Sorry for taking so long! I’m still on my trip but will be returning home Sunday!
Story
Petra is confused why Sreng is not on good terms with the Kingdom despite being neighbors. She says Brigid has a good relationship with the Empire. Did she forget what she said to Dedue in her support and that Brigid is a vassal state and that she is their political prisoner?
Cornelia must have known to use Sreng as part of her trap, cause it would force Dimitri to the capital (it is a matter of life and death to the Houses in the north)
Bernie, WHY are you here?!
One NPC thinks that Kingdom land is too poor for Sreng to bother fighting land over with, but that was just his opinion.
One NPC says Miklan’s story gives them hope that anyone can turn over a new leaf.
Miklan actually has some nice, intelligent things to say about the war fronts and what’s going on, lol
Felix thinks over Dimitri’s words before he left. And he’s “learning the hard way about what Dimitri has to deal with”, lol. He’s gaining insight! <3
Those damn Western Lords
Dimitri surrendered himself due to the threat to the people.
I’m loving Felix getting a chance to shine, truly.
Arval; “Guess he [Dimitri] is actually a kind hearted leader”
Arval: “Also, Shez, you could never be cut out for nobility” Lol
Man, everyone at camp has something new to say after that cutscene about Dimitri
I could care less that Cornelia did something to Count Rowe
There was a Sreng attack but it was small and contained. Cornelia probably lied about the particulars. One NPC thinks she may have even instigated it
Flayn: “The Western Church has never gotten along with Lady Rhea” BuT I THouGHT SHE waS iN CHaRGe of ALL oF FOLdaN HUEHUEHUE
Even Ashe knows Dimitri doesn’t care much about his own life
The castle has a dungeon... that connects to a waterway, secretly. Interesting.
Oh, Catherine reached out to Shamir, nice.
It seems Seteth suspect’s the Slithers might be involved at this point but doesn’t say that directly.
One NPC comments that there are only two ways to hold a royal family member due to their strength: Hold them in an enchanted cell, or sap their will to escape. (Guess the former is how Cornelia kept Dimitri imprisoned in Houses)
Annette is worried about her father. But gee, I thought it was better that she killed her father or was removed from him, NO?!
Another cutscene?
Cornelia is testing Dimitri’s patience, kek
Man, she wants to hang him after killing Dedue and Rodrigue
Damn, she’s bringing up his father. What a bitch. I love her
Ah, we see the moment Dimitri accepts his fate (saying it was basically a matter of time before someone turned their gaze of revenge onto him)
One a side map, there is a Western Lord as an enemy. Baron Pryderi. What do you know? No crest!
Alright, main battle, let’s goooooooo
I REALLY want to meet Duke Ifan.
The Slithers already have a much larger presence in this route and we don’t even “know” who they are yet
Ashe is worried about Dedue. :3
Felix is like “Fine, we will rescue everyone else, ok?” (Guess someone else is on his mind ,kek)
Finally, someone calls out how dumb it is that people keep opening up gates as we advance, lol
Rodrigue: “Felix, you saved me, thank you.” Felix: “B-baka, we weren’t just going to let you die”
I love how Felix and Sylvain talk about disabling the controls: “Uh... er.... ok, let’s just.... try this....” (I like to imagine they just smack it with their weapons)
What’s cool is that there are a lot of characters who want to rescue someone. Felix - Dimitri and Rodrigue, Ashe - Dedue, Annette - Gustave, etc.
Felix, seeing Dimitri’s lance in the enemy’s hands: “Makes me sick, let’s take it from their cold, dead fingers” (He’s so cute)
Felix: “It’s all he has left of his father” GAH
I love this cutscene. Dedue, Felix, and Dimitri.... bringing him back up from being willingly to die for his people, to being a badass.
Favorite cutscene in the entire game so far, GOD DAMN
“We are here to fight by your side, Your Majesty” THEY GAVE DEDUE THE GOOD LINES
THEN SYLVAIN’S FATHER SHOWS UP, BASED
Cornelia calls their bodies “frail” and wonders how they stand it. Interesting.
Cornelia is the only smart slither besides Ephimenides. Doesn’t reveal anything, teases you the whole time, etc.
Cornelia implies Edelgard knows what happened to Patricia.
And there she goes, like a snake. Magic escaping teleportation magic.
Ah, lesson time.
Felix is laying it out. “Stop doing everything by yourself!”
Man, this is a better lesson than whatever they tried to do with Claude.
Urg, they are still pushing that Dimitri is somehow fault for the war (which, it comes from Dimitri’s mouth, but no one corrects him. :/
Mercedes: “Well, Felix is just worried, even if he’s weird about it”
Everyone else is piping up about how they want to shoulder his burdens with him.
I’m not crying, YOU are crying.
Stop crying. OK
Viscount Mateus is another creep noble. Well, Cornelia is putting worms in his ear, saying the son (the one that Dimitri married to Gautier house) will die due to Viscount’s loyalties.
Great, more revolting coming.
Whoa, Baron Dominic is the leader of the rebels now. Poor Annie.
“Surely that is ancient history at this point” You would THINK Annie, but Claude says otherwise in GW.
Ah, Dominic likely didn’t have much choice, didn’t have the power to say no.
Let’s go get Dominic to defect!
Duscur pulling throoooouuuuggggh! Giving us soldiers. I love to see it. Dimitri and Dedue’s and Rodrigue’s efforts are paying off.
It’s nice to see that Dimitri recognizes that Duscur is not on equal footing yet with them. We don’t get this so much with Petra and Edelgard, alas....
“It is my... no, it is our duty” HE’S LEARNING
Man, this route forces you to go through way more side battles than the other two I’ve noticed.
Oh, also
I want to headcanon she ripped out his eyeball so badly in AM.... and that he just lied to Byleth about the truth of the horrors he went through in that dungeon....
Supports
Flayn and Dorothea B- Lore? Ah, so song made people not want to fight anymore. Ok-dokie. Story led to festival to name of Opera company.
Books
Empire Nobles I- 1179 Edition
House Hresvelg
Most distinguished noble house of the Empire, tracing it’s roots all the way back to Great Emperor Wilhelm.
Governing House of the Empire for 1,100 years
Lineage can also be traced back to Saint Seiros herself, which is why generations of emperors are believed to bear the Crest of Seiros
House resides in Enbarr, Imperial Capital, claiming all surrounding territory as its domain.
It boasted supreme authority both within the Empire and without until the Insurrection of the Seven in 1171.
This uprising stripped their power by the nobility.
A series of misfortunes has plagued this house, some believe dark clouds hover over their future.
House Aegir
House of dukes, possesses great power in the Empire, second only to Hresvelg.
Head of house came to occupy the post of prime minister, rendering the title a hereditary one thereafter.
Led the Insurrection, and holds the true governing power of the Empire
House Vestra
House of marquises with a domain, exists in the shadow of House Hresvelg.
Manages darker tasks in the Empire and is responsible for the emperor’s periphery affairs, including coordinating ceremonies and rituals, Imperial consorts, and Imperial Guard.
Allied with Aegir in the Insurrection.
House Hevring
House of counts that inherited rule over the Empire’s domestic affairs, particularly relating to administration, finance, and the judiciary. Frequently clashes with the Minister of Military Affairs over these matters.
Much of their territory lies in Oghma Mountains, with lucrative mining industries.
House Bergliez
House of counts that has inherited the rule over the Empire’s Ministry of Military affairs. It commands all armies that do not directly belong to the emperor.
In war, the head becomes the Imperial’s army’s commander in chief.
Their territory encompasses most of the Empire’s main breadbasket, Gronder Field.
House Varley
House of counts that has inherited rule over the Empire’s Ministry of Religion, house main responsibility is to maintain amiable relations with the Church of Seiros.
It is now more involved with judiciary due to recent years of estrangement from the church, causing political strife with the Ministry of the Interior.
If you haven’t already read my review of Scarlet Blaze, I would recommend it, because in this review I will be making references to it, as well as building off of what I said previously. As I experience the game, my understanding of the entire story unfolds, and to fully separate the routes as I understand them would not be fair, in my opinion.
Plus, it keeps me from repeating myself.
To be frank, there was a lot I did not cover or only glossed over in my Scarlet Blaze review. Part of that was because I was so overwhelmed with information, and I lost steam by the end of the review to the point I just wanted to get it over with.
I’m not entirely proud with how I ended my last review as a result, because of just how much I didn’t discuss, and how much I skipped. But I think those points can be brought up here as needed, to fully cover my bases as I move forward.
As before, I won’t be speaking too much about Houses in general unless I think it’s worth being brought up. I want to make this review to more about how Hopes stacks up on it’s own. However, I will admit that this is harder to do with this route than Scarlet Blaze.
Also. I am splitting this into 2 parts, since it has gotten so big that tumblr has started to delete my work and I lost some of my writing in the process. When part 2 is done, I will publish it then.
So after another 40+ hours or so, I have finally completed Golden Wildfire.
Golden Wildfire has been compared to Three Houses’ Crimson Flower route pretty early on in the Hopes discourse, and after playing the route for myself, I find myself agreeing with these claims, although there are some differences.
This is the route that really makes Byleth’s absence from the story really seem like it hurts the most. Not necessarily in the quality of the writing, but rather in how it affects the main lord and the path he chose to go down. Now, I haven’t played Azure Gleam yet, but between Scarlet Blaze and Golden Wildfire, it is no contest.
Scarlet Blaze shows a rather confident Edelgard who finds a lot of success without Byleth as a teacher, especially if you manage to recruit Byleth to your side. The route seemingly has a shorter war, the Slithers and the Church have been ultimately removed, and the Alliance and the Empire end on amicable terms and start marching on the Kingdom to take care of it once and for all. By all accounts, Byleth not being a part of her life really doesn’t affect her much at all. So long as she has a strong ally on her side with the power of a protagonist, she will come out on top. The only thing you can say that maybe she isn’t as well off is how many fires she had to put out during her route, but if she had only a six month war to two year war or so versus a 5 year war, I would say that still puts her Hopes version ahead of her Houses one. Especially since she takes care of the Slithers in Hopes, while in Houses she still has to go into a secret war with them in the epilogues.
This is not the case in Golden Wildfire, where we get a Claude who went from a curious young lad who always thought before he acted, and investigated wherever his curiosity took him, to a young man who’s ambition is his defining feature, who is shortsighted and uninterested in seeking the truth, and who dresses up his lack of intelligence with pretty words to hide the ridiculous mental gymnastics he goes through.
This is particularly a shame, because Golden Wildfire actually has a really strong start. The first four chapters set up Claude with a lot to do that he didn’t have in Houses. Claude suffered in Houses from having a copy-pasted route, which was a duplicate of Silver Snow instead of something unique to him. So we didn’t really get to explore a unique story with him spear-heading the plot, since we are trapped in the same story with different lead characters.
Here, however, the route starts with Claude having an Almyran conflict that is uniquely his, as well as issues with his control over the Alliance Roundtable (as he is a newcomer that came out of nowhere), and finally the war with the Empire knocking at his doorstep. This is exciting for Claude. Edelgard’s route, while better than Crimson Flower, still ultimately feels like an extension of her Houses’ route. Rhea is still the final boss. The Slithers are still part of her story. Dimitri is still in her way. Etc. It’s a better story to be sure, but still overall a very familiar one.
So it was nice to see Claude’s route starting off strong, giving him something new that the other lords can’t possibly have due to not being part Almyran, as well as providing a new frontier to a story set in Foldan previously unexplored.
Like SB, Golden Wildfire’s first four chapters are at a neck-breaking speed. Again, this is not an issue if you’ve played Houses. The first few chapters are identical, and really only change when you get to chapter 3 and start to slow down a bit. Instead of raiding Enbarr, Claude is fighting back his older brother Shahid and his invading Almyran force.
The chapter itself is a little baffling, considering that Shahid does not recognize Claude as his younger brother, but overall it sets up for an exciting story. A brilliant young tactician who has to balance the two sides of his lives, as well as potentially two war fronts! Where could this story go from here?
There is a real sense of urgency from the early chapters of the war, as Claude scrambles to corral stubborn lords, build up his army and secure his defenses to Edelgard’s conquest. And we are presented with a Claude who suffers from a lot of doubt, which is surprising but refreshing. The early part of the route takes the time to show Claude struggling with doing right by the Roundtable and by the Alliance, constantly wondering what he SHOULD be doing. In a way, he feels trapped, because he has obligations to his people and yet, still wants to honor the history of the Alliance. We see this doubt expressed in multiple early supports, such as with Shez and Hilda and Lorenz. We see this doubt in the main story. Again, a nice change of pace from SB, since Edelgard rarely expresses doubt or concerns, and is confident in her decisions and her chosen path.
There is some real intelligence behind the writing here, noting that the newer commanders of the Alliance are younger and inexperienced, while there are older nobles with more experience, yet perhaps also more stubborn to newer ways that could be beneficial to the nation. It’s not perfect - there is an early implication that the younger blood is the ideal and the older blood is to be cast out, but characters should always be set up to learn and grow as people and so it didn’t bother me at first.
We also get the sense that the Alliance is quite weak despite its wealth, adding to that urgency in the early chapters that is quite enjoyable. It also builds upon the need for schemes - the Alliance cannot meet the Empire with overwhelming force, so they need to go through crazy battle plans that come down to “and it just might work!”. This makes the battles honestly a lot more exciting, because unlike SB, where it’s just you and an overwhelming force pushing everyone over, it’s you with a weaker, messier force trying to outsmart the bigger opponent. In fact, I would say the early battles are more intense and chaotic than the SB battles ever were.
I would even put forward that the first half of the route keeps true to the promise of Claude fighting two fronts - one with the Empire, and one with Almyra, and that the route itself is far more interesting than Edelgard’s. While Edelgard’s promised a conqueror route but spent more chapters fixing issues within the Empire rather than conquering, Claude actually gets to defend his territory. First, we defend the Great Bridge of Myrddin from Empire forces. Then, we route the Imperial army from marching into Derdriu, the Alliance’s capital. With the invaders isolated, we finally clear them out of Alliance lands, bringing us into chapter 7 that was a rather fun and exciting ride.
Not only that, but GW is a bit more creative with its chapter maps overall. SB had the players drive through territories in a nearly straight line, giving the impression that you are forcing your way through enemy territory. But there is little variation from this pattern.
Meanwhile, GW has more variety in the way its side maps are laid out. Sometimes surrounding the main map, or putting it super close to camp, etc.
It really seemed like Golden Wildfire was on a golden path to victory, gearing to become an exciting adventure with a wacky crew and a pretty endearing young leader with a charming smile.
Then the rest of the route happened.
Well, sort of. The switch isn’t suddenly flipped until after the time skip. No, it just starts to.... dip around this point.
Chapter 7 is when Claude does something a little strange. He announces that Alliance troops are going to march upon Empire lands and take the Bergliez territory, which is known as the breadbasket of the Empire due to the rich fields ideal for growing crops. Claude’s plan is to not only return the favor of the Empire attacking them, but also to gain agricultural lands for the future of the Alliance.
Why is this strange? Well, it’s... Claude.
Claude up to this point in the story had always expressed that he wanted to do what was best for the future of the Alliance. So the idea of taking fertile lands by this characterization alone is not entirely bizarre.
However, Claude had also up to this point continued to express concern about his “choice” to enter this war. I say choice because Claude feels he chose to be part of the war, rather than the fact Empire troops were literally knocking at the door of their capital. Which is... I mean, it’s either get conquered or fight back. And Claude does express that he doesn’t want the Alliance absorbed into the Empire.
But Claude spends some time in the main story, as well as several supports, worrying about what he should do. He feels so unsure of himself, so lost and stressed by the choices he has been making up to this point. He wants to honor the Alliance’s past and do right for his people.
There are even points where it’s noted that commoners are blaming Claude for what has happened to their fields and livelihoods, considering that the war has consumed their fields and ruined their crops. And this isn’t even mentioning how often Claude wonders why enemy soldiers continue to insist on fighting when they about to lose, worrying about the deaths that will come with it.
So when you take all these aspects the story has been focusing on to this point into account, then it makes Claude’s decision to suddenly declare invading the Empire for land on the stranger side. If he cares so much about the lives of his soldiers and of the enemy soldiers, and he stresses about being in the war in the first place, why make that push for enemy land and prolong the fighting? It’s not like Claude is even trying to end the war, he just wants to take the opportunity to take the land in general.
You could argue that it’s because the Alliance lost farming land to begin with, as noted before, but that point is relegated to a support, not the main story, so it’s easily missable and is not even considered a point as to why Claude invades. He invades purely for “the future of the Alliance”.
That said, it’s not so bad that I cannot believe it. It’s just a little confusing with how Claude has been presented here so far in this route. The battle itself is fun and I didn’t mind playing it. Byleth and Caspar’s father are the biggest enemies here, where we must defeat both. But as soon as we defeat Caspar’s father, we suddenly find ourselves... in a retreat.
I take some issue with the retreat. For one, Holst and Caspar’s father are literally at each other’s throats. I mean literally, their blades are against each other’s necks. But at the call of the retreat, they both stop and... let the other go.
The battle is over, because now Almyra is attacking and they need to get back as fast as they can to prevent the largest Almyran invading force in over a century from getting past Foldan’s Locket.
It feels a little silly, considering that these two men would just stop killing each other because one side decided to retreat. The reason why we are even allowed to retreat after attempting to take land isn’t so bad at least - we are allowed to escape because pursuing us would mean the chances of razing the Empire’s source of grains to the ground, and that is not a risk the Count can take.
But the fact we are suddenly retreating anyways is a bit of a mood whiplash. We had the Empire on its knees, but now we must flee to stop another invading force that is quite literally knocking at our door.
We then reach the route’s last chapter before the time skip, where Shahid attempts his last invasion. This is also where it really starts to sink in that Claude keeps a lot of his plans and ideas close to his chest.
There had been nods to this part of Claude prior to this chapter, but it’s really noticeable here. When Shahid attacks, it becomes known during and after the battle that Claude had actually reached out to Nader two years ago, after Shahid’s first attempt, in order to get ahead of Shahid’s next attempt should it come again in the future.
Not only did the characters not know of this save for Holst, who also met with Nader, but there were no hints that this happened to the player either. It’s done completely under our noses, and this is not the first time Claude had done this.
Claude had done several schemes prior to this chapter where the player and the characters are not privy to his thoughts or actions. Claude had a plan with Lorenz’s father about betraying the Empire to trap them, by making it seem like the Count had joined the enemy side.
