Fun fact: the monkey was in four scenes total: first during the second part of a bitter cold in the surgeons room, then in the third part of bitter cold sitting on the surgeons shoulder, then in part two of murder standing near another caged animal, then finnaly is shown one last time in its death scene
You know the shiny thing you see in the water the whole game? That’s the mermaid who honored Martin and saw that the ship safely returned home. They touch a little on that.
His estate was granted the highest reward of all, 90£. That's big sum, not fully reflected by just looking at inflation numbers. Still, not enough recognition possibly but the adjuster didn't know the full extent of his service when he wrote the report.
He could been survived if his steward didn't mention about the 'shall', it triggered the mermaid. Anyone who spoke about the word 'shall' in front of mermaids has been killed by them.
Considering Dahl was Witteral's steward for so many years, I wonder if when the captain went down to the lazarette to confront the mermaids in order to call off the kraken, as he sees the dead body of Dahl, despite what he did to Naples... if there was a tad bit of realization that he was right about the shells carrying a curse, and angered by what the curse did to his loyal friend, part of Witteral's rage in killing those two mermaids was vengence for Dahl.
I think that him throwing the shells back in the ocean was part of his regretness for not listening to Dahl and the feeling of guilt for being indirectly responsible for the death of his tripulation.
Imagine how the insurance agent feels. They've waited a whole year for that letter, spilling some of their tea upon the package's arrival, the story of the Obra Dinn has left a mark on their life. The insurance assessment that preceded helped convert the passage of time to the player, now we too can feel the emotional impact of finally getting to revisit the story we've grown so fond of, like meeting an old friend. Not using a violin would've been a crime.
The Monkey's Paw - the mermaid fulfilled her promise of returning the Obra Dinn to harbour (the sparkling in the ocean you see as an investigator was the shell in her hair) - but no more no less. Even after the bargain was made, many more people still were killed (driven by a haze of greed and bloodlust and desperation - the mermaid's influence perhaps? Or maybe the shells, if they are still lying at the bottom of the lazarette with the dead merfolk) before it arrived, empty of life. And once it arrived, it was sunk by a terrible storm (as evidenced in the insurance documentation which note total loss of cargo and vessel). We already know that the mermaid seem to be in command of the kraken and it was be reasonable to assume they had some control over the storm and lightening that hit the topmen on the high ropes. It seems reasonable to me that she'd have the power to sink the ship as soon as she fulfilled her promise - a la monkey's paw / fulfilling the wish in a way you might not expect, subverting the intention of the wishmaker. Truly excellent game and storywriting.
The surgeon always struck me as an odd character. I was never entirely sure of his alliances, and yet he always felt like he didn't lie, did he know what would happen maybe? He knew someone would come to use the Memento Mortem, so he shot the monkey, but it almost felt like he knew more, I just can't explain it, maybe he knew about the shell? The power of the mermaids? He probably knew the kraken was related too, even before the Captain...
I mean, of course he knew someone would use it, given that he was the one that sent it to you. It was his. Massive mystery where he got it, but it was probably of use in his career to study dead patients. (Though I imagine it'd be more useful to a coroner.) It's entirely possible he used it a few times over the course of the game's events, but it's not like anyone would believe him if he told them the truth of various things, so kept it to himself.
Somehow the captain managed to stop the kraken attack when he went in there and they probably stole the boat to flee as soon as the sun rose, so the doc had no time to investigate it himself, killing the monkey was a way to find out what happened.
This. This just ties everything together so well. And it feels like this song just evokes that feeling of building dread, and that creeping realization. You know how the story ends after this point.
Sadly the captain would not be remembered for it, his estate forfeit for the crime of suicide. Martin, however, got £90 for Exemplary performance of duties and Extraordinary valor, BEFORE this chapter was taken into account. A hero, sadly one that managed only to fling a light into the future. A tragic one.
Pretty cool how the icon of the Bargain chapter is a monkey's paw, which is also the name of a short story where IIRC there is a magical monkey's paw that can grant wishes, but with consequences.
I believe the consequences here is, well... finishing the game, and solving all the mysteries, truely finishing what all could be found, meaning all other questions are unanswered forever. And to really stab it in, this chapter was actually just a tad uneventful, ending on a bit of... a weird note. Monkey's Paw indeed.
@@MarioGMan25 I don’t think it really needed one besides it was already hinted Bargain would be the last chapter.Behind the tragedy and brutality of the fates of the crew on the Obra Dinn that we witnessed.We did nothing else and i think we wouldn’t see much.
@@MarioGMan25 The monkey's paw is Martin making a bargain with the mermaid that will see the ship home, but all the crew aboard will have long since died before that.
Yep, Henry took the monkey's paw, the wish was a chance to see what happened on the Bargain chapter and the curse was the sickness that eventually claimed his life
Wow! Whoever voiced the captain must have sounded badass in this game and in this chapter! Nice! :) "Call it off, damn you. This is your kraken. You brought it here. Send it back!" *stabs one mermaid* "I'll kill every last one of you monsters. Withdraw the kraken! Or I will kill you all." *stabs another mermaid*
The captain was a bonafide badass, really. I played the game with my boyfriend watching, and from the start we just called him Captain Wick, because of how badass he is at the start of the game, in the end, and seems to have been from the beginning.
