4/29/2024 0 Comments Firewatch bad ending![]() But I don't think I would change a thing.Walking, Talking and Playing with Masculinities in Firewatch by Melissa Kagen Abstract I might have been a bit of a doormat and forced Henry to become as much of a doormat as me. I might have been far too forgiving with Delilah, not wishing for Henry to lose his only company, the person who made him feel human again. Henry knew he had made an impact on Delilah's life, and Delilah had made an impact on his in return. I thought maybe Delilah's tower would burn, but that didn't matter, Henry had seen everything, I had seen everything. I somehow trusted her, even though I knew she was lying. I still had my wedding ring on, after all. Throughout our conversation, I urged Delilah to meet up later in our life, and she was urging me to go visit Julia instead, something I said I'd do. I was going to be strong for the both of us. Ned never pushed Brian off that height, and is clearly distraught about his death, although he seems to not recognise his indirect role with it.) (Sidenote: Building off these choices, I even came to the defense of Ned, telling Delilah that Ned never set out to kill his son, as Brian's death was clearly a tragic accident, one Ned was definitely partly responsible for by how he kept pushing his son to go into the cave, despite him clearly not being ready for it, and him falling to his death as a result, but not as directly responsible as Delilah believes. Throughout my playthrough, I was always reassuring Delilah, being strong for her, forgiving her. But I knew she cared, she had Henry's image on display. Henry had ran through the hell Delilah wanted to escape, just to get to meet her, and Delilah seemed to not care. I was hurt, but couldn't be mad at Delilah needing to survive. She told Henry that she'd left without him, because she couldn't bear staying in this hell (the burning grounds) any longer, and asked Henry if he was mad. I calmed down, knowing that Henry was loved, and was going to spend his last moments in the shadow of someone that had grown extremely fond of him.īut then I saw Delilah's receiver. Her crosswords, her tequila, and the drawing she made of Henry, displayed very prominently on her desk. So, I took a look around, and got to see Delilah's life. At first, I was gripped by panic, believing that the fire had gotten so dangerous that the rescuers went against Delilah's wishes and evacuated anyway, and they weren't coming back for Henry. ![]() Delilah half-heartedly said she would wait for Henry.Īnd so, Henry made his way to Delilah's tower, and found it empty. I couldn't go through this alone, and neither could Henry, as evidenced by the existence of the third option in Henry's thoughts. Also, on a personal level, if I were running through a burning trail, I would want the one person who'd been there for me through everything to stick by my side. ![]() ![]() I needed Henry and Delilah to meet, I needed them to go to safety together, not for a dislike of Julia (I kept making Henry put back his wedding ring), but because I needed them to stick by one another. In my playthrough, I made my only unambiguously selfish choice and pleaded for Delilah to wait for me. Plead for Delilah to stay and wait for you (you aren't too far away), urge Delilah to go with the rescuers or simply tell Delilah that you think that if that helicopter leaves without you, it will never come back for you. The rescuers tell Delilah to come with them either way, and that they will come back for the other lookout later. While you are on your way, a helicopter comes to evacuate Delilah, and she informs the rescuers that another lookout is on his way. That is Henry travelling to Delilah's tower during the ending when everything is ablaze and they both have to be evacuated out. For she's touched your perfect body with her mind
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