There are a few other miscellaneous “schemes” Claude cooks up in battle to get the upper edge too, like attacking one side to give the credit to Holst to drag out enemy commanders who would itch to take on the big man himself.
But for all these schemes, there had been hints that there was something going on that we as a player don’t fully know about. Claude apologizing to Lorenz in advanced. Claude actually explaining his plan to one person, only for another person to catch up to the plan a bit later. And so on.
However, the plan with Nader is the first time where there was literally no hints to this at all until the start of the chapter, and this plan had been in the works for nearly 2 years. It really starts to make you wonder what else Claude has going on in his brain that we don’t know about yet.
The battle ends with Nader turning on Shahid as per the plan, and Claude killing his brother by hitting him with an arrow off a cliff. He had wanted his brother to surrender, but was ultimately not given much choice if he wanted to stop the invasions for good.
And just like Shahid falls off a cliff to his death, so too does the plot suddenly take a nosedive into a deep abyss of absolute chaos.
Even with the last two chapters’ minor issues, like Claude’s weird choice to invade the Empire and the whiplash to go stop Almyra, I found Golden Wildfire to be a better route than SB up to this point. It was more interesting, had less tonal issues, and the map designs were better. The goals and actions of the characters were a bit more understandable and easier to root for. The characters were more likable and less bloodthirsty.
I was really enjoying it.
And yet, this is where the time skip occurs. And it felt like I got thrown into a different route entirely.
Part 2 of Golden Wildfire opens up with Claude announcing that the Alliance has been dissolved, and that now he is king of the newly dubbed Federation instead. While the Five Great Lords still technically have a voice, with Claude as king he is able to finally make decisions quickly without needing to consult the roundtable at all.
This is a little shocking, although not entirely overboard. There had been hints leading up to this possibility throughout part 1 and in the supports. The route keeps reminding the player that the Alliance gets things done slowly due to needing to convene with the Alliance lords, and that it sucks because not every lord is on the same page. Claude’s C support with Shez in particular is about this, and it is Shez who actually suggests to Claude that he just take power so that decisions could be made.
Therefore, Claude proposes to the Five Great Lords that he become king and that they make the Federation out of the Alliance. The Five Lords did agree to it, at least. While it is a power grab, Claude did at least allow the lords put their vote into the proposal. And I understand where Claude is coming from, since the route did a decent job setting up this situation. However, I could not help but feel that it felt like this:
But Golden Wildfire completely loses me literally in the next scene, where Claude and Edelgard finally meet up.
I will say that at least GW leads to their eventual meeting better than in SB. In SB, it just jumps to them agreeing to ally with each other, giving no support in the writing that this would happen; not a peep from Claude and nothing from Edelgard at all. While in GW, we get a scene where Edelgard concludes that trying to conquer the Alliance through military means is probably going to lead to nowhere, and instead wishes to try something else.
It made this transition not completely out of left field. Even the start of the conversation was ok. Claude is rightfully angry that Edelgard invaded at all, while Edelgard insists that it was not an unprovoked attack since she was invited in by a traitorous Alliance lord (and Claude points out that this isn’t really an apology, but is willing to allow the Empire to make amends for their actions).
But eventually, Claude agrees to... ally with Edelgard because he read her letter and agreed with her that the Central Church was a threat to Foldan’s future that needed to go. And since Edelgard promised to provide stability to their shared borders, Claude agrees.
And then it gets worse.
Because while I can understand why Claude would ally with Edelgard for the sole reason to reach some stability to the warfront, I cannot follow his logic as he announces this new plan of action to the rest of the crew.
This scene is jammed pack full of nonsense that I would like to take the time to parse through it carefully. Let’s just start at the top:
In a 180 degree twist, we are suddenly against the Central Church and the Kingdom in one fell swoop.
Declaring war on the church, in my opinion, is no different than declaring war on the teachings. Which I will get back to in a moment:
What is particularly baffling about these lines is that in SB, where the Central Church has been an antagonistic force since chapter 4, Edelgard makes many proclamations about not killing Rhea, but merely capturing her.
Edelgard wants the Central Church gone, but she also doesn’t see any reason to kill Rhea provided she just steps down from power. She tells Claude as much in their talk in the Side Chapters near the end of the SB route, and declares it even while in battle. Although Edelgard also says that she will make the monastery Rhea and Thales’ tombs, she still ultimately puts forth she would rather capture Rhea alive.
And even in those chapters, Claude seems surprised that Edelgard did not wish to kill Rhea, and basically says that keeping her alive simply isn’t enough.
His surprise, coupled with Ignatz’s statement that they must kill Rhea (and there was no one who refuted him in return), tells me that Claude and Edelgard did not actually discuss at length what the terms of the Central Church’s disappearance would mean.
It is odd to me that this route jumps to murder, when the route that actually HAS the Church as a main antagonist for the entire thing merely wants to capture her.
Not only that, but Shez says that Rhea and Seteth are not all that they appear to be, or so the Empire says.
Judith says it best here. Shez, along with Claude, have basically bought entirely into the Empire’s words.
Shez does express some confusion prior to this talk about suddenly having the Kingdom and the Church as enemies at least. It seems forgotten here, but Shez does need to get everyone on Claude’s side on these new plans.
This comes from almost nowhere. Claude has discussed before that he wanted to do right by the Alliance’s history and wanted to improve the Alliance in any way he could. But this goes beyond just improving the new Federation.
As I stated before, Claude's primary character trait in GW is ambition. We got a glimpse of it when he invaded the Empire for new territory when the opportunity presented itself, but this is a much larger scale. He’s now using Edelgard and her army as a means to not only stay independent, but to also expand his nation’s influence more than ever before, which was NOT something that was very much alluded to at all.
The boy at the start of the route, riddled with worry about joining the war and doing right by his people, is gone, and suddenly seems more interested in power. Even if he had been selected into the position of king, he still ultimately suggested that he consolidate power and dissolve the roundtable first. It’s dressed up as something for the good of the Federation, but again I feel like I go back to:
I have seen arguments online about how this is the real Claude, that people who played Three Houses did not pay attention. That he always wanted power, that he always wanted to be supreme ruler. But this isn’t really true. Claude in Houses was defined by his obsessive need to seek the truth, to get to the bottom of things. It was to the point where he would read other people’s journals, or pry into people’s private affairs even if they didn’t want him to. He hungered for knowledge, he hungered for truth.
Yes, Claude had ambitions in Houses. He wanted to break down the borders of the lands. He wouldn’t have minded if Rhea died. He didn’t really like the Central Church in general. This is true.
But it was more than that. Claude always seemed to consider his options carefully. That he didn’t just buy into the words of others, and that he needed to get to the bottom of things.
But here, he’s more ambition and power hungry than his Houses counterpart. Claude had always worried about war because of how it affected the common folk. Even IN Hopes, he expresses concern for the enemy soldiers when they don’t surrender. He doesn’t want war or bloodshed. He made no allusions to wanting to expand his nation’s influences.
It is like I am meeting a different person.
Is this the Claude the developers wanted to make in Houses? Probably. In one of their interviews, they admitted that Claude was supposed to be a “bad guy you couldn’t help but love”. However, they “ended up making him a lot nicer” than he was originally conceived to be.
In Houses, Claude was a man who mixed non-lethal poisons (alluding he would use them on his foes). He seemed like the guy that wouldn’t mind play mind games with others to get the upper edge. But he had never used allies to further his causes like he is using Edelgard here. He never declared war on a side that had done nothing to him. He didn’t seem like the type of man that made such rash decisions like that.
Making a “bad guy you just can’t help but love” is not impossible. But it doesn’t work if you trade sensibility for unfounded ruthless conquest, and instead make the “bad guy” seem ridiculous and almost moronic. Especially at what follows here:
This was all said by the man who, prior to this, didn’t want there to be bloodshed from his enemies since they should just give up in the face of defeat.
This was said by a man who, just a few chapters ago, attempted to take land from the Empire since the opportunity presented itself.
He claims that the Kingdom was at fault first.... because they conquered the Alliance before it was the Alliance over 300 years ago. Something that he also just tried to do himself.
He has no personal qualms with them, but since the Kingdom had once did some crappy things to them literally centuries ago, that it was ok to throw them back to the wolves.
Does that not sound insane? To blame a nation of people for the actions of their ancestors, to know that you will be killing them and your justification is “once upon a time, their great-great-great-great grandfathers made us angry?”
Not to mention that the situation with House Daphnel was an internal issue of the House, and the only thing the Kingdom did was welcome them with open arms when they decided to defect.
(He also forgets to mention that the Kingdom and Empire and Alliance once banded together to stop Almyran forces a century ago, and helped them build Foldan’s Locket!)
I cannot stress enough how much this comes out of left field for this route.
In Houses, Claude does say he doesn’t really like or trust the Central Church. If you had played Houses, you would know this, and this speech isn’t too terribly surprising.
But in HOPES, Claude has made absolutely no statements at ALL about the Central Church or that he doesn’t like them. There are TWO scenes were he has something to say about the Central Church and the Kingdom up to this point.
That’s it, that’s all he really had to say about them up. Making his claims about how the Kingdom fucked them over 300 years ago and his dislike for the Central Church even more baffling.
There had been no discussion about how the Central Church gave Crests legitimacy. Not even Edelgard’s route really went into that- it focused more on bloodlines in general rather than Crests.
No talk about how they force their beliefs onto others, and that there is no room for others of different backgrounds or faiths. And remember how Holst said they weren’t after the teaching of Seiros, yet here is Claude condemning them for their teachings?
Plus, for those who have played Houses, you would know that the holy book of the Church says to NOT abuse Crests, that those who abused their Crests and the power they brought made the goddess so sad that she left the world!
Not to mention that there are quite a few nobles with no Crests in the Alliance, nor is there very much talk about nobles striving for Crests in their family. Hell, Claude has HOLST in his army, who was made head of his house despite his younger sister having a Crest!
And while I can somewhat forgive this route for thinking that the Church didn’t allow for different backgrounds or faiths due to lacking people from outside Foldan beside Claude himself in the base roster, I do want to note that people like Petra are recruitable to SB who IS from outside Foldan and OPENLY practices a different faith.
Oh wait, I forgot about Shamir, who is given to you in GW as a base member of your party, who is from OUTSIDE Foldan, worked FOR the Church, and was never forced to practice the belief at any given point!
This is the first time we get to actually hear what Claude’s goals are, since he had basically played coy this entire time.
I find there are two... well, three major issues with this moment.
Firstly, it does not match up with his previous actions at all nor his previously established motivations. Claude early on is more concerned with the future of the Alliance, while trying to honor what the Alliance stood for in the past.
The second, it took this long before we got any clue as to what he REALLY wanted more than anything.
And the third is that it is hypocritical, but just as Edelgard is played straight despite her hypocrisies, so it is here as well.
As I have said before, after Part 2 it is like playing an entirely different route. The first part was about Claude and the struggle of keeping true to the Alliance while also trying to do what’s best for them without getting conquered by two other nations. The second part has become a declaration of expanding influence and tearing down the old ways in all of Foldan.
When I started this review, I had commented that this route was a lot like Crimson Flower 2.0, and this is where it starts. Because Claude’s ambitions are nearly identical to Edelgard’s, with the desire to change the entire continent by tearing down the Central Church no matter what or who is in the way. And while the finer details might be different, as Claude doesn’t want to unite Foldan under one banner for instance, it’s too similar to not feel like Claude is just a male Edelgard in this instance.
Claude had just declared that the Central Church was forcing its own ideals on all of Foldan, and that it was his intentions to blow the door open and change that through force. Is he not, then, forcing his own ideals on all of Foldan?
At least with Edelgard’s route, I was more convinced why she wanted to take out the Central Church. Although not much time was devoted to them as antagonists and did very little to try to convince me that they are actually as corrupted as they say, SB did at least have them send assassins and have Rhea say some mean things.
SB also devotes time early in the route to both Dimitri and Rhea, although not much, as enemies to fight. Both of them are fought before the time skip. While GW only sees both of them in one cutscene and then doesn’t deal with them until Claude declares them as enemies along with his alliance with Edelgard.
What does make this route a bit more palpable than Crimson Flower, and maybe even SB, is that Claude’s allies are willing to call out Claude’s actions, and even the narrator himself mentions that Claude’s actions are about to have some consequences. I will circle back to this in a moment.
Funnily enough, this chapter starts out with a few Federation nobles along the Kingdom border start considering defecting to the Kingdom since they are unhappy with the changes in their homeland. Unfortunately, why this might be the case is relegated to mostly camp dialogue, but essentially the old system allowed even minor nobles to have some say to a degree. Now, in the new system, even their voices are basically not worth listening to. Feeling betrayed and angry, these nobles have started looking towards the Kingdom.
Since the shift from “the Empire is our enemies” to “now the Kingdom and Church are our enemies” is in this chapter, this also changes the focus off these nobles. They are relegated to the side maps instead, where they are defeated unceremoniously for trying to defect. It’s all kinda hush-hush and swept under the rug a bit.
For what time the route DID give to this issue, it tried to paint it as if the Church was Seiros was preying on these Nobles instead, and that these particular nobles are not the “good ones”. But this is so underdeveloped and more time is spent on the fact that Thunder Catherine is nearby that you would be forgiven for forgetting this little side plot entirely. There were actually some serious consequences to declaring the Alliance a Federation and taking away the republic is once was, and it was just... a little side feature. How terribly disappointing. For a nation’s who’s history is in being a republic with no king, the Alliance was shockingly willingly to jump that ship and be perfectly happy with Claude as king with little issue. It reminds me of SB, where most of the nobles are ok with Edelgard flipping their lives and way of life upside down with little discourse or anger, where our lords have free reign to be tyrannical without the hinderance of examination.
This chapter’s main battle instead is with the Knights of Seiros, who have been battling Imperial Soldiers and winning. Randolph is here as well, and the mission is to rescue him and his fellow soldiers, and route the Knights.
Except it’s not, because Claude’s scheme this time is to allow Randolph and his troops to die as bait so that the Federation could encircle Catherine and the Knights. This battle ends with Catherine dying, Randolph dying, and all Imperial and Church soldiers dying. Very few casualties happened to the Federation as a result.
So to be clear, Claude, who called out Edelgard for using her citizens as meat shields in VW and in Hopes had hoped enemy troops would surrender as to not cause bloodshed (even tried to parlay with Ferdinand), used his newfound allies as bait almost immediately, and did not even allow the Central Church’s forces a chance to surrender or survive the battle at all.
Claude does make it clear here (to himself) that the Imperial troops aren’t truly allies, since he’s using Edelgard’s army as a means to an end, and he still considers the Imperial troops enemies at the end of the day. However, even his own actions kinda put a bad taste in his mouth - yet, he will continue to move forward.
I think what makes this so frustrating is that Claude DOES realize his actions are slimy. He even, to a degree, doesn’t like them.
Edelgard may have been frustrating for never realizing that her actions may be wrong, but that shielded her from Claude’s problem. Claude realizes what he is doing is pretty awful. However, he STILL goes forward with it anyways! He KNOWS better and yet, does not stop!
Circling back to his allies calling him out, we see a bit of that here. During the battle, Lorenz seems disgusted with the idea of what they had done. Shez and Judith address Claude directly, telling him that he is not instilling loyalty among his allies if they cannot trust him to have their backs.
This somehow leads to “you need to trust us more” as the primary concern instead of the sacrifices of lives Claude had just done, but it was at least something. It was a bit refreshing to see considering how everyone basically worships Edelgard’s actions nearly all the time in SB.
Even the narrator says that Claude’s actions will have upcoming consequences, again something Edelgard almost never sees in her own routes, where she is able to sidestep most serious consequences to nearly everything she does and is constantly rewarded instead.
All that said though... the lesson this chapter wanted to impart was not that “using your ally as bait is probably not a great thing”, but rather that Claude did not tell anyone his plan, nor did he open up to anyone about his plan and so did not take any new ideas in.
This is at least consistent with what was set up throughout the route - Claude constantly keeping his schemes to his chest and surprising his allies (in a negative way) over and over again. But the lesson learned could not have come at a worst time. Claude should have instead lost allies due to his schemes and their lack of distrust to bring about a lesson of trust and openness. It should not have come from the sacrifice of an ally, and then the sacrifice not be a vital part of a different lesson learned.
It is absolutely bizarre.
And then the route immediately forgets about it as no one else talks at length about Claude’s actions. Instead, it goes into how no one in the Federation even cares about the war on the Central Church. And I mean literally no one.
And somehow, this does not signal to anyone that the Church is probably not the power Edelgard or Claude thinks it is.
Let’s pause for a moment to talk about the powers of the different Churches, or at least the Central Church versus the Eastern Church.
It is made quite clear in Hopes that the Eastern Church is a more passive force. They have no standing army - they are quite literally not allowed to have one by the lord whose territory their base lives on. We meet quite a few NPC priests at the camp from the Eastern Church who have offered their prayers and supports, and convey some tidbits of information.
You learn that 1) the Eastern Church as little power. And 2) that Claude did not require a blessing from the Church in order to become King, yet the priest insisted just because some people in general may have wanted to see it.
That’s it.
If Claude didn’t really need a blessing from the Church, not even the central one, and the Central Church has meddled very little with the Alliance just in general, where is this idea that the Central Church has this iron grip on Foldan even coming from? If anything, the Alliance has neutered any form of the Church in their region to the point that no one even cares about the Central Church at all.
The characters claim that it was the hard work of the Eastern Church that has allowed the people to not riot over the idea of the Central Church to be dissolved, but is that really what it is? I remain unconvinced.
Also, Claude has this to say, just after he made a point to kill every soldier in the last battle:
Remember this line.
---
We have now reached the chapter of this route, chapter 10, where we recruit Byleth or kill Jeralt. Just as in my SB review, Path A will be recruiting Byleth, and Path B will be killing Jeralt moving forward.
Now one thing I did not touch on in my SB review very much was Byleth or Sothis. I wanted to take the opportunity in this review to rectify that mistake.
In Hopes, Byleth is a speaking character and not the silent self insert this time, which give Byleth some room to actually express himself without being trapped as being the protagonist.
I cannot say that it makes Byleth a particularly more interesting character overall, considering his quiet nature and lack of screen time keeps us from really getting a solid sense of who he is as a person. However, we do get to know a few things.
