It's sad, but not that sad. You want true grief play all the way through rdr2, Arthur's death will show you what video game deaths can truly feel like.
@@generalshaagi4832 - I don’t have as big of an emotional attachment to Arthur as I do Roxy. Was shocked when John Marston died, but didn’t cry. Same thing happened with RDR2. It’s all a manner of who the character is, what their role is, and how their portrayed in the fandoms. Like Joel in TLOU2; favorite character. HATED that he gets killed and still hate it today.
@@STH151NicoleFan I'll just have to agree to disagree. Love Roxy to death, but Arthur was way more developed and characterized over a longer period of time to where when he died it felt like losing a real person.
Literally Every Single Moment About This Part Is Heart-Wrenching: Cassie's Response To "Gregory", The Music That Plays When Cassie Finds Roxy Stuck Under The Forklift, Roxy Welcoming Back Cassie & Telling Her How She Remembers Her As Cassie Holds Her Hand The Entire Time, Roxy Saying Cassie Is Number One - Twice, The Moment When Roxy Finishes Speaking & The Music Still Playing With Her Looking Ecstatic Seeing Cassie, Roxy's Confusion & Her Shaking Her Head "No" As Cassie Inserts The Faz-Wrench Into Her Eye, The AR Security Network Being Extremely Simple & Shows Roxy As The Symbols Needing To Be Connected, Cassie Letting Go Of Roxy's Hand & Deeply Apologizing For Doing This To Her Favorite, Roxy's Last Message "I love carrot cake. *bangs her fist on the forklift* Happy birthday, Cassie...", Cassie Apologizing Two More Times Sounding Sadder As Roxy Succumbs & Powers Down, & Of Course, Once You Progress, Cassie Crying While She Goes Deeper Into The Mega Pizzaplex.
What is really interesting is that Gregory is cold and he has no mercy for the animatronics. Meanwhile Cassie cries over Roxy. Cassidy is cold and has no mercy for humans just like Gregory and the Crying Child had a significant birthday party and is known for crying.