What I absolutely loved about this game is how it gave the message "Monsters are not born, they are made." as shown by Oersted's story and how it ended.
You can summarize the reason oersted summon other character is because of jelousy of them having a favourable ending, while he getting betrayed, cucked and got framed as a dark lord
I don't even blame Oersted. Everything happening in the span of this chapter was in the span of a day. Too much happening too fast is bound to be damaging. Also, if he let Althea by Oersted's side, he could have become the court wizard. He may not have a wife, but he'd still have a high position regardless.
Not many games do a lot of twists where the playable character begins a hero and lose everything, to the point that they give up on humanity. And those who tried can only dream of having the perfect execution Live-A-Live did. Is there any wonder why this is in my Top 10 GOATs? Heart's out for Oersted, I can relate to him to a certain extent.
Oersted, after being framed as a monster, finally lost it when he realised that his friend betrayed him, and after his lover committed suicide due to her Stockholm syndrome. Guess Joker was right: All it takes is one bad day...
It seems Oersted killed everyone and the blood splash everywhere in this kingdom, but I somehow still feel sorry for the kid, the only one still believe Oersted is the true hero even this happen. Did Oersted really kill him? It’s hard to imagine…
Just finished this earlier. I saw both the original & remade version of this chapter, but even then, the twist still shocks me. Rather than beat an incarnation of Odio, you BECOME him. Fucking insane.
@@quasiphilosphic And the twist that Odio is responsible for every single bad thing happening in all the stories because all the villains were his incarnations thus explaining how they're all connected is even more fucking insane.