One is that Byleth is very serious. He clearly lacks social skills, likely due to Jeralt’s upbringing, and so misses sarcasm and jokes, and has a hard time expressing what he really means in a given situation. He gets called a cold person by Leonie for only focusing on the details of a job, rather than making an alternative decision to save the lives of others.
While he might be hyper-focused on getting whatever job has been given to him to an extreme degree, he is not an unfeeling person as we see when he thinks about the loss of his father and revenge. Byleth expresses that he doesn’t really necessarily seek revenge for Jeralt (if Jeralt dies), although can eventually be convinced by Sothis to follow through with a revenge plot... somewhat. Byleth does care about people, people like his father, and it’s necessarily out to kill for the sake of killing. Even after agreeing with Sothis to get revenge, it is implied throughout the final battle with him that he is fighting Sothis’ control instead of trying to outright destroy Shez, implying that he didn’t really want to follow through with killing him. This is what leads to Shez getting the final blow on Byleth, since Byleth and Sothis were internally fighting for control over the body rather than focusing on the fight.
Speaking of Sothis, meanwhile, I skipped over this part purposely in my SB review, saving it for this one. Because Sothis is almost a seemingly different character here, while also being a complete wasted opportunity.
Sothis in Houses is characterized of being a rather harsh, but kind, goddess living inside of Byleth’s head. Since she lacks her memories, she cannot give Byleth a lot of information, and as a result has little to say on the realities of the past or the world at large. She is mean but funny, sharp-tongued but motherly. She handed over her power willingly when the time came, and considered Byleth a separate person from other than herself.
This Sothis, however, seems to have a bit longer to cook in the oven before she woke up, and thus woke up with either most or all of her memories. And she is ruthless.
She threatens to take over Byleth’s body, calls Byleth a vessel and a glove to be worn. She scorns him, gaslights him into seeking revenge even when Byleth didn’t necessarily want it himself. She knows more than she lets on, but never actually explains anything to Byleth or the player. She even says she is not there to answer questions.
I know the developers in their interview said they wanted to explore a side of Sothis we didn’t get to see in Houses, but only makes Sothis seem like an uncaring and cruel deity, rather than the snappy mother-figure we had gotten to know and love. Sothis acts in a manner no one would have ever guessed from her portrayal in Houses.
And it’s even more frustrating is that the devs and the story refuses to engage with her character in any meaningful way, because the devs do not want the players to know about the past, and instead side-step that issue by making Sothis aggressively silent about anything important.
They even portray Sothis as a bad mother just in general. While in Houses she had the excuse of basically having no memories, here Sothis seemingly has all her memories. She even knows the epithets of the Nabateans in the game (such as the Nabateans who are now Felix’s Shield and Dimitri’s Lance). And yet, she allows Byleth to slay Rhea without so much as a word spoken to them from our perspective. Maybe she did express doubts but... we don’t hear about it. Byleth can just be part of the group that takes Rhea down in both SB and GW, and it seems as if Sothis has condoned these actions on the virtue of being there and saying nothing.
Sothis is fundamentally wasted potential. The story is so focused on the war at hand that it would rather not engage with revealing more about the Nabateans and their past. I suspect because it would invalidate a lot about what we know about the war, and would therefore give no reason to doubt which side is the “bad side”.
The Nabateans are basically background characters in both SB and GW, and for a game that is about expanding lore, this is insanely frustrating.
In fact, there is ultimately a lack of meaningful lore in general. I’ll circle back to this point a bit later.
I will say, at least, that Sothis is given somewhat of a redeeming moment... if you have recruited Byleth and watch his supports with Shez. In the A support, Byleth will comment that “maybe it was the goddess who said that it was Arval who tried to protect Shez out of love” after the events of the Side Chapters. Of course, the language plays coy, but the line suggests that Sothis was really the one who suggested that Arval had loved Shez (although we do not get to see her say it) and relayed the knowledge to Byleth as an act of kindness.
It’s not much, but it’s something.
---
With Byleth and Sothis more or less out of the way, what happens in this route when you decide to recruit Byleth, or to not recruit him?
Well, like SB, this is meant to be a moment that is harrow for the lords and their companions, as it was their actions that led up to this moment. In SB, it’s Edelgard struggling to keep her vassals in check that led to the death of Randolph. But in GW, it led to the death of Judith.
While I have harped thoroughly on GW so far, I do have to give some praise to chapter to better a better version of “losing someone” in Path B than SB tried to do. Randolph in SB remains an unexplored and underutilized character who’s most interesting feature is dying in AM as part of Dimitri’s recovery arc. SB did not give him the chance to breath in the narrative, so by the time his death scene rolled around, you find that you really don’t care all that much. It’s sad because the other characters are sad, but as for the player, you never got a chance to get attached.
GW, however, has given Judith time and space to be part of the cast, even if she isn’t playable (which was a missed opportunity to be sure). She’s right there with everyone else, voicing her concerns, laughing, scolding. Everyone loves her, and for good reason - she is charismatic and sort of Claude’s supportive adult-figure. You really do get the feeling that she is a beloved member of the crew, well respected and intelligent, and you yourself get the time to get more attached to her than anything Randolph had to offer.
Furthermore, the lesson taken from her death in Path B is far more important and meshes better narratively with GW than anything SB tried to drive home. I don’t think there really was a lesson in SB that came with Randolph’s death. It was just one of the many things that happens along the way while trying to put out fires.
But here, Judith’s death is a direct result of Claude’s foolish and brash actions where he allowed his newfound ally Randolph die in battle just so he could get the upper edge.
Fleche learns of her brother’s death, and is manipulated by a Slither in disguise (I believe it’s meant to be Myson) into wanting to seek revenge on Claude in return. So she raises a small army of her own and launches an attack on Claude in hopes to assassinate him. She brings along with her Jeralt’s mercenaries, which is how you end up facing Byleth one last time.
She ends up dying in this battle no matter what your choice ends up being, but if you take Path B, Jeralt also goes down in this battle too, along with Judith. This battle is literally due to Claude’s callous decision to sacrifice Randolph’s life, and this is when a lesson he should have learned back in chapter 9 seems to really pay off. Since Claude should have learned that sacrificing lives as he did was brash, here it comes back full circle and really gives him the chance to realize how badly he fucked up. That he cannot just do such schemes without paying some deep price for it. Frankly, it’s almost accidentally good here.
But what about Path A?
Path A unfortunately loses this lesson entirely. In SB, where there wasn’t a lesson to really be had, this difference isn’t as big. But here in GW, it’s a much bigger difference. Since Claude didn’t have to face losing out on the death of someone close to him, the consequences of his actions are significantly neutered.
In fact, there is almost no reflecting at all, instead the characters are more concerned with Byleth and with Claude not-so-subtly saying how great and wonderful Byleth is and so on and so forth.
Even SB still took some time to reflect on the deaths they at lost regardless.
Regardless of your choice, Judith becomes a non-entity after this in the story anyways. Her only purpose after this moment is to allow for access to Claude’s paralogue. So instead of writing scenes where she continues to exist organically in the story if she lives, she becomes a camp character no different than Randolph.
And I have to dock points off even more for GW not giving Byleth and Jeralt the time they needed in the route.
When chapter 10 rolls around, Byleth has appeared as an enemy uniquely to GW exactly 2 times. Just two. And in neither case were they has harrowing and terrifying as SB had given him the space to be.
In SB, Byleth and Jeralt bounce between the Alliance and the Kingdom looking for work until you finally face them in chapter 10. But in GW, they only ever work for the Empire. It does make sense, since the Kingdom had no reason to fight against the Federation (at least until now), so the Empire hiring them was really the only logical conclusion for this route.
However, GW actually gets to the skip skip earlier than SB by a chapter, giving Byleth less time in the early part of the war to have a presence at all. So by the time recruiting them came around, you don’t really feel like a proper antagonistic relationship between Shez and Byleth had been set up.
Frankly, the entire relationship between Byleth and Shez is generally poorly done.
I remember when I was first playing SB, I wondered what jobs Byleth and Shez had that had them cross paths in the first place. What destiny led them to them crossing blades? What big job was so important that led to their strained relationsh-
Oh, it was nothing, just a random job from some minor lords in a squabble, that’s it.
If you were like me, and had watched the trailers and viewed the box art, you probably came away with the conclusion that the rivalry between Shez and Byleth is meant to take center stage. Byleth and Shez face off in the art. They are the biggest characters on the box. They had a whole trailer dedicated to their big fight.
But it’s ultimately almost entirely meaningless. The big focus is the war- Shez and his beef with Byleth is a side feature that is basically over the moment you recruit him, or comes around for one more big battle with no resolution to who Shez is. The same is true for Sothis and Arval - they actually do not know each other personally, Arval is not a god, and Sothis just thinks Shez is a descendant of the Slithers.
Oh, and speaking of Shez, do you want to know more about his past and where he might have come from? Did you want to know about his connection with the Slithers more?
I’m afraid you are out of luck here yet again. SB skirted telling the players anything about Shez, teasing it constantly but never revealing anything. It is the same here but even worse - not only do they discuss Shez’s past even less than SB, they even practically throw out the Slithers from the plot except for one chapter.
Having the Slithers removed from the plot isn’t itself a problem - AM from Houses is a stronger story as a result of the Slithers being side-lined for a more character-driven story. But here, they still devote enough time to Slithers that it feels empty with them nearly gone.
Again, I must circle back to the Crimson Flower comparison. CF suffered because the Slithers were a decent threat but were relegated to “well, we will deal with them after the war is over” and as such, are only mentioned in the epilogues as being defeated in a shadow war.
It is the same here, were characters like Lysithea talk about the Slithers as a threat that must be dealt with, but unlike SB where Thales appears on the last map to die, the Slithers appear in a single map identical to their SB version, where they are just killing civilians.
For... some reason. Yet again.
In fact, the GW version is much sillier than the SB version, because in this route the opera company comes to help in the fight. This is just a contrived way to give the players a chance to recruit the allied Dorothea, but right before the battle everyone is slobbering over the idea of meeting the famous singers. At least SB was more serious in what the Slithers were doing from start to finish.
This is likely to set up the Side Chapters, where Shez faces the Slithers and Arval one last time (and ultimately leads to nowhere), but it feels completely out of place. It’s a single chapter devoted to the Slithers where you learn nothing about them at all, and it was forced upon you in a hasty retreat.
Yes, you read that right. A retreat. Again. Because you see, Claude and co decide to use Almyran ships to invade the Kingdom by sea.
----
The next two chapters follow Claude and his companions over the sea to invade the Kingdom and force Dimitri to give up the church, as Claude believes this is the course of action that will lead to the end of the war the quickest.
This, of course, catches Dimitri off guard because the Federation lacked the naval capability to launch such an assault, his lack of Claude’s Almyran back pockets notwithstanding.
Chapter 11 has us attacking a fortress in Felix’s territory, where Felix and Rodrigue escape thanks to the sacrifice of Sylvain’s father who came to their rescue, and chapter 12 has us attacking the Kingdom capital directly after that.
I must say that I found these two chapters particularly frustrating for a number of reasons.
Firstly, we learn that part of Claude’s plan to invade the Kingdom is to get the Kingdom’s long-time border-sharing, aggressive and antagonistic neighbors, Sreng, to attack in order to tie up many of the Kingdom’s troops. This, in turn, would make their smaller attack force have an easier time to force open the doors to Dimitri.
Claude spends quite a bit of time discussing how the Central Church, and by extension Foldan, does not allow for any relations with foreign nations. He complains about this, that the people of Foldan are xenophobic as a result of the Church preventing communication through doctrine. He wishes for nothing more than to force the borders open, to have the people of many lands learn from each other and converse freely.
Except his usage of the Sreng (whom he also manipulated into attacking) runs antithesis to these ideals. You cannot claim that people hate each other based on nationality alone and that people need to get along, only to turn around and cause a literal race war so that your own army gains favor in the battlefield. You cannot say those bolster your ideals, or be confused as to why people on the borders don’t like each other. How can a country get over their ancient feuds if you only flame the fires for your own ambitions?
It is no wonder the Kingdom doesn’t like the Sreng, when the Sreng can so easily be tricked into attack when they think they have the chance!
Not to mention that the side maps consists of mostly routing bandits, who see a chance to cause havoc due to your invasions.
And to top it all off, you kill Sylvain’s father, who died for his friends’ safety.
And what did Claude have to say about this great sacrifice?
This is followed by Claude criticizing the Kingdom’s code of chivalry, that it was chivalry that led to the Margrave’s death since he refused to give up or run away, and that he intended to create a world where such sacrifices would not be necessary.
In other words, this man invaded a foreign land, killed one of their leaders, and blamed their culture for it. Then topped it off with a call to change their culture.
Is that not horrific to think about? Not to mention that it ignores the reality that the Margrave died to protect his friends, not for some code of honor. He did it because he loved them and wanted them safe. But this does not occur to Claude.
(In fact, the Kingdom’s code of chivalry gets racked across the coals in both SB and GW as something disgusting).
And then, in chapter 12, Claude forces his way into Fhirdiad to “talk to Dimitri” to get the message into his “thick skull”. Claude had not bothered to send a message to Dimitri prior to this. He simply woke up and chose violence first.
What is also unsettlingly is the entire cast is on board with this plan. Like in SB, the playable cast sees no issue with invading the lands of those who did nothing to them, killing people along the way.
At least Dimitri evacuated the city prior to Claude’s invasion. But the lives of those soldiers who defended till the last will be on Claude’s hands, and the hands of his friends who were so excited about what they were doing that they would cheer.
The frustration goes further than that. I have picked out a few lines that I want to briefly go over.
In other words, Claude’s plan is to force Dimitri to give up the Church to remove the Empire’s moral crutch for the war. He believes that if the Church is gone, then the Empire will be unable to continue on because their reason for fighting in the first place will be eliminated.
Ignoring that House’s blatantly disproves this logic, Hopes allows Shez to mention that this plan might not work.
In camp dialogue.
Shez can rightfully point out that the Empire has intended to unite Foldan as well as remove the Church. After all, Edelgard still plans (by her own admission) to conquer the Federation, just no longer through military means! Not only does Claude openly agree with you, he still goes after the Church and will still continue to insist that the war will be over if the Church goes down!
And it’s not just him, the other characters firmly believe that the Church, and not the Empire, are at fault.
(Lorenz here is talking about the Margrave and how he died after they invaded).
And after all this, after you force Dimitri into submission and have the entirety of the Kingdom’s capital... you are ordered into a hasty retreat due to that single Slither event I mentioned before.
That’s right. You retreat out of nowhere not once, but twice in this route.
Not only does it feel artificial, that you would just leave after literally having the Kingdom on their knees like that, but it also feels callous. Remember that line from before, where Claude claims to do this war so that the fewest lives will be lost. Well, how can you claim that if you are so easily able to just run away before securing your victory for good?! All those lives, lost for no reason, since now Claude will have to march on the Kingdom once again in order to get the Church to be driven out.
It’s absolutely appalling that this route praises these actions as heroic and clever, rather than insane and cruel.
-------
The remainder of the review will be continued in a reblog in the near future, please look forward to it.
As I finally wrap my my playthrough of Scarlet Blaze after nearly 90+ hours of gameplay, including recording my playthrough as well as grinding supports, S ranks on missions, and so on, I figured it would be wise to jot down my final thoughts on the route’s writing as a whole, since that’s what I am primarily interested in. This is going to be generally informal, since I don’t have the energy nor the desire to write a 50 page thesis on the qualities (or lack of) of this route befitting a publication.
It’s still a long one though, so be ready.
As a quick note, there are some lore inconsistencies between the two games, Houses and Hopes, but this review will not touch on those issues very much. I may occasionally bring something up as I feel is needed, but overall, I will try to review Hopes as its own entity.
------
First of all, Scarlet Blaze is a much better route for Edelgard when it comes to quality versus Crimson Flower. Not that that is a great accomplishment, mind you. Crimson Flower is a general disaster in many ways, but Scarlet Blaze’s first third of the game is honestly competent.
But not perfect.
The first 4 chapters of the route are actually excellent, provided you come off of Three Houses with some general knowledge of Foldan and the lore. Although these chapters are told at nearly neck-breaking speed and skips over a lot of world building that Houses had done in its academy phase, as mentioned earlier when you come off of Houses it’s not really as necessary for this story and it helps to get to a new story that doesn’t force the player on a repeat of White Clouds. Scarlet Blaze instantly establishes Edelgard as a young woman with intelligence and agency on her own path, while also willingly using dubious methods to get to her war. Using the Church’s forces to help her cast out the Slithers from her Palace, only to turn on them later 2 years down the road, using Jeritza to rescue Monica but being sneaky with her commands to him. She left out Ferdinand, Bernadetta, Caspar, and Linhardt from her plans to invade the Palace since their fathers were involved in the Insurrection years ago. These are all logical actions, if not a bit callous at times, that establish her as a strong female character with the desire to make changes in the world.
The foundation of her war is more streamlined and concrete here too. Crests are often mentioned but they take a major backstep to most of the story. People have Crests, true, but the focus here is more on bloodlines in general, and the Church’s doctrine being something Edelgard finds to be the biggest problem. Her war is declared on the Central Church for being corrupt, and for causing the Empire to break up all those years ago. Using Count Varley to set up the Southern Church as a means to undermine the legitimacy of the Central Church not only weakens the Central Church’s power, but also delegitimizes both the Kingdom and the Alliance’s existences. Both nations have no choice but to either bend a knee to her, or fight. Diplomacy only matters here if Edelgard gets her way. It’s legit brilliant. We then follow Edelgard to taking down the Garreg Mach, and sending Rhea on the run to the Kingdom.
Probably the only issue I have with the first 4 chapters is that Scarlet Blaze sidesteps Ionius as a character, who is present in Houses but is not present here at all. If you haven’t played Houses, though, this isn’t as big of a deal as Hopes makes it clear that Ferdinand’s father is the real power now, but Houses informs you that Ionius is still on the throne technically. This makes Edelgard’s grab for power seem a little odd in context then, because Ionius is not part of the process at all here, unlike in Houses. But this is a minor issue.
