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3:05 When they get your order completely wrong at a fast food place. 😂
A little unrelated but has anyone else had any input delays from the update
Honestly thought they'd nerf the aoe on the blast but hey it survived
Charon is first love
Have you gotten the new raven familiar? Portable Artemis.
24:55 forget 55 fear, this is the hardest challenge in hades 2
apollo legendary was indeed always a thing with charon, it just doesn't stack with giga cleaver. Don't know if it stacks now after the update.
Dio is a total comedy act, but I like it very much. At least someone is enjoying the situation, kek.
Totally offtopic: you will thoroughly enjoy Vow of wandering in rift of Thessaly, I can assure you of that. Especially on narrow ships. Ask me how I know.
Mirrored thrasher on momus with heph legendary is fucking mental, you have to try it (took me like 8 tries to get it)
@boat3d just FYI since you didn't specifically mention it, in case you didn't notice you managed to keep the experimental hammy all the way through to the end this run and one of the black coat runs too. Looks like you can keep it until the final boss if you get lucky with just enough free rooms.
I bet you're gonna miss the axe block. NO ONE USED IT. But anyone that has watched your max fear video knows…you mastered it.🎉
You know what I just realized? If Prometheus' visions come to him unprompted, he would have been bombarded with constant visions of being eaten by an eagle again and again and again and again for years on end. That would have *sucked*, man. Yeah I get why he's so mad.
As for Trivia:
Charon, aka the Ferryman or the Boatman, is an enigmatic entity in Greek mythology even moreso than in the Hades games. While in the games nobody exactly knows the scope of Charon's powers or duties besides Nyx and his brothers, in Greek myth the Greeks didn't even talk about his relationship to any of the other Gods. The idea of Charon as Nyx's son is a Roman invention based on a mistranslation of Charon's name as being related to Chronos', and no surviving material talks about Charon's origins in actual Greek myth. The first Hades opens with the lines 'few tales are told of Hades, whose very name inspires fear and penitence', and I think this is probably why so little information exists about Charon beyond his existence and duty. The Greeks were terrified of talking about Hades, as it was a common superstition that talking about Hades would invite him to take you before your time. Thus, Hades and the Underworld were rarely discussed outside of myths about his wife's family or heroes trying to enter and escape the Underworld.
What was known about Charon was common knowledge across every part of Classical Era civilization. Greeks, Romans, Thracians, Dacians and even Middle Eastern cultures like the Persians recognized the tradition of placing an obol in the mouth of the dead to pay off the boatman as he rowed you to your final resting place. Whether this tradition arose because of the myth about Charon or the myth about Charon was a way for the Greeks to explain the tradition of placing a coin in the mouth of your relatives that came to the Greek pantheon from an even older religion is unclear. Ancient Greek clothes didn't have pockets, and there are apocryphal rumors about poor Greek folk carrying coins in their mouths if they couldn't afford purses coming from a joke about it in a play by Aristophanes, so perhaps the idea of dead souls being too poor to pay the boatman without a coin tucked in their mouth is where the tradition began (or perhaps the joke in the play is supposed to be absurd in nature and isn't related to the practice at all).
What is clear is that the practice was expressly tied to Charon across the Mediterranean by the 5th century BC, and was almost a universal practice by the time of Alexander the Great and the Roman Empire. According to authors such as Euripides and Aristophanes, Charon would only row those who could pay him across the Styx and into the Underworld, leaving those who went unburied as wretched shades left to wander the shores in despair for all eternity (or, if you believe Virgil and the Aeneid, a hundred years as penitence before Charon took pity on them).Why he was so insistent on being paid also isn't really explained, but the Greeks never describe him as greedy so much as a consummate professional who only works for paid labour in recognition of his duties.
His depiction in Hades follows this interpretation closely–he doesn't really use the obols to horde wealth so much as turn them into elaborate works of art in a chamber in Erebus (per the boss fight in the first game), and his reasons for fighting Chronos seem to be tied as much to his anger at Chronos firing him and decentralizing his payment system as it does Chronos kidnapping his mother and siblings and sealing them in a time spell. He also seems especially bent on destroying even the idea of an alternative payment system being used by Chronos in place of his own obols. He and the other Unseen also seem to find golden metal to be gaudy and excessive, which references how Greek coinage was made from electrum, copper, bronze and silver (with obols specifically being made of bronze or copper early on and out of silver later on). This is probably why Mel says 'I much prefer silver' after killing the golden bag miniboss in Tartarus. The value of an obol was about 1/6th of the value of the dollar equivalent of the day, which was called a 'drachma' (a handful, as in a handful of obols).
Like his fellow psychopomps Hermes and Thanatos, Charon's appearance has also changed over time and been shaped by the medieval understanding of death. As mentioned before, the Greeks didn't have an equivalent to the medieval concept of the Grim Reaper, so they didn't portray Charon as the skeletal fellow that we usually make him out to be in the modern day. Instead, his earliest Myceanean-type depictions have him as a short, scruffy working class man with a raggedy beard, a kind of cantankerous New York cabby of the ancient world. Later on (during Classical Greece and onwards to the Roman Empire) he would be presented as a more dignified robed old man, who would gently welcome those allowed onto his ship aboard and reassure them as he took them to their final resting place. The Renaissance Catholics like Michelangelo and Dante often had him as a demonic gremlin rowing damned souls into Hell (a common Christian trick was to take pagan spirits and gods and make them into satanic beings to ban their worship). Today he's usually depicted as a fusion of the latter two interpretations, with him being a stately and consummately professional yet spooky and demonic looking entity. Hades brings him back to his roots as a working-class tough guy while keeping his appearance vaguely demonic and his role in the Underworld as very posh and professional, combining the three interpretations quite artfully as the Hades games often do.
They shouldve kept the block effect on one of the axes, maybe Than axe because it rewards you for being untouched. It allowed for so much skill expression, it was sick
From what I'm seeing about the Sorc Nerf is that everyone who is great at the game cough boated cough don't mind the nerf however a lot of people actually hate the nerf me included. Axe Block I can live without it hurts but sorc slow being put on a keepsake hurtsss badly.
How do you get your magick back so fast? Also to me it seems a little weird that more often we seem to be looking to spend our magick than gain enough to do something cool, seems to lead to more of just spamming either normals or omega moves & not using too much of the other.
Also I didn't realize they changed the slow motion to be more channel speed, I agree that's pretty nice.
Isnt the new hammer only for the normal special? So only the little twirl would go further and do more damage
You kinda need sudden cleaver and nimble mind for Charon now especially if you’re using Lucid gain which is the go to
Just managed to clear 32 Fear Surface the other day, and boy oh boy was it comically terrifying. Getting a billion zombies on Olympus with the horde vow is funny as hell, just seeing a zombie appocalypse limping towards you, especially if they're all armored and with speed perks from the benefits vow. But getting a room with 10 armored 2 perks rocket satyrs and shooting automatons is just pure survival hell. The massive hp pools on those coupled with vow of damage letting them snipe you across the room for 60 damage a pop is just brutal. Supergiant should really revise those numbers on those enemies. My lucky break build was Nyx black coat with Hestia scorch cast + gale force + air quality + lightning lance and Zeus special, which would get pretty much insta-triggered from the quality air fryer damage. All in all, a very hard, but very fun run, so can't wait to see your attemps at 32+ Fear surface! Keep staying awesome!
P.S. Frinos tanked like 90% of Proms punches. Just like "No blud"🐸
Now I need to use that charon with three omega specials… But then how did you already start doing fears in the surface!? Also how much fear do we have now?
Hey Boated! Would it be possible to make video about best Arcana sets for each weapon?