformation, the felling of the attacks But in the end she still helps you rest well when you die And on Fear a d hunger Termina, she helps you by by giving you a free save
@@miguelangelcifuentescruz9465 The Girl has an Ancient Soul within her, created by Nilvan and Le'garde making love. She is essentially their daughter, the product of their godly love. The God of the Depths was already weak, had few followers, and after killing off the three hearts, it was essentially "killed", though old gods can never truly die, so it simply was absorbed into the God of Fear and Hunger and used as a basis to allow the Girl to ascend. She is the God of Fear and Hunger herself, it's not the God of the Depths reborn, she is a new unique deity who can rival the old gods themselves. She is allowing humanity to break the cycle of new gods through the cruel age of industrialization, which we then see in the second game.
@@miguelangelcifuentescruz9465 No, she's still that same little girl, feeling every bit of the immense pain the ascension has put her through. She was an unwitting, unwilling vessel for this new god. Imagine having a limb burst forth from your body. Imagine bones cracking as your skeleton stretches to be 9 feet tall. Imagine your body cavity opening, your insides becoming your outsides. This is what that girl is going through here. Even in her final form, she still trembles in constant pain.
@@WobblesandBeanThe girl is gone now, it’s even stated that the god of fear and hunger shed it’s last shreds of compassion after brief ascension, plus in a enlightened sense of state, I don’t think pain matters anymore to the human-created god that surpasses even the old gods
@lightningmcqueen4078 she is not gone. the girl is the god. they are the same person. she has changed yes, but she is still her. she killed the only people she loved. that's presumably why she shed her compassion afterwards. you were the only one who showed it to her.
"Maybe your fate was an act of mercy? The last traces of compassion the newborn god shed after her true ascention. Your demise was peaceful after all. . ." A bittersweet ending is still a sweet ending, especially in the endless darkness of these dungeons. Nilvan may have took advantage of our kindness, but she was very bleak in her favor. We more just wandered into the heart of darkness, not knowing the girl would ascend in the god of the depths like that.
Knowing from the sequel that her tough love was able to have humanity progress further and defy the old gods and essentially eradicate monsters from the world it is more sweet than bitter. The ascended gods might not be the most pleasant bunch at first glance, but compared to the old and new gods and the shit they inflict on humanity, they become a very reasonable group of deities.
When I first got this ending I sat there for like an hour thinking about it, it’s so awesome Each time you went deeper you thought “Well, there is an end, right?” and then you get to lvl 9, and go “This is the bottom! Just a pile of corpses, then?”, but after the fight the god teleports you to level 10, THE bottom, what is that place, why are there flowers, is your pain so great you barely crawl or is it the dungeons themselves collapsing all their weight on top of you?? Is this where the god will stay in its physical form, what happens to our body? So great
I think about it a lot, still. What that little girl went through is the worst pain and torment I have ever seen anywhere, real or imaginary. She's a CHILD! She doesn't deserve to suffer like this! Even in her final form, she still trembles in ceaseless agony. And yet, still, she showed you mercy. Well, maybe not the kind you wanted, but mercy nonetheless. Her unique form of it: To slip away peacefully lying in a field of dark flowers, not left to languish and slowly starve, succumbing to madness from your pain and hunger as you clamber at the walls of the dungeon like a panicked animal.
That moment when the god of fear and hunger said "It's fearing and hungering time.", and then feared and hungered all over the place. Truly the most epic moment in cinematic history right there.
@@felipinhonunez632 If a god sees the state of the world, and can only encompass that overwhelming force that either destroys or reinvents humanity, I guess that a quiet, silent death is really the most merciful thing they could do.
Not in the game but in the universe yes. The player 'kills' the God of the Depths before they enter this part of the dungeon and some lore theories suggest that there was a Sun God that died
So far, I haven't found this ending with Nas'hrah in it. Is it impossible? Because I wanna know what he would say, after seeing how he roasted Legard (her father) mentally. 😂