The pace of the story slows down at this point, but this is where the writing starts to fall off a bit, unfortunately. I am not kidding when I say the next chapters till chapter 9 is just Edelgard putting out fires. This is meant to be the conqueror route, but we spend a lot of time rescuing lords that are in tough spots, either due to general war strategies or due to a lord’s own personal vendetta. Chapter 5 has us going to rescue Lord Lonato, because he hates Rhea for killing his son and sees her fleeing to the Kingdom as a chance to kill her. The reasoning for rescuing Lonato is not because he is some great person, but because we need to prove to other Empire vassals that the Emperor has their back... apparently no matter their folly. Lonato has done something pretty dangerous in regards to the war efforts, yet Edelgard is more worried about the Empire’s image for those who want to switch sides. This is not a bad reason per say, but it does feel a bit jarring and frankly, boring.
The next part of the story is rescuing Count Bergliez from Claude’s scheme that nearly has him killed, and I’m not kidding when I say the rescue effort takes two chapters. This by itself would not be a problem, but the route is only 15 chapters (17 if you include the secret chapters), and we are already on chapter 7 and it feels like nothing has happened since chapter 4. So wasting two chapters for what is honestly a single big event seems like a chapter was just thrown away, especially since we had to already rescue another Lord prior and this is meant to be the conqueror route. Claude ends up kind of looking like an idiot here rather than a tactical genius, despite all the peacocking the characters do to praise his vast intelligence.
Chapter 8 is still fairly boring because, once again, it is a rescue mission, this time for Count Rowe and for the dominion over the Silver Maiden, a large fortress of great strategic importance. Just like Lord Lonato, there is no love loss for Count Rowe. He is a slimy bastard who will change alliances as easily as one changes their hat. He can even turn on you if Gwendal, his knight, is defeated before you can reach them, where they become enemies instead. Again, the importance here isn’t that we are rescuing a great man, but rather proving that the Emperor has everyone’s back, as well as preventing the fall of an important fortress. None of these men are well established from Houses, or even given any screen time from that game at all, so as a player we know very little about them and have no attachment to them either. It feels like we are rescuing nobodies, even if these characters have unique models and portraits.
It would be interesting if Scarlet Blaze had something to say about keeping all these traitorous men safe under the Empire’s care, as a sort of “we have to do what we have to do in war, no matter how wrong it may be or if these people are worthy of our protection or not”. But it frames these rescues as less of a necessary evil, and rather instead as something noble. Edelgard is saddened by the lost of Count Rowe if he dies, because she is saddened that there was so much death due to the battle, rather than something that was ultimately his own fault because he turns on her. It seems the route is doing everything in its power to underplay exactly what Edelgard is doing.
Some of the supports do briefly, oh so briefly, touch on her actions. Her support with Jertiza and Monica are the better examples of this. With Jertiza, it is revealed that they have a contract with each other, which provides Edelgard with a stone cold killer called the Death Knight, who kills anyone and everyone. In Houses, the Death Knight wandered the streets, killing innocents. In Hopes, he seems a bit more reigned in, and they only focus on a single crime- killing his family. Edelgard is more than happy to have this killer’s services because they suit her needs, and even informs Jertiza that she would not mind sweeping his crimes under the rug due to his killing services.
And with Monica, she admits openly to Monica that she only rescued her because it was beneficial at the time to, and not because it was to rescue a loyal vassal or a friend.
Both of these actions are cold, calculating actions, dubious in nature. This would be great, if the writing did anything with them. But the route is more interested in spinning these situations into something positive. Jertiza tells Edelgard he wants to go to jail for his crimes, and she says he will let him, since everyone should “choose their own destiny”. And with Monica, Monica is such a simp that she just comes away from the conversation praising Edelgard for all her glory, unbothered by the fact Edelgard was willing to sacrifice her if it meant it would lead to her future.
It’s not just in the supports that we see this: this happens throughout the route too. I am not kidding when I say that Scarlet Blaze suffers from the same tonal issues as Crimson Flower when it comes to the cast recognizing exactly what they are doing. Most of the characters lay blame on the opposing forces for what happens in the war- Ferdinand remarks that the people’s fears are in the people’s heads when it comes to the Empire, seemingly forgetting that they are the ones instigating the war. Caspar is legitimately bloodthirsty, and even at one point during a camp dialogue, you can “share in his bloodlust”. Many of the characters “wish for peace” but seem unaware they broke the peace to begin with. Only Dorothea makes a comment that they are the ones who instigated the war and no one wants to be taken over and lose their way of life. Linhardt makes some comments about how he just wants it all to be over and for Edelgard to just stop her war. And Arval has to remind Shez that they are the aggressors.
The GD crew seem pretty unbothered overall to be on the Empire’s side. In fact, SB makes a point to show that the GD are only really there because someone else kind of told them to, but they would also as quickly turn on the Alliance due to one reason or another (to the point that even Claude makes a comment on it).They care less about being on the side of the Empire, and more about being in a war. But Ashe and Mercedes, the only two recruitable Lions, seem either nearly suicidal about their choice to defect (Ashe), or are unsure if they should be there at all (Mercedes). Especially since Ingrid must die in Chapter 8, which really sends Ashe down into a deep depression.
And to be frank, Ingrid dying and Dimitri mourning her death was the most interesting and heartfelt part of Chapter 8, and for the route up to this point. There could have been something more here, with Edelgard’s traumatic past or something. But Edelgard’s past is rarely brought up, and rarely plays a role in anything at all... just like in Houses, really.
Edelgard’s horrific past, the experiments she suffered, the loss of her siblings, etc... none of that really matters here. It is occasionally brought up from time to time as a off handed remark. It is also brought a bit more to light in a paralogue, which requires that you recruit no less than two different people in order to even access it. But in either of these cases, we never actually learn about what exactly Edelgard went through. She never discusses her siblings and how her new future is for them as well. If it didn’t connect her to the Slithers, it might as well not even be there at all.
Moving on, chapter 9 is finally when the story gets interesting again, because this is the chapter where Shamir and Catherine, on the behalf of the Central Church, raid the Palace to assassinate Edelgard in Enbarr. One thing I really liked about this chapter is that a few NPCs note that, back in Enbarr, life is pretty normal. In fact, people are generally cheery there, because they cannot image a world where the their Empire will lose, and they do not have to worry about the realities of war hitting their doorstep.
I like that they mention this, but I don’t think that it leads anywhere. It’s a great touch because it shows how the aggressors see most of their people leading normal, untouched lives, but there is a war being waged by them onto the innocents of other nations. It’s almost a nod to the dark reality of this route, without allowing it to actually be impact. Which is a shame, really.
The chapter ends after thwarting the assassination attempt on Edelgard’s life and Ferdinand’s father escape from his imprisonment, and then the game goes into a time skip of about six months. During this time, the war was apparently at a stand-still, and our characters did not fight in any battles during this time. We open up into Part 2 with Edelgard and Claude coming to an agreement and fighting the Kingdom together.
If you have been following my notes during my playthrough, you may have noticed I found this story beat to be particularly baffling. Claude makes no indication or clue that he had any inclination to join with Edelgard prior to the time skip, and we do not get to experience or witness the build up to this rather important moment. This is actually a pretty big deal, for two sides to join together to fight the third, and yet, it kind of comes from out of nowhere. Even if you have played Houses, this comes out of left field. Claude in Houses never attempts to join with Edelgard, even if he claims they share some ideals, and will even fight to the death in one path (and can only live at the mercy of Byleth or Edelgard).
Not only that, but this is when the story starts to feel like a real conquest route for about 2 chapters (chapters 10 and 11), and you start to feel pretty bad for the Kingdom. It is revealed that the Kingdom had finally brought some peace to what lands they have left, and now the Alliance and the Empire are marching on their borders again.
As we move into Chapter 10, this is when you can either kill Jeralt or spare him to recruit Byleth. The method to do so is somewhat tricky, although not entirely impossible, and it leads to two different outcomes and story beats for Scarlet Blaze. As I talk about them, I will refer to the “recruited Byleth path” as Path A, and “killed Jeralt” as Path B from this point on.
Path B has you killing Jeralt, as I mentioned before, which had somewhat been Shez’s goal throughout the route. I had not really brought it up yet in this review, so this is a good time to briefly discuss Shez, Arval, and their roles in this story up to this point.
Shez is the new protagonist of Hopes, replacing Byleth in this role. Byleth is instead relegated to somewhat of an antagonist. At the start of the game, Shez and Byleth come to a head about a year prior to the start of when Houses would have occurred, where Shez’s mercenary group and Byleth’s mercenary group were hired pretty much against each other. Unfortunately for Shez, Byleth is the stronger mercenary, killing everyone in Shez’s group and nearly killing Shez as well. Shez only survived due to the awakening of Arval, whom I will discuss in a moment. The two fight before Byleth and co leave.
It is due to Arval’s timely save that allows Shez to meet the lords a year later, ultimately changing the story that we know from Houses into the one we see in Hopes. Shez prevents the lords from meeting Byleth, killed Kostas, which allowed the other bandits to flee to a different base than in Houses, which in turn prompted Edelgard to rescue Monica. This allowed Edelgard to out the Slithers from hiding, including in Enbarr, and thus, the war started a year later than it does in the original game.
Shez himself as as a character (I chose the male avatar) seems technically more interesting than Byleth, on the basis that he actually talks. He speaks to other characters, raises concerns or praise, and it more than just a blank piece of paper for characters to bounce off of. To many, this is an improvement off of Byleth, who never actually speaks in the game.
However, I cannot give Shez a lot of praise overall. Shez is basically a shonen protagonist, in that his only real qualities as a character is being upbeat, giving the right advice at nearly all times, being an idiot at other times, being nearly beloved by everyone, and being as flexible as whatever support or story beat needs him to be. His biggest talking point in his supports is how he was raised by a woman who was not his biological mother, which is another point I will circle back to later.
As a character, Shez can be all over the place. In one support with Lysithea, it is revealed that he is bad with words, so he has memorized lines to give to people when the moment calls for them. This is particularly strange, though, because he never does this in any other support, being frank and honest in his thoughts at nearly all times. It exists in this one, single support chain, and never anywhere else.
In other words, Shez is basic, and therefore uninteresting. He is basically just as much along for the ride as Byleth was, except that the story doesn’t entirely hang upon him nearly as much as Houses did to Byleth. His redeeming quality that does making him interesting, however, is Arval.
Shez is meant to be the antithesis of Byleth in every meaning of the word, and as such, also as a child-like, sassy and snarky being living in his head, giving him advice or talking to him in general. This is Arval, a boy-ish entity that has some connection to Those Who Slither In The Dark, a secret the game makes no attempt to hide at all. In fact, from chapter 3 or 4, the game practically outright tells you Arval is associated with the Slithers to a degree. It’s less a plot twist, and more a giant neon arrow blinking “GET IT” right in your face. In my opinion, however, this isn’t a bad thing. Anyone coming off of Houses would have made the educated guess that Arval would have been a Slither, so it was probably better to not try to treat it as a twist at all.
Arval himself is far more interesting than Shez. He’s almost fatherly to Shez, yet also underlyingly manipulative with his words, even if Arval isn’t aware of his own manipulation. In many ways, he is like Sothis, in that he berates his host’s intelligence a lot, but also loves his host and protects him, while also being like a child with wisdom beyond their apparent age.
Early on in the story, I actually found Arval to be quite annoying. He interjected his thoughts into the story far more than Sothis ever did, and he was never has funny as the writers thought he was. It made his quips grating rather than enjoyable. However, as the war progressed, this happened less and less. Arval become less annoying and more insightful, such as being the first character (and one of the few) in Scarlet Blaze to remind Shez that they aren’t just fighting a war, they are the instigators of the war.
What was particularly interesting about Arval is his insistence of Shez killing Byleth. Shez didn’t really have it in his heart right away to kill Byleth in revenge for his fallen friends, until Arval urged him on. He calls Byleth a monster, and frequently mentions to Shez about his opportunities to finally kill him. Right before Chapter 10′s big battle, Shez even wonders if he even needs to kill Byleth, and that he would rather get such a strong person on his side. It is not Shez that really wants Byleth dead - it is Arval.
Arval speaks about not allowing the cycle of this world to end, and it would end with the death of Shez. Another point we will circle back to later.
So throughout the story up till this point, Shez continuously meets up with Jeralt and Byleth in battle. As mercs, Jeralt and his son are hired by anyone who needs their assistance, and until chapter 10, this is either the Kingdom or the Alliance, depending on the chapter. It’s honestly pretty hype when Byleth enters the battle field - the music changes, and you watch as stronghold after stronghold falls in the Ashen Demon’s wake.
In this regard, the story did a somewhat decent job building up Byleth and his father as a threat to Shez, making Path B’s choice to kill Jeralt not entirely without textual support. I cannot say it was strongly done - Jeralt and Byleth are more minor roles than compared to Claude or even Dimitri - but they appeared enough in battle that by the time this chapter roles around, it doesn’t feel unearned.
What is particularly strange to me, however, is the writers’ choice in who else dies as a result.
See, killing Jeralt has quite a few consequences. It changes the story in a few different ways, and one of the most notable ways is the death of another character. Each route has another character die by Byleth’s hands as a result of Jeralt’s death. In Scarlet Blaze, this character is.... Randolph.
Randolph is not really much of a character. He is a background character, along with his crazy sister Fleche, who is loyal to Edelgard due to the opportunities she has given him. I can say he is more defined than the other general chick that I literally cannot remember her name (nor do I feel like looking it up), but that’s like saying a square is more defined than a triangle because it has one more side.
Randolph, along with Fleche, are actually more memorable due to their role in Houses for Dimitri’s character development, rather than as characters in their own right. It’s Dimitri who threatens to torture Randolph to death, and later Fleche who attempts to kill Dimitri as revenge, only to kill Rodrigue instead. It is these moments that made people remember them.
Even in Hopes, the story does little to build them up as important or someone worth caring about. They exist in the camp, mainly, but that is not enough. So when Randolph suddenly appeared in a cutscene before the battle, I knew that this was the writers trying to remind the players that this is a character that exists, and to hopefully build up some emotional attachment to him before he dies. It comes off as cheap, especially since they had given us Monica. Monica was a character we never actually met in Houses since she had died. But here in Hopes, we save her life, and becomes an important figure in the route. Randolph is not offered the same dignity here.
So when Randolph died to Byleth in battle, my response was “oh. Well, ok. Sucks for him.” Even Fleche’s cries weren’t enough to make me care. This was a character whose role is apparently to die at every chance he gets.
I have mixed feelings about the scenes that followed. On one hand, the characters after the battle comment on the atrocities of war, and it really feels like they took a true loss for the first time. In other battles, they “mourned” deaths of their allies in that they simply noted that there was death in general. But here, they really feel like they are reflecting on the deaths of so many people. It’s more harrowing. Even if I didn’t care about Randolph, I did enjoy the characters reflecting on the losses they suffered.
However, Fleche calls Byleth a monster for killing her brother, but Byleth did not kill Randolph out of revenge for Jeralt’s death. We learn later that Byleth didn’t even know his father died at the time. Randolph just... lost to a better soldier. But the writing makes it seem like we should be feeling that it was unfair, that it was unjust. It completely ignores that it was just a natural event that happens in war - the luckier and stronger opponent kills the other. The end.
For other character deaths up to this point, there is little mourning from the Empire’s side. Instead, these are treated as necessary sacrifices to the war effort, characters that were just on the wrong side. Some characters even delight in the killing, such as Hubert and Caspar, while others claim that it was their choice to die, such as Ferdinand.
It is understandable that the characters would mourn an ally rather than an enemy general, but it’s presented to us as if this loss was an unfair and unjust one, rather than just a natural consequence.
But what about Path A?
If you recruit Byleth by sparing Jeralt in battle instead (or rather, you just never fight him at all), Jeralt and Byleth decide to allow themselves to be hired by Edelgard since they failed to protect their employer, Rodrigue, from being killed in battle.
This path is rather jarring. For one, Randolph’s brief set-up prior to the start of battle becomes obsolete - he is again relegated to a background camp character after this moment. But more notably is the change in tone of the scene that follows the battle.
Rather than mourning the losses of all their soldiers, the characters instead stand around Byleth, practically slobbering all over him in awe. No one seemed upset (except maybe Monica) about having someone who killed their allies on their side. They praise him, gush over him, are excited by him. If you understand that Byleth is literally the Goddess reborn, this natural fascination the characters probably feel isn’t totally farfetched. But it’s still jarring to see, in my opinion.
This goes further than just this scene. After Chapter 10, Edelgard and Hubert’s A rank support unlocks, and Edelgard spends it talking about how she feels naturally attracted to Byleth, and how it might be her Crest that does so (this support happens regardless if you recruit Byleth or not). It canonizes Edelgard’s obsession with Byleth to the power of their matching Crests, which has a slew of implications that I will not be touching on in this review.
After this chapter, however, you may be surprised to learn that the choice to recruit Byleth or not does not play much of a role until later down the road. Byleth is either relegated to a camp character, along with Jeralt, or disappears until he comes back up for one more showdown with Shez. Whatever you chose to do does not reflect at all in the next chapter, where you continue to push your conquest further into the Kingdom.
(One side thing to note: Dimitri has a long scene about mourning Ingrid’s death earlier in the story, but there are no scenes of him or Felix mourning the loss of Rodrigue at all. It’s rather disappointing).
And for me, this was the toughest chapter to swallow, because this is the chapter that truly highest the tonal issue with this route the most.
As I stated earlier, Scarlet Blaze is meant to be the conquest route, and so far, there has been very little... conquering until chapters 10 and 11. It’s been a lot of trying to keep things from falling apart, really. Throughout this entire endeavor, however, most of the characters are gung ho about conquering to “change the future” for the better, to “bring peace” (despite being the ones to break peace in the first place).
Instead of being a campy story about taking over the world or a dark story about a conquering nation taking over a weaker and desperate innocent one, Scarlet Blaze presents itself as a legitimate side with a moral backing. Hopes wants us to believe that all three nations of the war have a leg to stand on in their reasoning for the war. These types of story can be well done. But if one of those sides are the aggressors of war, then you better have a very good reason to be conquering in the first place.
To me, Scarlet Blaze does not offer a good enough reason for the Black Eagles to be taken as morally right in their war. Edelgard’s reason for war is to give everyone in Foldan a chance to rise to the top and to chose their path in life, regardless of their bloodline. This means that the Alliance and the Kingdom must also fall to their knees to her reforms. She has deemed the Central Church as the ones at fault for these social norms, and as such as made them her main enemy.
