The_Hitcher89
Member
I thought it was just a faint smile. One of being unhappy (as you would be surrounded by destruction and dead relatives), but not regretful. Not the time for a kiss, or a beaming smile imo.
Too many fucking people kissed Warren. I didn't even hug him cause all of Max's affection is for that blue-haired punkess
I knew I called it. Well I was wrong about them coming up with a reasonable explanation.Generally in time travel stories, the person with the ability to time travel has to come to terms and accept that they can't change the past and the moral they learn is that they have to be able to accept things as they've happened and make the best of the present. I don't know why she got the powers in the fiction, I'm just guessing why she has them ultimately for the story. I'm sure they can come up with a reasonable in story answer for she has the power.
Who says it's the same something?
Yeah, I'm one of the current 6% who just walked away. She didn't seem like the type to kiss him. Maybe a hug, but not really.
Yeah, I'm one of the current 6% who just walked away. She didn't seem like the type to kiss him. Maybe a hug, but not really.
The most tragic thing about sacrificing Chloe was Chloe died without even meeting Max again since they were kids. She doesn't even see her before she dies. That sucks.
I don't particularly like Warren, but I just felt this massive urge to hug him at that point. Not only did he immediately believe in Max, but his selfie was crucial.
It just felt... right.
Yeah, I'm one of the current 6% who just walked away. She didn't seem like the type to kiss him. Maybe a hug, but not really.
Ridiculous conincidence:
Chloe is voiced by Ashly Burch.
Ashly's brother is the head Writer for Borderlands.
Tales From the Borderlands finishes today.
Also, The finale of a huge tale about the ramifications of time travel hit just before BTTFday.
Can someone take these coincidences and turn it into a half life 3 confirmation?![]()
I did this too. I couldn't not hug him.
In general, it seemed obvious that Sacrifice Chloe is the closest thing to a "canonical" ending, especially given how complete it is versus Sacrifice Arcadia Bay. I still wish more development had been spent on the other ending, though, because it felt more right in a few crucial ways. Though that said, it does feel like the story is robust enough to support either option pretty well.
(so for sure there is no third ending, right?)
No. I did the same in my playthrough and got the kiss for the sacrifice Chloe ending.also, datapoint, kissed Chloe and Warren and did NOT get a kiss for the sacrifice Chloe ending. I firmly believe it's because of that.
Some people seem to be bothered they didn't explain enough things, but I think I prefer it that way. They really didn't explain anything in detail in Donnie Darko either (Well they did explain a bit more in the Directors Cut, but I think it only lessens the impact of the film), one of the big influences of the game. I don't think it's important to know where Max got her power. They let the players to draw their own conclucions. This was a game about Max and her growth as a person and how she affected people around her. And Chloe and their friendship.
Totally agree.I don't really care if they explain anything.
I just wish the final episode had more to say. You're jumping between timelines and going through crazy nightmares, but it doesn't amount to much. It all simply feels like padding. It doesn't feel like it adds anything to the characters or story.
Heck, the most important character in the entire story is barely in the final episode. It would be more interesting to spend time with Chloe instead of traveling through needless timelines and P.T. rooms.
I don't really care if they explain anything.
I just wish the final episode had more to say. You're jumping between timelines and going through crazy nightmares, but it doesn't amount to much. It all simply feels like padding. It doesn't feel like it adds anything to the characters or story.
Heck, the most important character in the entire story is barely in the final episode. It would be more interesting to spend time with Chloe instead of traveling through needless timelines and P.T. rooms.
My least favorite episode... I knew this ending was gonna happen, but I was just hoping it wouldn't.
So when I got to the end and it didn't really matter, it kinda took all the wind from my sails. Other people have said it's the journey, and that's fine and all, but the ending will stay with me more sadly. I wasn't a fan of Chloe from episode two to episode four, so killing her was pretty easy.
The nightmare sequence was just bizarre. Since it keeps trying to get you emotionally invested in Chloe and remind you of your time with her... it didn't work on me. I just kept hoping I could get to some twist or message from Rachel.
