The music : A man and a god fighting to determine the fate of the universe, a nearly unlikely victory where the man's failure could spell doom. The situation : A teacher and detective in a warehouse.
This is more than the battle of two middle aged men in a dirty warehouse; it is a literal battle of morals. One which has lost faith in the law and has taken matters into his own hands to protect the innocent, killing while refuting the stability of a corrupt law system. The other beholden to the law and using his strength and knowledge to protect the innocent, to meet justice under Lady Liberty. One of something more base that betrays them both, here stood in a dirty storage house, with a bomb under their feet. They are two sides of the coin, one lawful, the other chaotic born and molded from an experience of life few men will ever feel crushing their shoulders, breaking their knees, drinking their blood. They are both victims but they have climbed that cliff Ulysses deems his home, born from a crucible different and alien to each other. But still there is something lost here. In this moment of strong minds and morals, both wishing to protect and laying their lives on the line in service of those voiceless, those deaf and sightless to this struggle in the end that violent impulse boils to the center of their hearts, that demand for strength to stand for what you deem right, that of which is correct, according to their morals, their eyes, their feelings. Savages deem what is true by power, of might. It is natural selection, free and fierce in its splendid valor. It is something we do not like to consider, that these feelings are still deep in our hearts. That rage, that hate, that sadness which makes the human subhuman, that first murder. That need to be right, that fervent battle for survival but this battle is not only your own. It is for the life of all whom your opponent would kill in defense of those mute, and your battle for those guilty but still beholden of rights and equal justice. So dig in your heels. Forsake your higher mind, debase yourself in this act of shameful defiance. Dig in your heels, for your opponent will do the same.
I know barely anything about this game, all I know is that this guy was a teacher. They gave the most badass theme I have ever heard To a teacher I need to play this game
This guy's fight themes are so stupidly good, that, even though I haven't played this game (hence I don't know the context of this fight) I became a fan of these songs and never stop listening to them. And this mix only increased my fanaticism even more, thanks for this video.
Just so you know, this guy is the final boss and his second battle theme, the final boss theme, is for a fight that's basically boils down to 2 grown men, one who's a detective and the other who's an [SPOILER ALERT] fighting in a warehouse with stakes the being that the fight will somehow determine the fate of Japan. Standard yakuza- I mean, lost judgment fair.
My ears. My ears have never been blessed to such, such magnificence. I just finished Lost Judgment at 6 am today, and I was prepared to listen to this, now that I have, holy shit. Sure, there are some rough spots, but when it's at it's best, IT'S FUCKIN KIWAMI. Thank you, Rucksen.
I appreciate it man. Yeah I pretty much got all of unwavering belief done in one day cause I had one of those enormous ADHD bursts of working motivation. That's why Dig in your heels and the beginning of phase one sound a bit off because I was unnecessarily precise with the speed adjustments.
@@rucksen You take rest and focus on yer life for a bit! You did good enough with this, and I'm glad you did the best for unwavering belief specifically. I'm doin the same since my Sonic Frontiers review DESTROYED ME. And the lack of views is kinda demotivating so I'm just on a bit of a break.