Unfortunately, Scarlet Blaze does little to justify these claims other than, frankly, heresy. After Chapter 4, we interact very little with the Church as all. Off the top of my head, the only things we actually see the Church do that can be called questionable is Rhea promising to kill Edelgard after Edelgard raided the monastery, send assassins to try to kill Edelgard in Chapter 9 and to Count Varley in general, and... that’s pretty much it. As an antagonistic force, the Church has very little screen time here. They really don’t appear as a major threat until the last two chapters, and even then, Chapter 14 didn’t even focus on them as much as it does on the Kingdom.
If you played Houses and came away believing the Church is the source of all evil, then that screen time isn’t necessary. But if you are like me, and came away believing that while the Church has its issues, it was by no means enough to start a continental war of conquest over, then this is very notable.
That’s not to say the game doesn’t try to vilify the Church in other ways. This is usually in dialogue with the characters, such as Shamir claiming that the Church wouldn’t help people in need and would focus on the fight instead, or Edelgard claiming that the Church upholds rigorous standards that shackle Foldan to the past.
But we never see these claims in action. We are merely told these things, and even then this information does not always line up. I cannot tell you if it is intentional or not, but there are plenty of times when characters spew a lot of negative rhetoric about the Church or the Kingdom, only for the game to contradicts these claims elsewhere.
For instance, Ferdinand claims that the Kingdom has very few nobles without a Crest. In fact, he claims that the Empire is gaining more nobles without Crests, while the Kingdom only has a single Lord without one, due to his generation simply never having one in the first place.
However, we know this simply isn’t true. Even if you ignored Houses, Hopes itself doesn’t support this claim with its own enemy units.
The devs did take care to give Crests to generic nobles fought in the game, and yet we see plenty of nobles here from the Kingdom who lack a Crest. And this isn’t even all of them.
This makes Ferdinand come across as kind of a fool, one who does not verify his information and has fallen prey to the rhetoric he is subjected to on the daily.
If Scarlet Blaze wanted me to believe that the Church is responsible for much of Foldan’s problems, it makes it harder for me to believe Edelgard’s words when her followers get such basic information wrong.
Chapter 11 really shows this the most in my opinion, because we get some rather startle dialogue from our cast that is meant to be the “heroes of this story”.
Chapter 11 is when Edelgard conquers the Western part of the Kingdom. The last of the Kingdom lords loyal to the crown have taken to hiding in a single fort as a last ditch effort to stay alive. And we get some very interesting dialogue from our characters.
This is not all that is said in this chapter, but it’s comes across as tone deaf, because the route isn’t treating itself as a villain route. If it was treating itself as a villain route, then I would have no complaints.
But this is being said about people of a foreign nation, one that the Empire is forcing to its knees to force change upon them. These are people who are seeing their lands taken from them, their way of life questioned and vilified, and the characters all basically say “Well.... they just refuse to change, it’s their fault!”.
The route wants us to feel that these characters are fools for just not bending to the will of invaders.
We also get some rhetoric about the mentality of these nobles trapped inside from Edelgard, which I found particularly baffling.
The thing is, we do see Baron Domonic prior to battle, and this is never brought up by the Kingdom nobles at all. Never is it stated that they chose Dominic to be in charge due to his bloodline... Edelgard just makes that claim out of nowhere, because it fits in with her beliefs.
It is also baffling to me because we do know that the idea of nobility and having responsibilities is not unique to Foldan. Petra is a foreign Princess (made queen during the route at some point offscreen) who is literally right there among the cast. She talks frequently about her responsibilities as queen, and it is a position of birthright just as much as the other nobles in Foldan. But Petra never brings it up as a comparison to Edelgard’s claims. Edelgard never makes mention of wanting to fix the entire world itself- just Foldan. And if the Church is only bound to Foldan, then how does it cause suffering to nobles outside its borders like Brigid?
It doesn’t help that Shez, somewhat a player mouthpiece into the world of Foldan, is ecstatic by Edelgard’s words and wholeheartedly agrees with her.
(This is extra startling because Shez starts out somewhat criticizing Edelgard’s war in their C support, only for him to become an undying loyal follower just like Hubert and Monica).
The thing is, they could have made this a legitimate route to root for if they had just... tweaked Edelgard’s focus a bit. It wouldn’t even take much! Just imagine instead... if Edelgard started her war to root out the Slithers.
Think about it. Edelgard was already subjected to Slither experimentation. She knows what they are capable of. So, what if she knew they were deeply rooted among the people of Foldan, in positions of power? She didn’t know who she can trust - she even says this at one point in a discussion with Hubert!
This slight change would instantly make her war a truly morally grey one, one where the suffering subjected to the common folk is understandable. She can’t just try to talk to the other nations - she doesn’t know who has been Slithered. She needs to take over everything to sniff them out, and free Foldan of their underground tyranny for good. Heck, I might even be on her side for that then!
But alas, the Slithers are treated more as a second set of antagonists. Like the Church, they get very little focus. However, they DO get more focus, for better or for worse.
Besides some paralogues (that lead to nowhere, honestly, in terms of information), the Slithers do kinda get a few chapters right after Chapter 11. Because you see, besides being a conqueror route, we don’t really get to conquer too much. Right after we take over the Western Kingdom, there is a sudden crisis back at home and we find our cast putting out fires again.
Turns out, there is an insurrection happening back in the Empire. Some Empire nobles unhappy with the way things are going have joined forces with the escaped former Duke Aegir, who is leading the charge. Along side of him are the Slithers, who had helped him along the way.
12 Chapters. It took 12 chapters before we got any substantial Slither antagonists to deal with. It took this long before we saw Solon again, and it’s not till Chapter 13 that we get to see Kroyna again either.
And what are the Slithers doing exactly?
That is a very, very good question. Because we never truly learn their aim in this war, other than their ultimate goal is to take back the world from everyone on the surface world.
Why did they suddenly help Duke Aegir in his insurrection and cause mayhem in the Hyrm territory so that they can take Fort Merceus? I guess apparently to spread chaos. That is their reasoning.
Yay.
I suppose one could infer that they want the war to go on because the more death the people of Foldan deal to themselves, the easier the job will be later for the Slithers. But this is never directly stated by the Slithers, ever. They just.... do their thing.
Not only do they do their thing, but they do their thing separately. They barely work together, as it turns out, each Slither kind of working independently for the same goal. So they do random experiments for different reasons, or cause insurrections for different reasons, without being a monolithic entity of deep innerworkings that is unified under a single banner.
The fact the Slithers are basically the cause for the insurrection in the first place is troubling, because it removes agency from the people of Foldan. Scarlet Blaze would have you believe that most of the Empire is pretty ok with Edelgard’s rapid reforms, and those who aren’t have just decided to suck it up.
This isn’t very realistic, honestly. But instead of having Duke Aegir gather unhappy nobles to his side, it is the Slithers who push it along and who make it a reality. It’s always the Slithers who cause the chaos, rather than people just being people and doing awful things on their own.
And again, we don’t really learn much about them. Solon appears at the end of the battle for a brief moment, only to get away. And in Chapter 13, 9 chapters after we first meet her, Kroyna is just... killed rather unceremoniously.
So to recap at this point, Scarlet Blaze introduces the Slithers as early as chapter 3, then we almost do not hear from them until chapter 12 and chapter 13, and the route is only 15 chapters long. PLUS, only 4-5 of these chapters is actually about conquering, and the rest is about just putting out fires within the Empire or along the front lines.
Edelgard is one of the one most affected by the Slithers, yet they only have garnered a mere 2 or 3 chapters for her story.
Plus, chapter 13 has me feeling bad for Duke Aegir. The slimy, whiney, frankly quite awful human being Duke. Me. Feel BAD for this guy. He laments about not being given a chance like the other nobles like Linhardt’s father, and if he had he may have fallen into line. But Edelgard never extended this chance to him in particular.
Which brings up another thing. In Houses, it is revealed that the Insurrection of the Seven, in which seven noble houses overthrew Emperor Ionius and took power. It’s not fully addressed in Houses though, and why exactly they did as such is never fully explored.
Well, it’s not explored here either. How Edelgard managed to convince those who once plotted against her father to her side is never explored. The Insurrection of the Seven is never explored. We learn absolutely nothing new.
Did Aegir deserve to be thrown into jail? Yes. But was he less deserving than the other noble houses who not only were pardoned, but even given positions of power? Take Count Varley. He’s one of the most corrupt nobles in the Empire who loves money more than his job. And yet, Edelgard made him the new leader of her Church. He is clearly the worst person for the job, yet he got it anyways. (Not only that, but the route makes no commentary on Edelgard installing her own bishop into a position of power over the biggest religion in the land. You aren’t supposed to like Varley, but you aren’t exactly given any indication that this action is a wrong one either. This should be indication of what kind of route this is, but the route plays it totally straight.)
Was Aegir not given a chance because he was the only one who subjected Edelgard to experiments? To be frank... it’s honestly not clear. And that’s a shame.
(There is Hubert’s father as well, who Hubert killed during the raid in Enbarr. We don’t get to learn his side of the story either).
However, this is a good segue into characterization for a moment.
When compared to Crimson Flower, Scarlet Blaze offers some characters more time in the spotlight. I cannot say the entire ensemble gets to shine equally, but there is a notable improvement on character purpose and focus. Without Byleth taking over all of Edelgard’s precious time and love energy, it leaves room for other characters to interact with her instead.
When it comes to the main story itself, both Hubert and Ferdinand get to shine the most, with Hubert really stepping up to the plate while Ferdinand gets his own small subplot related to his father. Ferdinand doesn’t get to shine as much as Hubert - the subplot is relatively small, and only relevant for a few chapters, but it’s still more than what he had gotten in Houses.
Ferdinand is the one who kills his father, with an axe to the neck. Ferdinand is understandable shaken up by this, but he deems his as his duty. He feels it was his fault that the Duke staged an Insurrection because Ferdinand had insisted on a fair trail first, rather than just executing him as soon as they could. While I find this logic... confusing, I’m not really going to get into that in this review.
Unfortunately for Ferdinand, that’s as far as his character really goes here. He’s more serious, less funny, and more in line with Edelgard’s desired future. Instead of being Edelgard’s number three like he is in Houses, that spot was taken by the newest Black Eagles member, Monica.
AND OH BOY DO I HAVE THINGS TO SAY ABOUT MONICA.
Monica is, without a doubt, the worst character in the entire cast. If simp was in the dictionary, it’s definition would be Monica.
Monica’s one and really only defining feature is that she LOVES Edelgard. She adores her. Worships her. She counts the number of times she has had tea with Edelgard, the number of times Edelgard has eaten cake, the number of times she sighed, what she does every day, who she talks to.... And no, I am not exaggerating.
For any fans who have played FE Awakening, there is a character called Tharja that is an equally obsessive character to the player insert, Robin. And Monica... is far worse. Because at least Tharja has more qualities than loving Robin.
Monica has almost no other characterization. Nearly everything she says, with a few exceptions, is about how Edelgard is wonderful and who dared to hurt Edelgard, and hey, why don’t you love Edelgard as much as she does?
I could go on, but I have other things to talk about.
The rest of the Eagles aren’t really too much different than their Houses counterparts, but I do want to give a shout out to Petra for not only being far more interesting in Hopes than in Houses, but also for having the best support in Scarlet Blaze with Caspar. I won’t talk about it here. Just go watch it - it’s very good.
Speaking of supports.....
One thing I noted with the supports is that they are sometimes at odds with Edelgard’s characterization, or even her desired future. Edelgard literally comments that she wants to create a future where only merit matters, and not bloodlines. Quite a few of these supports, especially with Ferdinand and Lorenz, make comments about restoring noble honor, or restoring their house, or breaking down the barriers between nobles and commoners.
Some of these supports are cross supports that actually probably make sense in their original route, but some are only viewable in SB, which makes it all the more confusing. Edelgard’s future is for the world to not know of privilege but of merit, and that bloodlines and origins do not matter. And yet, there are plenty of supports viewable in SB that continue to boast about nobility.
One support that stands out to me is Edelgard’s support with Balthus, where Balthus asks to be her bodyguard for a fee. Edelgard flat out tells him no, then lists one of the reasons as his “family history”. I find this quite baffling, for if one’s origins do not matter, then why would Balthus’ family history matter? Ferdinand’s own father was a criminal snake but Edelgard keeps Ferdinand under her employ. And yet, Balthus is not offered the same dignity, part in due to his “family”. Is that not hypocritical?
Edelgard being a hypocrite does not bother me - she was already hypocritical in Houses. What bothers me is the writing seems unaware that she is being hypocritical at all.
Not to mention her bizarre choices of who lives and who dies. When Lorenz’s family betrays them, she welcomes them back with open arms after they defeat them again. However, if Count Rowe betrays her in battle, they cut him and his knight down. Duke Aegir is another example of this, as discussed before.
I also want to call out another Edelgard support in particular that was really... something else. Edelgard’s A support with Ferdinand has them talking about how commoners won’t just be able to rise to the top right away, if nobles already have a leg up in education. Ferdinand than comes to believe that that was Edelgard’s plan, to create a free school to teach everyone a good education. Edelgard looks baffled... then says this is why she needs him, because she needs ideas like that.
In other words, she didn’t think her future plan through. It didn’t occur to her that commoners wouldn’t just be able to rise to the top by merit alone, if they lack the education.
(Of course, this still ignores the reality that even with access to an education, the commoners will need an industrial revolution first to free them from the labor of the fields, so that they actually have time to learn).
We are fighting for this grand future, but the person leading the charge has not thought beyond “get rid of church, ????, profit”.
----
We now reach the last two chapters of this route to discuss. I know it’s been a lot, but if you made it this far, congratulations. We have now reach the part where your choice to recruit Byleth or not matters.
That’s right, this whole time up until this point, Byleth’s existence hasn’t made much of a difference to the story, other than a few pieces of dialogue changes here or there. Chapter 14 is where this difference finally rears its head. So, let’s discuss these two different paths.
In Path A, we are reminded that Byleth and Jeralt are, in fact, characters, as they make a brief entrance into a scene with the cast. We then see Rhea and Dimitri planning their next move - Dimitri will march his army to the Valley of Torment while Rhea goes to take the monastery. Claude meets up with Edelgard and Hubert (remember him? He’s barely been in the story either, and now he’s back, yay! We also hadn’t seen Rhea since Chapter 4, nearly 10 chapters ago) and explains that Dimitri is marching to the Valley. They all agree to meet up there for a three way battle. And this is what happens - All three (four, including some of the Knights of Seiros like Seteth and Flayn), meet up in the Valley for a bloody battle, the Alliance and the Empire versus the Kingdom and the Church.
Once Sylvain has been killed, and Dimitri routed and on the run with Claude on his tail, something very interesting happens. Arval takes over Shez’s body and attacks Byleth.
This then leads to the 2 secret side chapters of this game, taking the route from 15 chapters to 17 chapters. These side chapters have us saving Byleth from Shez/Arval, then Arval killing Solon as a sacrifice to enter what I call the Shadow Realm, taking all three lords and Shez with him.
Here, we learn that Arval is, in fact, basically an AI designed to help usher in the consciousness of Epimenides, an ancient Slither who was once an ordinary man, who was bent on killing Sothis in an act of revenge and taking back the world for his race. Shez was meant to be his vessel in this era.
Shez, along with the lords, kill him, removing his presence from the world for good.
During this time, in Scarlet Blaze, Edelgard has a chance to talk to both Dimitri and Claude.
Her discussion with Dimitri is.... well, she’s not very kind here. She shuts down any notion of them having a history together, and has very little interest in conversing with him. I think I will save a deeper analysis of this discussion for my Azure Gleam review, after I play that route.
Her discussion with Claude, however, I find much more fascinating, because it’s more important to their long term plans and why they are working together. But we will discuss that in just a moment.
After the Slither is killed, the lords and Shez.... somehow manage to get out of the Shadow Realm (literally somehow), say their goodbyes, and go their separate ways to finish off the last chapter.
Now, what happens in Path B?
Instead of Byleth talking with Edelgard, we see Byleth talking with Claude. Apparently, Byleth has “given some tips” to Claude, which changes Claude mind on siding with Edelgard. He claims that he only agreed to join her side because the Alliance was under duress, but now sees a chance to strike at them and get the upper hand. He rallies his soldiers to destroy the Kingdom and the Church so that they aren’t shackled to the past, and to get rid of the Empire for their aggression. This leads to a real three way battle, with Byleth popping up at the end.
This is the only path where Claude can die in the entire game (also marking the only one of the three Lords who can die in this game as well). Byleth will also die here, to Shez’s sword.
Now, before I go on, let’s talk quickly about Sothis. Because....well, there is some stuff to say.
Sothis is not exactly the character we know from Houses. Here, she is... crueler. More vengeful. She calls Byleth a glove to be worn, and it is she who seeks out revenge for Jeralt’s death, moreso than Byleth. I could venture a guess as to why, but I think I’ll save that for another review.
It is Sothis who controls Byleth in the last chapter, and the only reason why Shez wins is because Byleth is kinda fighting her back for control. It makes Byleth sloppy, and thus... killed. Much to the delight of Arval, who finally feels a great burden lifted from him.
I don’t know how I feel about this Sothis. Sothis was always motherly, but here, she seems almost out of character in her vengeful nature. Again, I can hazard a guess, but I’m going to save that for a different review.
I want to wrap this up, so my comments on the final chapter after this will be brief: Edelgard and co go to the monastery to stop Rhea once and for all. Thales.... just happens to be there, which is very contrived. You beat both Rhea and Thales, who then kill each other. Edelgard and Shez then.... high-five, then roll ending text.
------
So, which path is the better path in terms of writing?
Well..... neither, really.
Each path has it’s hiccups in terms of writing.
Path A leads to removing Rhea, Thales and other Slithers INCLUDING Arval from the world. The ending scroll has the Alliance and the Empire reaffirming their agreement, before marching to end the Kingdom once and for all. It’s almost conclusive, save for some sly comments from an NPC that wonders if the Alliance will uphold their agreement. We also get to learn what Arval is and his purpose as well.
However, there are some issues. For one, not everything makes sense, and this is where I circle back to Edelgard and Claude’s discussion in the Shadow Realm.
Claude, as it turns out (which I already knew from leaks), wants the Central Church gone. However, he doesn’t want the Kingdom gone at all, wants Rhea dead, and wants to change the WORLD, not just Foldan.
Edelgard, however, only wants to change Foldan, wants to capture Rhea, and wants the Kingdom gone for good because they are too rooted in Church doctrine for her comfort.