I wish Mr. Jefferson's violent/aggressive attitude was shown somewhere vocally. Honestly though you only see if after you get someone suspended (Nathan, Mr. J, or David) and him and the principle are talking. It's extremely subtle and I just wish he would have raised his voice somewhere. Otherwise his abusive tendencies just seemed to come from no where unless you re-read some of his texts/notes to Nathan. Then they kinda make sense, but even still... would have liked a little more.
Happy that Dave saved us, I called it in episode four, but was nice to see him go to those lengths. Just wish I hadn't gotten him shot like eight times.
Oh, top of page.
This is the Spoiler Thread everyone.
I will say though that Max mentions getting her power and not seeking it and I think the reason she got it was probably very influenced by symbolics (religion, native american symbolism, etc). Rachel getting Max to put an end to Jefferson while not changing the rest of history was apparently okay with the town, cleansed it or something, to the sacrifice of Chloe. The other option was altering too much, having the apocalypse happen and the town being obliterated. When it is though, we see a lot of animals pop out and there's a lot of cleansing that seems to have been done too.[/SPOILER]
Fuck Arcadia Bay.
That's what I say.
Also, I like episode 4 more than 5. It was still great, but 4 was fantastic in my mind.
Sacrificing Chloe is the real ending to me.
but my god man. I actually teared up during the cemetery scene
and thenthe camera panned to the priest and I was like HEY ITS LARRY DAVID
Chloe went hella slutty for the nightmare sequence.God, all the fan art that is going to come from those Chloe/[Insert Person] scenes
Saving Chloe ending sucks big time. Not only it's much shorter than the other one, it's kinda dumb as well. So Chloe and Max didn't even go and see if the people they cared about are still alive? I mean it's not like an atomic bomb has dropped on Arcadia Bay and everyone else are 100% dead.
Chloe went hella slutty for the nightmare sequence.
It really just depends on the player and what type of person you are in real life.I chose to save Chloe because I'd grown much more fond of her as a character than most other Arcadia Bay residents. But honestly the sacrifice Chloe ending makes much more sense thematically to me. LiS for me was a lot about representing the emotional turmoil of constant regret. Constantly rewinding every mistake had an obvious negative effect on Max. Fixating on regret from a poor choice is what ruined her friendship with Chloe in the first place. And it's not just resigning yourself as having no agency. But knowing that some things can't be helped, or changed, no matter how much you try. That fighting against it rather than accepting it can ruin you.
Max goes from a neurotic shy amateur photographer to a bold hero throughout the course of the game. I feel like Max as that hero would make the hard choice you know is right. It completes her character arc.
There's a hollow satisfaction to saving Chloe. There's no real guarantee that what happened in Arcadia Bay wont happen again elsewhere. Or that Max won't have to use her powers to save Chloe again resulting in some other, even greater, chaos. It's very romantic and tragic at the same time.
In that ending the real problem of letting regret destroy you isn't resolved. I kinda thought on that for a second before deciding. But I still went with saving Chloe.
My issue with the sacrifice Chloe ending is that it nullifies the entire time travel thing. Like why? Why the whole game? She wouldn't have HAD to live with the consequences if she hadn't gotten the power to begin with. If I punch someone in the face and kill their family if she punches me back because "she needs to learn to live with consequences", I still punched her first for no reason.
This way she gets all these amazing memories with Chloe only to then have to fault herself for the rest of her live that she could've saved her? Doesn't seem fair to me.
And I don't think she owes Acadia Bay anything.
Whatever god or force of nature gave Max time rewind is the cruelest fucker ever.
I mean the whole lesson to be learned from the game is accepting the pains of life and being able to move forward. However the only reason the loss of Chloe's life is so powerful is because of all the events that occur as a result of you saving her the first time you get the power. I know Max and Chloe were best friends prior to Max leaving for Seattle and seeing her die would hurt regardless. But if she had never gotten the power and she basically went into that bathroom saw Chloe die not knowing at the time it was Chloe the weight of that loss would of been way different. She didn't save Chloe the first time because it was Chloe, she saved her simply on a feeling of moral imperative given this new power. What cruel force wanted to teach her a lesson so badly to artificially create all the events needed to make things as painful as possible. It was fucking entrapment.