Despite the ending scroll telling me they reaffirm their agreement and march on the Kingdom, their ideals do not match up for the long term. Claude doesn’t want the Kingdom gone, per his claim, and he has “real ambitions”, as he tells Edelgard. It sounds like to me, something will happen along the road that will break up their treaty.
Not only that, but the secret chapters don’t seem to have been written for this route. Dimitri has lost nearly everyone he loved - Gustave, Ingrid, Sylvain, Rodrigue - yet is happy to have been talking with the two lords if but for a moment.
This comes off of Claude literally telling Dimitri to stop running so he will “stop chasing”, and Claude also blames Dimitri for being there in the first place. (Another thing to save for a different review).
Path B, however, never has you learn about Arval at all, and yet has Claude do the more rational thing to his long term plans and betray Edelgard, leading to the ending scroll saying the war went on between all three nations. Arval is still potentially a threat to the world as well, since he could one day take over Shez’s body in the future.
Not only that, but it was Byleth’s existence on the other side that pushed Claude to betray Edelgard, and we.... don’t really learn what Byleth told him. Since Byleth is meant to be God, then what does this imply about Byleth’s influence in this context? Claude even mentions that he wishes he had Byleth sooner on his side to be pushed into the right direction in the first place (implying that siding with Edelgard isn’t the right path, even thought it is Byleth’s advice that leads to his death in this route).
Plus, it’s... so coy with this nod to “my teacher, I wish you chose me” sort of thing that also plagued Houses.
But in both of these paths, the “rivalry” between Sothis and Arval is basically nonexistent, which the box art somewhat alludes to but ever follows up on.
The box art would have you think that Sothis and Arval are two side to the same coin but... they aren’t, really. Hell, after Byleth dies, that’s just it. We don’t learn more about Shez’s past AT ALL (they talk all the time about how Shez’s past is a mystery, how he was adopt, about who his adopted mother may be). They literally leave that hanging. We don’t learn about the “cycle of this world” that Arval had mentioned at the start of the game. All of that is completely left untouched.
So, Path A - learn more information overall, technically a better ending, but the writing of the secret chapters don’t feel like they fit this route very much. Or Path B - Learn nothing of Arval, Claude’s actions are more understandable with his character motivations, but the world is more worse off than ever.
I can’t decide which one I think is better in quality at this time. Both really aren’t that great.
Not to mention that the final chapter is just ridiculous. Thales just HAPPENS to be there when Rhea is, and despite Rhea and Thales being long time enemies of Edelgard, they actually take each other out instead of Edelgard having the pleasure to do it herself.
And it ends on... a high five.
This is a call back to the start of the route, where Edelgard didn’t know what a high five was and didn’t do it. Now here, she does, in the wake of her “victory”.
And I think this high five is the symbol of this route. It shows just what this route really is - a route that fails to recognize the gravity of what it is doing to the continent. A route where your pretty female lord is only praised by her followers, who is almost never questioned and whose actions are always somehow justified, even if they shouldn’t be.
A conqueror route ends on a high five.
And I think that should tell you something.
----
Thanks for reading this really long review. My next task is to start Golden Wildfire. I look forward to seeing what else this game will offer, and how my thoughts will change as I go through this adventure with Claude!
Sylvain says its a bit scary because they are trusting the Church a lot. Seriously, this weird mistrust in the Church is just dumb.
The Western Church is undergoing reform now. A new bishop will be chosen too.
Petra is not happy with the Empire and has decided that they will not be having a relationship with Brigid during her lifetime.
Some distrust of the Alliance. Even Shez is like “I don’t know, man.” Doesn’t help that Lorenz also agrees with him, saying that Claude is difficult to trust. So... there’s that.
Apparently Jeralt’s company is working under Randolph. Jeralt really has a poor sense of morality, huh?
Apparently Randolph doesn’t want to be part of the raids they are doing, according to an Imperial solider NPC who escaped. Even “turned a blind eye” to him escaping. Kinda hard to feel pity when the dude was a-ok with conquering before.
An NPC says that some Adrestian Nobles still care about the Empire’s wellbeing, and wishes there was a way we could work with them. I mean... I guess? But once again, it’s really hard to feel sympathy for people who are so ready to conquer. And they don’t seem to be trying anything to stop the Duke either.
Dimitri truly loved Patricia, according to Rodrigue, since she was the only mother he ever knew. Then Rodrigue says that this time, they are the invaders to the Empire. Technically true, but like.... it’s not equal, man, come on.
Felix, in his own way, expresses some concern that his father is running himself ragged. (Then points out that he doesn’t have any room to criticize since he is running ragged himself).
Aw, Hilda sent the Alliance crew a care package. Cute.
Lol, Yuri criticizes Balthus for buddying up with the Empire. Balthus takes it and hits it back, pointing out that Yuri worked for Rowe. Yuri implies he hated it and maybe didn’t have a choice? Oh well.
Annette: “Now we are invading. :(” Shez “They started the fight, what’s wrong with fighting back?” “Hmmm, I’m not sure that reasoning is convincing enough for me.”
Literally why not, what else are we supposed to do, just twiddle our thumbs until the Empire kills itself off?
Some NPCS have changed their minds about the Church, having once believed they were a pile of garbage till they saved their life.
Another NPC admits to siding with the Empire originally since she believed they would win. Now she’s with the Kingdom for the same reason.
Marianne is concerned about Edelgard. Literally why, she started the war.
Of course, Dorothea is also worried about Edelgard. At least she is actually friends with her. But I’m getting really sick of this game gaslighting me and pushing Edelgard down my throat.
Oh, Hanneman appears in a side map! Fascinating, fascinating. So is Ladislava.
And now for the big chapter battle.
Seems like this is similar to the SB battle where a bunch of houses are together as one, except this time on the Empire’s side instead of the Kingdom one.
Dimitri reminds everyone that we are the invading force this time, so it makes sense that the houses are banding together to protect their livelihoods.
“Not after what we have done” Ashe, buddy.... they attacked first.
Dimitri comments that he knows that if they lost their way, he knows that everyone will help him come back from it. (YES! This is what AM was missing, so nice now).
Oh, we can recruit Linhardt and Constance this chapter? For some reason, I thought Linhardt would be later.
Looks like we are killing Duke Gerth. Kinda a shame, really. He’s actually a nice one.
Oh, Monica is here! Can I kill her?
Linhardt is a Holy Knight? Interesting. Oh also, Hanneman is here.
Linhardt says he doesn’t have it in him to kill Petra. Petra is way cutthroat though, kek.
Lol, Linhardt calls us cruel for beating him up first before we actually ask him to switch sides. He does kinda have a point, lol.
So we killed Baron Ochs. But not the other lords.
Manuela is here too, excellent.
Wait, we don’t kill Monica?! NOOOO
Ok, maybe we killed two more Empire lord. Still, low death count so far. Manuela just retreats too. Hanneman as well, And Duke Gerth. Not as devastating as the SB version was, which basically killed everyone except Annette, if you wanted to let her go.
At least this route has guilt, not even SB had that. They even recognize that while it sucks, if they just sit back it won’t be good in the long run.
Whoa, Felix just kinda defended Dimitri, saying not to put everything on him. That’s my boy.
Lambert also took the throne young (Rodrigue says too young).
Dimitri and Lambert are nearly identical, except Lambert had a shorter temper.
Rodrigue had hoped Felix wouldn’t have been like him so much. Both he and Felix can’t live without serving some sort of greater purpose. For Rodrigue, that was living to make sure he kept Lambert’s promise.
Rodrigue says that Dimitri needs someone to take his hand and pull him in the right direction. He says he needs a friend, not a retainer, to do that. I guess that’s their piss poor reasoning for why it has to be someone besides Felix or Dedue.
Whoa, Arval gave his stamp of approval of Rodrigue, calling him a wonderful man. And he’s RIGHT, DAMN IT.
Oh, hi there Randolph. Guess this is his time to die.
Basically, the Empire army is mostly reduced to scrabble competing to kill the most or whatever. All picked by Duke Aegir.
Randolph tells Jeralt that if he dies, his contract will be considered terminated and Jeralt will be free to stop supporting the Empire and it’s fall into depravity. If he wasn’t an invading force, I would almost respect him.
Time to march closer to Enbarr.
Paralogue
Dimitri, Rodrigue, and Sylvain Paralogue....
A Sreng attack is coming. The leader was a previous prisoner of war that Sreng had offered up. Despite the attack having killed Matthias’ first wife, he agreed to take the boy and treat him well. He taught him the language and the ways of Foldan. But the boy eventually ran back home, with all that knowledge to boot.
Dimitri finds it profound to be on the same battlefield that his father had been one once. Sylvain finds it uncomfortable that it’s still the exact same fight though.
Lol, it’s funny that only Felix is missing here, like the trio of the past (Margrave, Rodrigue, and the late king) versus Felix, Sylvain, and Dimitri.
Matthias’ first wife was a start pupil of the Black Eagle house, and a classmate of Rodrigue and Matthias. Matthias became known as the “Wall of Ice” after she was killed in the Sreng attack.
The Sreng Commander had been planning this for a while now. Seems to also be using the Margave’s tactics he had taught him years ago.
And he apparently knew Miklan and Sylvain personally as well, so he must have been there for quite a while.
After his defeat, the commander ran off. But before he did, he and Sylvain joked with each other a bit.
The Margrave feels upset, that he taught the man how to speak their language and educated them. But Dimitri says that that was how they managed to get through to him in the first place.
Sylvain wants to bring peace between the Kingdom and Sreng, even if it takes him his whole life. Sreng wants a port and warmer land, but the Kingdom already has little to spare. So Matthias has no idea how this could end in peace.
Matthias kinda stormed off. Despite calling Sylvain naive, he actually wonders to Rodrigue if he himself is actually the naive one. He agrees with Rodrigue that he will go apologize to Sylvain for what he had said to him.
Lambert had hoped to forge peace between Duscur and Sreng. He was unsuccessful with Sreng, but had been making strides with Duscur.
Dimitri hopes this will end in peace, especially since he wants to end the need for Relics.
And I guess he did because we got the Lance of Ruin! Wish we could actually SEE that scene but... Well, we kinda do in another route-ish? So, whatever.
While not an exciting battle, I liked the premise of the paralogue and what it had to offer to the story on the whole.
A little extra note here, but this commander is 100% Leif (from the book Military History of Partholon). He is technically a prince, although never named as such. Oleg, the Sreng chief, died when a large beast (likely the Wind Caller pissed that people were in his home, but it could have been another random beast) killed him. Leif is his grandchild, the youngest of Oleg’s son’s children.
Supports
Now that Rodrigue is back, we can get to his supports.
Shez and Rodrigue B - Shez wants to have a snowball fight after the war. But apparently, Kingdom snowballs fights are basically snowball wars.....Of course it is. So cute though, thinking about Rodrigue getting ambushed by Lambert. And Matthias is apparently a cunning snowball fighter. Then Ingrid’s dad came out of nowhere (he is much older than the others) and grabbed them by the scruffs of their necks and forced them to end the fight. Stinking cute.
Rodrigue and Dimitri A - They talk about Lambert’s death a bit. Then, Dimitri asks what would Rodrigue have done if Dimitri had died that day too. Rodrigue urges Dimitri to value his life, if he wants Rodrigue to value his own. Dimitri doesn’t want Rodrigue to die for him, he believes it would destroy him. It would be like losing his father all over again. Touching support.
Yuri and Dimitri B - Dimitri learns that the people aren’t just standing around waiting for handouts. He wants to be a ruler that listens to everyone. Yuri points out that before people can participate in the government, they need stability and food on the table. Stability, food -> no longer worrying about dying -> more willing to go get educated -> get educated -> can understand what they would want or need for their future more -> participate in government intelligently. Yuri offers his services to help Dimitri raise the funds needed for this process, but Dimitri refuses at first (mostly because Yuri is a known underground crime lord) but promises to consider it. Yuri promises that he would never do something underhanded in Dimitri’s name. I’ve wanted this support chain for years, and it has not disappointed.
Shez and Catherine A - Not a particularly exciting support. I don’t really have anything to say about it. Just a “put one foot in front of the other” support.
Sylvain and Ignatz B - That painting is from 200 years ago, around the time when the Officer’s Academy was founded. They think it might be a painting of the archbishop at the time, although wonder why she is painted in plain clothes. Apparently her rule was not long, because she “died” of illness. It is said birds mourned her loss? The woman also looks like Rhea (so it’s probably Rhea). They speculate that maybe the lady (Rhea) wanted to be represented in common clothes on purpose to be free of the trappings of her position, or maybe the painter wanted to represent how she cared about the poor and downtrodden. A sneaky support about Rhea in the end. Has me wondering, though, why Rhea faked her death by illness 200 years ago.
Ingrid and Marianne B - Ingrid grew up around Pegasi, which are basically horses on wings. Why tf is Ingrid so suddenly incapable of being around her horse properly. And why are they talking still, go fucking save your friend on the battle field!
Felix and Raphael A - Felix goes hunting for boar. Kinda cool that this support calls back to Petra teaching Raphael hunting techniques. Felix talks about how his house and Dimitri’s house used to go hunting together (Dimitri bagged a shit ton of animals, Felix barely got away with his life against a boar). Raphael goes confused about which boar Felix is talking about (kek). I guess Felix isn’t the best hunter, lol. Raphael helps him take down the boar, learns a lesson along the way... sort of. Helping ain’t a bad thing. Also calls Raphael a friend. Cute.
Sylvain and Yuri B - Yuri and Sylvain snuffed out some spies. Sylvain had not hesitated to dispatch them, which surprised Yuri. Yuri admits that he is surprised that Sylvain didn’t hunt him down for killing his brother. Sylvain says its water under the bridge if Yuri helps with the war. But warns that he will not hesitate to kill him if Yuri betrays them. Still, they respect each other. Yuri comments that Sylvain is actually a loyalist deep down (except in CF, kek), and then suggests a date might be fun. Like... a date date. Sylvain is into it? Oh mama, oh lord, these boys will be the death of me.
Annette and Lorenz B - Lorenz compliments Annette for her achievements. Annette is surprised. Their relationship is mended to a degree.
Annette and Ignatz B - Annette clears up some misunderstandings. Gustave may be the best fighter, but he’s a worrywart, and terrible taking care of himself. So while he may be an outstanding fighter, but knights need more skills than just being the best fighter. So Ignatz still has a lot of strengths that are contributing, even if it’s not Gustave’s level of fighting.
Yuri and Seteth A - When the plague came through the kingdom, Yuri was saved by an old man. His mother found him, and they took the man in and cared for him. Then Yuri got sick. Yuri doesn’t know how, but the old man saved him. (The old man is dead now). Seteth then tells him that one of the Ten Elites had a terminal illness, but was cured because he got a crest. Yuri concludes that the old man must have given him a Crest, and that he is going to live a very long life as a result. Seteth, quietly, reveals that the old man was likely Aubin. Apparently, Aubin cursed the blood that flowed through his veins, but likely found salvation because he was able to save a child’s life through it. I guess Aubin might have been one of Nemesis followers before he changed sides, and cursed what he had done. Only a guess on my part though.
Shamir and Catherina A - Catherine had wanted to go drag Shamir back after Shamir slipped away. But Rhea stopped her, and that it wasn’t fair to impose the Church on others, especially those from another land (HMMMMM, NO SHIT?!). They both admit that they missed each other, and that they trust each other deeply. If Shamir didn’t switch sides as easily as slipping burgers, I might actually believe her. Sort of. I mean, she’s mot lying here, but despite the romantic undertones Shamir can still kill Catherine and show very little remorse for it. At least Felix goes into states of depression.
Books
Military History of Partholon
Harpstring Moon, Year 892
The Sreng people mounted a large-scale invasion. They crossed the Ruska Mountains in the north and descended south into Faerghus.
King Banfig built a string of strongholds along the north of his domain, from Blaiddyd to Fraldarius, including Conand Tower.
Wyvern Moon, Year 895
Sreng was forced to retreat. The Kingdom was poised for a counterattack.
However, Sreng’s resistance and harsh, snowy conditions caused them to abandon their attack. Thus, hostilities drew to a close.
After the campaign, a young and fierce general by the name of Laetitia Zoe Gautier, royal knight and descendant of the elite hero Gautier, was widely praised.
Great Tree Moon, Year 896
Banfig confers the northern part of his territory on Laetitia. She is given the title of margrave and tasked with defending Faerghus’s border.
She strengthened defenses in the north, constructing strongholds throughout the Ruska Mountains on the border of Sreng, and reclaiming the Lance of Ruin from the Church of Seiros.
... Verdant Rain Moon, Year 1169
Having waited for summer, King Lambert joins with northern lords Gautier and Fraldarius to march on Sreng. The Kingdom army sets up camp in a single stronghold within the Ruska Mountains and opens hostilities with the Sreng army.
While engaging the Sreng chief Oleg and his forces. a gigantic beast suddenly enters the fray. It lays waste to both sides. Lambert sustains grave injuries, and Oleg disappears into a ravine.
Oleg’s son offers his own youngest child Leif as prisoner to House Gautier to broker peace.
Ashe is worried about what will happen between the Kingdom and the Alliance after the war a bit but... why? Listen, we know Claude is a snake but we don’t really have a reason to be suspicious of the Alliance this time around.
An NPC talks about all the commoners who have been promoted to high positions in the Kingdom. Wow, it’s like all the lords wanted to make these changes to their lands or something...
Gilbert was sent to the Alliance? No, give him back. I don’t share my dilf harems.
The Central Church is helping refugees from the Empire, the very people who once attacked them. Jesus, this game has two routes where the Church is “evil” and yet this route is just tearing all that down.
Whoa, the main theme of Houses (and Foldan) is a motif in the background for the camp music. Did they do that too for the other routes and I just wasn’t paying attention? Totally possible.
There is an NPC who was helped by Dimitri. He lifted a wagon out of the mud for her, and she didn’t find out till later that it was the king. Cute.
Yuri says being hired was a formality- he has friends and family in the Kingdom so he’s happy to be back.
There is an Imperial General in the camp that joined the Kingdom. Says Ferdinand and Hubert are missing. They are 100% dead, I tell you. Lame....
Uhh.... What do you mean, Felix, that you thought the emperor’s actions were rash but not totally unreasonable? Do you mean the war? Uhhh, no one was liking it six months ago. Unless you mean the reforms? I have no FUCKING clue but you better not mean the war was not unreasonable.
Some NPC is talking smack about Kingdom food. But dude, we ARE in a war. Grub is war food, deal.
I’m disappointed we didn’t get... more out of Miklan’s death. Sylvain does mention his mom is taking is hard since she loved him as if he was his own son, but I feel like... there should have been more? Disappointing.
Seteth doesn’t really have issues about people not being religious but he would like to see the faith spread. He has issues with the Western and Eastern Churches in their own ways
Damn, Dimitri passed out for three days after the last big battle? Poor Dedue, must have worried him sick
Randolph appears in a side map. This boy will die soon, I know it, lol
So the Empire is now just destroying fucking everything. And they suspect the emperor is a mere puppet.
And now the Western Church is attacking? Oh, whoa, now the main map has changed. I’m trying to remember if GW did something similar. I don’t recall, honestly. I’ll have to check back on my recordings, but I don’t think so.
A little annoyed that they are doing the ol’ switcharoo, a surprise attack and changing targets. Not as bad as GW did but still, annoying.
Ah, the Slithers are involved. Cornelia’s people rearing their ugly heads.
Shez is really wondering how he is related to Thales, Tomas, and Cornelia.
Ah, we recruit Balthus this time. Interesting.
Metodey is on this map! My evil son! And he’s an Imperial General and not just a bandit this time.
Oh wait, Balthus is an ally, not an enemy? Very interesting indeed. I think that makes more allies you can recruit than the other two routes but I’m not sure. Technically he did join the other side but he’s decided to not help them since they are killing innocents.
We aren’t even in Kingdom territory, they are just killing anyone really.
Myson!
Metodey is dead. Myson says that we are only descendants of inconsequential beasts.
Even the Western Church is like “nah man, I’m out of here, this slaughter sucks”. But we took them out for being assholes anyways.
Whoa, Myson actually approaches Shez, asking how he got the power of Epimenides. Hmmm... his core? I guess that’s what is implanted into Shez. Then the asshole fled.
Shez is starting to fear his power. He’s is sure he is connected to the Slithers now.
Man, this route is doing a better job with the Slithers and Shez tbh.
But I think SB still does the best with the Byleth/Shez dynamic, alas.
Claude. Hi there.
He’s trying to make it look like they are attacking the Empire to keep them distracted as we try to take back the monastery. I... kinda forgot that’s what we were doing, lol.
Ah, those traitorous houses are keeping their lands for now, but have new people in place to keep them from being assholes again.
No one really trusts Claude though. Which is a bit odd, since they really haven’t done anything to warrant this distrust in this route.
Rodrigue is asking if Dimitri can strike down his stepsister.
“In a way, she and I are no different. Starting wars of our own volition”. UH, NO. HOLY FUCK, I AM SO TIRED OF THIS ROUTE INSISTING THEY STARTED A FUCKING WAR.
FUCK YOU.
Whoa, Patricia left a note behind.
It was a request from her to another traitorous house to help her kill her husband, and as well as express sympathies to the changes Lambert was bringing that the house was going so suffer through.
Dimitri says Patricia always looked past him, as if she was looking for something else entirely.
“There is no guarantee that a parent will love their child” True, but cold as fuck. Did Patricia every truly love Dimitri?
Shez would rather die than kill Dimitri (much to Arval’s horror)
Paralogues
Catherine, Ashe, and Yuri....
Catherine and Ashe talk about what happened in the past (but we don’t get to see it. Well, we learn about it in Houses anyways).
Then Ashe went off. Now he’s in trouble, Ashe is surrounded. Catherine and Yuri are worried about him.
The enemies are after Ashe. House Gaspard in particular. They probably think of him as a traitor.
Yuri has a lot of confidence in him. He roots for him because they both came from nothing.
Ashe starts to doubt himself and his chosen path. Thankfully, Yuri is very supportive and snaps him out of it and encourages him.
Pallardo? Wtf, why is he here as the commander?
Did we kill him? Will he not play a role in the main story like the other two routes?
Well, it’s weird that Pallardo is the one who started the attack... like, why? Weird. A little forced, but I like the idea behind the paralogue overall. Just wish it wasn’t fucking Pallardo.
Ok Yuri and Ashe.... now kiss.
Jk.
Or am I?
The other paralogue available is Lorenz, Raphael, and Ignatz. We have already done that one, so I won’t comment on it here.
Supports
Lots of Supports Opened up after the time skip!
Dimitri and Felix A - The only thing I find disappointing is I wish we got a bit more main story build up to this one But beyond that.....
FINALLY, FELIX KNOWS ABOUT DIMITRI’S DEMONS
And more of what he suffers!
Dimitri’s “enjoyment” that Felix saw all those years ago was Dimitri smiling at the voices cheering, not his own glee to be killing.
Felix is actually being fucking nice for once.
And Felix likes being Dimitri’s right-hand man!
Ok, this wasn’t feeling too shippy until..... Felix literally carrying Dimitri to bed.
IT’S SO GOOD.
Dimitri and Dedue A - “Dedue, would you avenge me if I asked?”
“Yes, I would”
“If I told you to forget me and live in happiness, would you?”
“No, I could not know happiness without you by my side”
“Perhaps if I had been born to a different fate, I could have traveled with you as a mercenary. Or be a farmer”
“Every time I see you slumped over your desk, I fear death as taken you”
WHO ENTERED MY DREAMS AND WROTE IT INTO THE GAME?!
T-they were written to be a couple right.... RIGHT?!
Sylvain and Ashe A - Sylvain wants to steal Ashe for his territory (but Ashe only serves Dimitri). Dimitri, however, has asked Ashe to consider taking over Lonato’s territory instead of being a knight forever. Looks like Ashe is seriously considering it, especially for Lonato’s legacy. I like this support, seeing them being friends and stuff. Ashe is right, though, Sylvain has always been a serious man deep down.
Dedue and Annette A - Dedue is stressing over the fact that the gap between him and Relic users is so big. He’s opening up. He’s jealous. But Annette says he is awesome (and he is!) because he can really just do about anything- sew, cook, garden, swing a big axe, woo Dimitri....
Mercedes and Ingrid A - Cute support. Not much to say, really. Just nice. Ingrid is looking out for her squires by being strict. Mercedes brings sweets. Mercedes just being a big sister, really.
Mercedes and Annette A - A much better support chain than from Houses. Friends forever <3. Travel together, grow old together, and many more things.
Annette and Shez A - Shez hasn’t seen sheet music before. Oh, and a mercenaries dying was singing Annette’s song till his last breath, smiling. That is fucking depressing as shit.
Shez and Seteth A - With many saints resting at the monastery, it must be really hard to know that Seteth can’t go back to his home. To him, it was a safe haven at last, only to be taken away. Seteth at least is trusting Shez now.
Shez and Flayn A - Flayn and Seteth were alone, only each other, for a very long time. Poor Flayn, she just wants a normal life, but being a dragon basically means she won’t be able to, huh?
Shez and Sylvain A - “I feel bad we roped you into this war” Uhh... Sylvain? Shez is from Foldan. The war is literally ALL over. He was roped into it by literally existing there. But you mean the battle on the kingdom side, fine, just bad wording. But Sylvain says they are fighting for their homes. The Kingdom is a rough place, but it’s theirs. Oh, and he’s still working on that gun.
Shez and Felix B - Shez has a hard-to-read fighting style because he developed it himself. That’s... that’s it, really. Felix’s style is.... apparently “reacting to how things play out” which is how... fighting works, Shez.
Ingrid and Shez A - There has been some prosperity in the Kingdom despite the war. And Ingrid is thinking about how she can better help Dimitri in the future, like teaching farming, even if she couldn’t be a knight. Shez is going to have a hard time being everyone’s personal merc (he throws his offer to quite a few people in their A support).
Shez and Felix A - Rodrigue taught Felix the fighting stuff. But it’s their family style of fighting for generations. But Felix is too keen, he feels like Shez talks to someone in his head in battle (and he is, lol).
Felix and Ingrid A - Aw, Felix was worried that Ingrid may have gotten injured and came to check. And it’s nice to see Felix might be fucking learning a lesson, about “sentimentality” and maybe the dead helping the living. Then Felix suggests she go put flowers on Glenn’s grave. I liked this one.
Felix and Sylvain A - Felix defended Sylvain when someone soldiers were talking smack about him. Felix, you tsundere. But uh, Sylvain, why did you have to play that role? You really honestly didn’t have to. That’s just bullshit. Holy fuck, Felix is blushing now, saying how Sylvain helps Dimitri and himself.
Annette and Ashe A - Annette really wants to be a teacher. That’s it, really. (Maybe an implication there are more schools? Idk).
Ingrid and Sylvain A - Sylvain is such a big brother, lol. He is happy to see Ingrid eat a good meal. I mean, I know they can become a romantic couple, but eh. The four of the childhood friends are family. (Makes her death in SB hit even harder).
Dimitri and Bernie A - What a waste.
Literally, it’s just Flayn’s support about Dimitri eating food that tastes bad because he literally can’t taste.
Except annoying as fuck.
Shez and Dimitri A - Hm. Well, Hopes really want to push this idea that people don’t have a choice in life due to the way things are. Like... being a prince. Which is what Edelgard wants to end. So does Claude, technically. But... Dimitri’s choice in Houses when he decides to live for himself is to quite literally... to make his people life a happy and peacefully life. It’s really no different than what Hopes Dimitri wishes to do, honestly, just that he’s viewing it a bit differently.
Plus, the truth is is that people sometimes don’t have a choice. That’s just life. I don’t have a choice to work. I have to work, I have to make money. Some people are rich enough to have that choice.
What about someone who has to care for another person? They didn’t get a choice either, unless they decide to abandon that person.
The reality is is that life is not fair. And we must choose to live life we can with what was given to us.
And technically speaking, Dimitri CAN abandon the throne if he really wants to. He just has too much of a strong sense of duty to even do that.
I also think people are putting his “Upon my death” thing a little wrongly. Yes, he would be “happy to die”, but he also says he would be happy knowing that he created a world of peace for his people. Sure, it comes with his death, but it’s the idea that he could look back and see that he was able to make a difference throughout his entire life.
It’s is a bit dismal since he can’t think of anything else, but I think most of the discourse around this particular line is just focusing on the wrong aspects of it. The real issue should be not the death part, but that it’s all he could think of. That he can’t focus on the more simple pleasures, the things like feasting with friends or watching a sunset. That’s the bigger issue.
Dedue and Ingrid A - Dedue is a fucking giant, lol. But my man is a fountain of wisdom. “It’s human nature to generalize” Yup. This is a great support. Also, nice to see Ingrid’s love of food playing a bigger role in these supports. Oh... oh no, Dedue is going to scold Dimitri for just walking around and going to places like a random inn, even if it’s run by a Duscur person and even if Ingrid is by his side, lol. Poor Dimitri. Poor Dedue.
Marianne and Ingrid C - Why wouldn’t Ingrid know that a horse would need more hay than oats? She’s... grown up around pegasi and shit.... :/ Also, I haven’t talked about this much, but Marianne basically being able to understand animals in such fine detail is basically a superpower. Is it a Crest thing? They never attribute it to Crests but surely it’s basically a crest thing.
Dimitri and Mercedes A - Mercedes shows Dimitri the town she took shelter in. Dimitri hides the fact he is king, as he usually does. Basically, she is showing him what he is protecting. Places like this village, a nice little place where everyone is accepted. Then Mercedes teases Dimitri that she will just introduce him as someone very important (making him flustered, since it implies they are together). Of course, she was just teasing. Not really a ship I care about but it’s sweet.
Shez and Dedue A - Very cute, just Dedue earning the trust of fellow Kingdom Knights, and that Dedue trusts Shez despite his powers. (Followed by if he did betray him or Dimitri he would cut him down in an instant, lol)
Shez and Catherine C - Man, I wish we could actually meet Count Charon. Catherine is basically just super loyal to Rhea, and for Shez to challenge himself and make his past self proud.
Felix and Raphael C - Felix is being weirdly nice and sharing his food with the hungry guy. “Meat buddy” kek. And Petra is mentioned. Can you not get this support if you don’t recruit Petra, or does the line change?
Catherine and Dedue C - Dedue is a little suspicious at first cause Catherine showed up out of nowhere. It’s a town of Duscur people and they don’t follow the teachings of Seiros. But Rhea decided to help the town out of the goodness of her heart, nothing more. (The town suffered a major fire).
Damn, more “starting a war in the process for us” why tf does everyone keep forgetting the Empire started the war?
Seteth and Yuri C - Yuri is investigating the Ten Elites because he doesn’t know where his Crest has come from. He had heard the Ten Elites did not get their Crests at birth so he wanted to start there. Seteth encourages him and says that not to hate the power but to cherish it. But Seteth clearly knows something more.
Yuri and Dimitri C - “A funny knight” lol, cute way to describe Dimitri. (But what kid says “obtuse”, damn educated commoner kids, lol). (Also, Dimitri completely unfazed by being called “idiot”). Yuri is pissed that Dimitri is waltzing around unprotected and unguarded in unsafe streets, since if he dies a huge war of succession will break out. But Dimitri wants to learn about the commoners as much as possible, to see how they live and to understand them better. Then, Dimitri asks Yuri to protect him then, which Yuri finds amusing and agrees.
What I find particularly ironic about this support is that Yuri says the area isn’t a outright slum but still dangerous to the king. However, in Houses, Dimitri quite literally lives in slums for 5 years. Dimitri in Houses def understand the common folk better than probably any nobles, and maybe even some commoners.
Catherine and Dedue B - Catherine is impressed that trust between Duscur and the kingdom is there. Then they compare Rhea and Dimitri to each other, that they can’t abandon people in need. (Also, Catherine says that she not religious at all). And apparently Rhea and Dimitri are often seen with children. (Which is funny, because Dimitri worries about being with children since he doesn’t know how to act with them, yet he enjoys being with them). Damn, this entire support really tears down the “RHEA IS EVIL” nonsense, truly.
Damn, but what a way to end that support “But if they cross swords, we would kill each other without hesitation.” Damn girl calm down.
Sylvain and Ignatz C - Some culture lore, there are different painting styles across the nations. Apparently the lady in the painting (an Imperal painting apparently) looks kind, like Lady Rhea per Ignatz’s words. Sylvain thinks the lady might be Miklan’s mother since she is from the Empire.
Also, Sylvain is interested in fucking everything, kek. Saint Macuil is apparently associated with birds (lol, makes sense). Kingdom is also not super good with art, not in their general interests. But Sylvain is (despite it originally being because he wanted to impress the ladies).
Annette and Lorenz C - Lorenz mistook Annette for a maid years ago when they were back at the school of sorcery. And was an ass about it years ago. I still like Lorenz but yeah, he’s sometimes an ass to commoners. Lorenz left the school not long after that because of the Tragedy.
Sylvain and Yuri C - Apparently, the two of them have been keeping an eye on each other. Sylvain has been waiting for Yuri to make a wrong move. But Yuri respects Sylvain, despite calling him cunning and very dangerous. But he’s right, Sylvain is dangerous, despite all the smiles and playing a fool often. I would even argue Sylvain is more dangerous than Felix or Dimitri. Those idiots wear their hearts on their sleeves. Sylvain is sneakier. In a way, Sylvain is kinda the Hubert to Dimitri, the clever one who keeps their ear to the ground and swords pointed to the backs of those they don’t trust. Except, Sylvain isn’t as evil or doesn’t stoop nearly as low.
Whoever wrote Sylvain for Hopes really knew the character. I’m impressed.
Annette and Ignatz C - Annette’s model literally just materialized, lol. Anyway, Ignatz is worried if he’s a good knight or not. So asks about Gustave, who is legendary. Apparently, he was just a soldier over 40 years ago at the royal castle. Lambert, who was still just a kid, was fucking around and fell off a ledge. Gustave saved his life by fucking throwing his spear and pinning the young prince’s clothes to a wall, saving his life. That got him promoted to being a knight. Then he changed his training to throwing a spear at leaves to a tree trunk. This motherfucker never missed a day of training (and it’s no wonder his training regiment with Dimitri was so... intense.). Ignatz becomes... disheartened. Who can blame him? Gustave doesn’t have a Crest but the dude is a legend. Why isn’t he as legendary as Holst?!
That’s my DILF, he belongs in my harem.
Books
Royal Territories of Faerghus: Book Two (1180 Edition)
Gautier
A margraviate situated at the northernmost point of Foldan.
The Ruska Mountains on its foreign border guard against invasion from Sreng. Most of its territory is covered in conifer woodlands and the climate remains cold year-round.
Chief products are fish and lumber, but the vast plains around the capital also allow for raising of cattle.
Galatea
A desolate county of rugged rocky mountains and barren plains.
Ill-suited for farming, has very few large-scale settlements,
Does boast the exact type of pasture favored by pegasi near its Fraldarius border. Has become well known for its pegasi stock.
Dominic
A small but beautiful barony. Coastal cities have become a hub of commerce through trade with Albinea.
Gideon
A viscounty with northern mountains that produce gold, albeit in modest amounts.
Rowe
A county. Features robust ironworks and smithing centered around Arianrhod. East is known for its Bacchus production.
Elidure
A viscounty that boasts unique culture due to influence of the Western Church.
Itha
A grand duchy. Mercenary dispatch and the small-scale hunts that take place in the Itha Plains, which cover the majority of the region, form the main pillars of the economy.
Mateus
A viscounty. Fishing and boat construction have long been its chief industries.
Geraint
A county boasting pastoral countryside throughout. The basin of the Taranus River that runs through the south provides fertile plains.
I apparently did not remember to write down what Mercedes had said last chapter so the point was written incompletely. She had pointed out that the
Southern Church likely had a different doctrine than the old one, and that they had a doctrine dispute long ago with the Central one. You can ask “but aren’t they under the same doctrine” and Mercedes says that the new Southern Church is under the command of the emperor, so... likely no. She worried about the people being confused since something they took for granted was suddenly take away from them.
Story
Duke Ifan sounds awesome, she even taught Gustave tactics. Wish we could meet her.
Seteth literally knows who Jeralt is. There is no way Rhea doesn’t. So, I guess Rhea is ok with him running around and never went after him.
Man, Miklan used to beat Sylvain.... Well, we knew this but still. He would come around with bruises and shit.
Mercedes feel bad about those we recruiting and making them bend to our will. Finally, someone who actually points this out.
Dorothea didn’t even want to fight, but she did it for Edelgard. :/
Apparently those who inherit Crests are known to live long lives, which isn’t a big shock. I wonder if Felix outlives most of his friends due to have a major crest. (Dimitri is apparently not so lucky)
Felix is not happy that Dimitri didn’t tell him everything. Don’t blame him, really.
Petra has no issues with fighting the Empire, just was worried about fighting old friends.
An NPC is angry that Miklan is here (he killed her mother when he was a bandit).
There is actually a unit on stand-by, though, people with Crests among their ranks, ready to kill him if he does anything bad.
HMMMMMMM STRANGE, CURIOUS EVEN
Lol, Count Varley is an enemy in a side map. Hilarious.
Shez and Dimitri talk about revenge. That Shez can’t go around seeking vengeance for every person who died. Ties into how Dimitri seeks vengeance.
Whoa, Dimitri suggests that maybe they should hire Jeralt’s mercs. Did Edelgard or Claude suggest this too? I literally can’t remember, someone remind me.
Ok, we get Bernie this chapter. Also, will be fighting the Death Knight and Byleth.
Aw, Felix tells Dimitri to not tire himself out (he says it harshly but we know he’s worried)
Man, why is Bernie fucking HERE? She is a terrible commander. She just cries and cowers the whole time.
Interestingly, a lot of comments are made in battle about how awful they feel about attacking Bernie (unlike the other routes where they are more a-ok with it).
Lol, Felix feels the Death Knight is familiar by swordplay alone.
Ah, Sothis awakens. Same scene I’ve seen three times now.
Instead of Shez thinking they should be friends with the Ashen Demon, it’s Dimitri words who makes him consider it, I believe.
Sreng is attacking, so Dimitri is going back.
NO, DUKE IFAN GOT CAPTURED!!
It’s interesting that Dimitri is going alone (well, not with the full crew, Rodrigue and Dedue are joining him), unlike the random retreat of EVERYONE for GW.
Felix is in charge of the army now. :3
Aha, it was a trap. Cornelia, I presume.
Whelp, time to go save Dimitri.
Supports
Ashe and Dedue C support opens up in this chapter - Two men bond over gardening and plants. <3 (Kinda weird this support opened up right after Lonato died, so it feels like the tone might be a little off).
Flayn and Seteth B - Flayn went into a slumber because she overworked her powers all those years ago. Flayn’s body is forever weakened as a result, she could go into a slumber that she will never awaken from again.
Sylvain and Annette B support - Finally, someone who thinks Annette’s songs aren’t some great masterpiece. I like Annette and her songs are... cute, but I never found how everyone clambered over her songs.... believable?
Annette and Felix B support - This support cannot be unlocked without doing Annette’s support with Sylvain. Of course, Felix is just enamored.... Cute support though. Wonder if support changes if Dorothea dies (she’s mentioned).
Sylvain and Shez B support - Sylvain starts inventing a gun. Basically. G-good job, Shez (Can you imagine, though, a place that is meant to be full of knights in shining armor going pew-pew). Poor Miklan’s mother, dying to a Sreng raid. Also, Dimitri isn’t all powerful, so he can’t just send in his own troops to help Sylvain without backlash from other lords. And even though the land is frozen, it’s still his home and Sylvain wants to protect it.
Shez and Annette B support - I. am. so. tired. of. these. dumb. ass. songs.
Oh, but some Duscur mythology? Now that’s interesting. Annette, please... what is this mythological warrior horse with a human face?
They are just going to say that and NOT elaborate?!
Shez and Dedue B - People are big angy that a Duscur man serves as a royal guard, instead of a child of a noble. At lease this support recognizes that there is a lot of luck involved, and why it might piss people off.
Sylvain and Felix B - Sylvain is a smart boy, Ashe is a precious boy. That is all.
Sylvain and Dedue B - Sylvain is no longer a big womanizer. And he sees Felix and Dimitri are like brothers to him (but er... what about Ingrid?). And sad about Dedue’s sister. What a sweet, but sad, support.
Flayn and Dorothea C - Cute support, about singing. That’s it. Well, and some mysterious story that we will likely learn about in the next support.
Flayn and Shez B - Flayn calls Shez dirty. More talk about perfumes and stuff I’ve seen in other supports.
Felix and Ashe B - Felix being cranky about Dimitri working too hard in his tsundere way. Also more knights among the castle who are commoners. It’s also cool that the support recognizes that Ashe is kinda in a weird spot between commoner and noble. Ashe getting Felix a bit tongue-tied too, kek.
Seteth and Shez C - Seteth seems to be this route’s Hubert. He’s suspicious of Shez. He says Rhea is a spiritual guide and has gone to great lengths to maintain peace.
Mercedes and Dedue B - Children are scared of Dedue, Mecedes brags about the flower crown Dedue had made to the children, so they flock to him.
I’m not crying, YOUR crying!
Mercedes and Sylvain B - Mercedes is getting engaged? Bleh, that horrid adoptive father. Sylvain proposes he marries her instead so she doesn’t have to marry the other guy. Obviously, I doubt they do, but the idea is to come up with solutions so Mercedes can get out of the arrangement.
Mercedes and Ingrid B - Ingrid’s older brothers are much older. The eldest works as his father’s advisor. The other one is a knight for another family. Ingrid thinks her brothers might be overprotective because she has a crest, but Mercedes says it’s because they love her.
Annette and Ashe B - Teaching common folk, very cute and good. I agree that knowledge and education. But sticking to a single morality? You should always be open to change. Don’t adhere to one way, or you will never grow.
Annette and Dimitri B - Dimitri is bad at magic. But he wanted to become a mage (I guess that old friend who showed him magic was Edelgard). Dimitri causes another explosion, he’s so bad at it, lol.
Annette and Ingrid B - Annette is afraid of the dark. That’s it.
Dedue and Petra B - Petra is learning so she can be understood properly for diplomacy for her country.
I’m a little annoyed that everyone talks about Foldan as if it’s one entity, instead of three.
Dedue and Ashe B - Stuff about tea, some history about Ashe and Lonato, how Lonato made tea for the Grand Duke before they had a falling out.
Dimitri and Ashe B - Dimitri tells Ashe to not throw his life away, and to live, even if that means they have to cross blades. Loyalty is to control the knights (I don’t personally believe that fully, but I get the point). Ashe points out that Glenn probably died not out of loyalty, but instead died because he wanted to protect his best friend (like the Margave in GW!). Dimitri says he will work hard to be the leader who deserves such loyatly, and Ashe whispers to himself that Dimitri already is one.
Dimitri and Rodrigue B - Sylvain’s father borrowed a sword from Lambert for thirty years (hysterical). Lambert and the Margrave got into a fist fight over how they were going to rescue Rodrigue. The Margrave probably kept the sword on purpose- and apparently had a hard accepting Lambert’s death until Dimitri ascended the throne.
DIMITRI, YOU DIDN’T START A WAR, WTF?! I CAN’T BELIEVE THE WRITERS EVEN MADE HIM THINK THAT.
Rodrigue and Ingrid B - Kinda a sad one, Ingrid promises to visit their land again after the war. Stuff about Glenn a bit.
Ingrid and Ashe B - Nice support, Ingrid talks about how their land is barren, and that they are trying to get the soil to grow things so their descendants can benefit. And so they try to look into a mysterious Dagda plant that can grow even in bad soil.
Ashe and Flayn B - They go fishing. The end.
Ingrid and Shez B - Whoa, some lore about Shez’s old merc group’s captain. She was part of a group that was so loyal to the local lords that they became merchants and farmers to help the local lands. It turns out, it was likely her grandmother who was the local lord, and Ingrid once knew this merc personally (Tobias). The point of the story is that people can choose what they want to do, no matter what they were born into, tying back to how Ingrid feels she has no choice to become head of her house.
Ingrid and Sylvain B - Ingrid is impressed Sylvain turned over a new leaf. Cute support. Oh, and it was Sylvain who coaxed Ingrid out of her room after Glenn’s death.
Books
Report on Abyss (From SB)
...some kind of passage, requires further investigation. There is a house down there that has taken in some students who couldn’t remain in the academy.
House is known as Ashen Wolves.
Consists of Yuri, Constance, Hapi, and Balthus. The church....
(An old report of some kind. Hardly any of it is legible.)
Letter from an Abyss Resident (from AG)
...Moved to Burrow Street recently. Got to know the Ashen Wolves class.
Strange bnuch, but seem all right. Especially Balthus’s money...
(A letter written with messy handwriting on stained paper).
Letter from the Abysskeeper (From GW)
It’s been a while. I have something to report.
The Ashen Wolves keep me on my toes. A new person has joined to make it four, Balthus.
Just the other day, we found a huge hole leading up to the monastery. We had to hurry and push a boulder in front of it...
(A densely written letter in distinctly spiky handwriting)
Alright, here we go! I’m taking a small break from writing my GW review to play some of this route.
Also, bear in mind... I’m about to go on a very long trip, and I will not have as much time to play during that time.
So, updates will be... slower. Sorry about that.
Story
They are treating us to a feast! They all want to get to know him over a meal! Besides Felix, he’s all “Let’s fight”.
And they are offering to show him around too. Urg, they are so nice.
This is honestly the best “welcome to our house” of the lot
Sylvain likes it if you play it smart and not rush into the fortress
Felix literally did a “I’m not trapped in here with them, they are trapped in here with me” comment, amazing
OMG Dedue is so tall
Jeritza has been a teacher since last year (again, not the teacher theory!)
Dimitri not laughing crazily at Alois’s bad jokes is a missed opportunity.
Wait, they were able to find other people who were kidnapped by Tomas and get testimonies? Did I miss that in my other playthroughs?
Aw, “we will be right behind you!” I think they are the only group who has said they join with him after him.
I’m telling you, whoever voiced that Knight of Seiros in the Solon scene... has such a nice voice. I hope that knight lived through the war.
Alright, here we go, let’s go kill Dimitri’s awful uncle.
Aw, Dimitri is just checking in. Pretty sure Claude came to investigate, but Dimitri is just “you ok there?”
He’s so precious.
“Power is neutral” Yessir it is.
Rufus wants to kill Felix’s entire line because they support Dimitri. Dimitri didn’t really say this but... imagine, like “Who dares threatens my boyfriend’s bloodline?!”
Finally, Catherine on our side and not a bloody enemy.
Oh no, wait, it’s Gilbert they are sending. Still!
Annette doesn’t join us due to politics, unfortunately. I get it though. But Ashe is willing to go regardless of that.
Wtf, they even read his letters while Dimitri was under “house arrest”? That assholes
The old letter about a merchant complaining they can’t trade in duscur anymore is just..... here, in the camp. lol
One NPC is like “I can’t tell what Dimitri is thinking!” and all scared about it. Lol
Some knights are trapped in the capital despite being loyal to Dimitri
Rufus is a bitch, Rufus is a bitch ~ ♫
Rufus, if you think he’s a beast, it’s cause of YOU.
Dimitri called his uncle “my lord”. He’s too gracious here
Felix, calm down, he’s about to kill his uncle
Dimitri, you aren’t breaking the peace. Rufus did, the slimy bastard
I’m not going to lie, but the execution scene is very, very clever. The way you see from Rufus’ point of view as the sword falls, so you know his head was divorced from his body without having to actually see it
Poor Dimitri tho, having to kill his own uncle. You can see that it bothers him. It seems so cruel to make him do it, but do it he must.
Hello, Margrave. Alas, I cannot accept you into my Dilf harem.
Man, Rodrigue having to pass on the torch because of Duscur when he didn’t do anything.... He is too good for this world.
“Also, Gustave, you stay. No, I said so.”
Since there is so much corruption ran through the knights, Dimitri has made a commoner army.
So, Edelgard hires Shez to lead as a commander of an army of mercenaries. Claude hires Shez 2 years later to be a commander just... in general. And Dimitri is like “I want you to lead them, my new army of commoners.”
Felix being nice and bowing is..... SO CUTE
Yup, can’t reject the Church here. It’s literally stuck between a hard place and a rock.
Like, a real political talk here, nice to see instead of “CHURCH BAD”
And I like seeing Dimitri finally LEAD
Shez talking with someone else BESIDES a main cast member?! Interesting
“There’s not a ruler in the world without their fair share of critics, right?” SB and GW would have me fooled.
There is an NPC that married into House Gautier. But even though it wsa arranged by Dimitri (to lessen the power of the western lords), the guy and his wife actually did want to marry
It’s interesting. Both GW and AG have NPCs who know people in the Abyss. But in SB, it’s “just a report”.
It’s nice that they actually gave the Duscur NPCs a different skin tone
“You’ve got an eye fo- You’ve got an eye f- You’ve got an eye for quality, friend!”
“Rhea and Seteth punish anyone in the church who takes a bribe.” Huh, no shit?
It’s interesting, quite a few of the NPCs are on a seemingly personal basis with Shez
Felix has a living mother! Who knew? She survived the mother curse! (She and Felix’s uncle are watching the lands while he is away)
They barely have enough resources to take on the refugees (but are doing it anyway!)
Aw, Dimitri apologies for dragging you into this mess.
Ah, so we get Hapi and Petra in chapter 4
It’s nice to rescue Cyril and not kill him this time
Same with Catherine and Rhea
Not really sure WHY Hapi is here but ok
And it’s so nice to see Rhea care about Cyrl. She cared about him in the other routes too but still
FINALLY I can fight Hubert, lol
Dimitri is already torturing himself.
Felix, fuck off, stop being a jerk.
I’m not really sure what you were trying to reason, Felix. You came in and berated him first.
Urg... Claude. :/
“I don’t know if I can trust Dimitri” fuck off
At least the Alliance sounds more together here than they did in SB
And also, fuck off Lonato
I wish we could meet Duke Ifan. She sounds cool.
Dimitri is so much taller than Shez, kek
Hm, why wasn’t Flayn someone we had to rescue in that chapter I wonder?
Gatekeeper is playable, let’s goooooo
Supports
Shez and Dimitri C - Dimitri feels guilty for the loss of a village while they gathered up the last of Klieman’s forces. He went to bury the dead alone He’s such a bleeding heart. :(
Shez and Felix C - “I can tell you like Dimitri and the others” “Urk! B-baka! Listen, Dimitri rushes in so I have to cover him since he doesn’t care about his safety! And Ingrid doesn’t see the archers always so I have to take care of them first. And the idiot likes to show off so I have to be closer to him. It’s just NATURAL, not because I LIKE them, GAWD”
Shez and Sylvain C - This is the first time we actually talk about the magic sword Shez has. Well... no, I guess it’s not. Linhardt talks about how the sword seems... cold, inhuman. But this is another support that actually talks about it. Sylvain is trying to think about weapons that don’t rely on a bloodline for the security of the future.
Shez and Ingrid C - This one is complicated. It’s basically the bloodlines and shit. How it’s all mixed up and who gets what Crest can sometimes be a luck of the draw. But Crests are valued for the use of the Heroes’ Relics, not because it’s a fancy crest thing. It’s almost like this shit isn’t just as simple as “Crest from one family, be heir!” And having a Crest doesn’t even mean you will be heir, but it’s up to the family usually. Heck, she’s going to inherit the title because her PEOPLE want her to take charge.
Ingrid and Rodrigue C - Another interesting support about tactics. That’s it though. Her brother had suggested the strategy once. I wish we could meet the rest of her family, they sound nice.
Shez and Annette C - Cute support, Shez sang Annette’s song and she was a bit upset since it wasn’t done yet. Whoopsie.
Shez and Rodrigue C - “It’s fucking cold here” “Yup, but pretty. Damn the snow though” C support achieved. Well, we get more Kingdom culture. Pegasi are a particularly sight unique sight in the Kingdom since snow prevents the use of horses in the winter. And Felix and Dimitri, as lads, followed a pegasus into the mountains and were huddled together in the cold. Dumb, poor babies. Still, the Kingdom gets more culture stuff in general than the other two nations, honestly.
Mercedes and Dimitri C - This support really should be locked until we actually rescue Rhea. Still.... Dimitri is giving people a home who would otherwise be homeless due to the war. Jesus, after the other two routes, it finally feels like this is a good guy route.
And Dimitri, the Empire was going to invade regardless what what you did, really.
Books
Exquisite Old Letter
A merchant had business in Fhirdiad, but it was canceled.
The king had gone to meet with leaders of Duscur but were killed by attackers from Duscur on their way. All were killed, except for the young prince.
Soldiers were sent to raze Duscur. Fhirdiad was in chaos without a king. Duscur is being punished for a few extremists
Can no longer trade with Duscur. A shame, because there is gold to be mined near Gwenhwyvar and their blacksmiths are exceptional.
Kingdom Nobles (1179 Edition)
Not for students to read
House Blaiddyd
One of the ancestors of the Ten Elites.
Ruled over the Kingdom for over 400 years since Loog, the King of Lions, claimed victory in the War of the Eagle and the Lion in 751.
This secured the Kingdom’s independence from the Empire, and Loog was crowned inaugural king by the Church of Seiros.
The House resides in Fhirdiad, the Kingdom Capital, claiming all of the surrounding territory as its domain and the many of the fiefdoms in the north of Foldan as its vassals.
Grand Duke Rufus of Itha started to rule the Kingdom after the passing of King Lambert in 1176, since the young prince could not rule yet. Strife and disorder plagued the land.
House Fraldarius
House of Dukes, claims to be ancestors of the Ten Elites.
One of the most ancient houses on record, even amongst Kingdom nobility.
Said that Kyphon, the sword friend of Loog, was also related to the Hero Fraldarius.
House Gautier
House of margraves, claims to be ancestors of the Ten Elites.
Territory lies in the northernmost reaches of the Kingdom. Has safeguarded the Kingdom against incursions by the people of Sreng for over 200 years.
House Charon
House of counts, claims Charon as an ancestor
Tasked with negotiation between the resistance armies and the Church of Seiros during the War of the Eagle and Lion.
Continues tradition of a ceremonial competition within the Kingdom
House Galatea
When House Daphnel, a cornerstone of the Alliance, was divided over an inheritance feud, half of them defected to the Kingdom and established this house.
Was granted the title of count
Most territory is frigid wasteland, where a severe famine occurred in the early 1170s
House Rowe
Noble house that once held territory in the northern Empire. After Arianrhod was built, they defected to the Kingdom along with all their territory.
For this contribution, they were awarded title of count
House Kleiman
House originally held no more than a lordship over a single castle in the west Kingdom, but was awarded a noble title of viscount for its great success in subjugation of Duscur in 1176.