@@FaeAngst if I remember correctly, at this point his wife had died in the Kraken attack and he could have been aware of that (if somehow he got the news, as The Doom final scene tells the captain was in the brig). That's why he sounds especially angry, remorseful and vengeful in these scenes, seemingly even ignoring the fact his steward died. One could deduce both the captain and his wife had a good relation. Risking her life, Abigail looked for Robert, and Robert took his own life to see her while asking for final forgiveness. The bitterness we can see on him during The Bargain must have been because he realized that only if he listened to Dahl, not only his crew but his wife would have been still there.
A third shell! Captain didn't toss them all! X Leave it. Help me lift this. ..Stop! Wait! We're to set you free! Give it a shell. Eh? X Do it! To the main deck. Throw it over. Lock the door when you leave. Get the tail, boy. X In return... the ship... the Obra Dinn... ...see it home.
So that's why Cap. Witterel rarely seen during "The Doom", Because he was running to the lazarette , arguably to find his steward for 20 years, Dahl, to see if he can helps with this situation. But after unlocking the lazarette and seeing his lifeless steward with a shell on his chest, He unleashed his rage unto the imprisoned monsters.
Why would the captain regret anything? The only explanation that makes sense to me is that the third mermaid gives in after the captain killed her two friends ("withdraw the kraken or I will kill you all!"). Captain goes to the main deck when she has called back the kraken ("captain came up from the hold, said he'd chased it off") and orders Martin to take a few men down to the lazarette to give the last mermaid her shell ("captain didn't toss them all!") and set her free. The mermaid doesn't know what those men are up to, so she spikes Martin when he opens her cage *without speaking to her first*, which is a very stupid thing to do. Doesn't he know those mermaids are killers? The mermaid fullfills her part of the bargain, but just like in the short story ""The Monkey's Paw" you should be careful what you wish for. The ship is brought home, no living soul on board, and it sinks in the storm the moment you finish your investigation.
@@karlokb6717 Oh, I see. So, i think he asked the mérmaid to bring it back because he knew it would sink if it was caught up into another storm and nobody would know what happened to it. It would remain a mistery. Do you think that he somehow knew about the pocket watch?
@@thielenlopes At the end of the game, on the second page in the final report, the inspector/player lists that it sank in the storm that rolled in after they left.
@@cloudy772 thats not miss jane bird, the only passanger thay was married we had were mrs. Hoscut Witteral and mrs. Jackson as the formosan royalty was in fact miss. Lims uncle
Thielen Lopes Evans killed the monkey and cut off its paw so that the Chief Inspector could use the Memento Mortem on it to see inside the Lazarrette and finish the story.
I give some massive props to Henry Evans. Even though he witnessed almost the entire tragedy, he knew that he didn't know everything. He wanted to know the full truth, and that's why he enlisted our help. He knew about the Memento Mortem, so he knew we could help, even if it was only a little. However, the deaths in the lazarette was one of the incidents he knew full well about, and yet he still sent the monkey in. That entire time, he's just kept that monkey's paw on him as a reward so we could learn the full story. He PLANNED all of that and made his decision THAT quickly while the storm had still been raging outside in that moment. Dude was a freaking genius.
I always assumed the bargain would involve you in some way, almost felt like an anticlimax when nothing more infernal than what killed the rest of the ship was involved. Almost being the key word.
I don't see why people don't get the importance of this chapter. This chapter reveals the truth about the captain. He WASN'T a hero. If he really wanted his crew to survive, he simply had to give the mermaids the shells and release them. But the captain was greedy. He wanted the shells for himself, so when the sea creatures came to rescue the mermaids and take back the shells, he tortured them and killed them one by one. The Bargain is NOT about an agreement. It is about the captain killing and torturing living beings in order to keep treasure to himself. People don't understand the message the chapter is trying to convey - This isn't a story about a cursed ship getting attacked by evil monsters, but a story about what greed can do to a man. If you think the mermaids are merciless, Just look how the moment they are released they help the Obra Dinn to get back home.
Perrott makes a bargain with the mermaid to get the Obra Dinn back safely. He got stabbed by them when he was just trying to help, so they take pity, I think
I like Return of the obra dinn the text editor has been changed "obra dinn"t to the specification. :) Retun of the obra dinn が好きで、テキストエディタをobra dinn 仕様に変更しました^^
This chapter makes for a nice ending to the story but it’s too bad the actual puzzle is really easy at this point. RIP to Third Mate Martin though, real hero of the story
@@RamRam.720 wow, that opens up another whole can of weird crab monsters. How does he know that? Who else know about this time peeking pockwatch? Why did the monkey have the pocket watch tightly gripped, if the narrator said you kept the watch? (I might be remembering wrong)
@@geo_licious You did keep the watch, Dr Evans gave it to you, not the monkey. The watch lets you zip to where a corpse died, you got sent a monkey corpse (or part of it) so you could zip to where it died and then piggyback through the other deaths (Martin, the ningyo mer thingies, and dahl). Dr Evan's knowledge/use of the memento mortem is...contested
@@RamRam.720 I meant that I thought he kept the watch directly after solving the events of the obra dinn. But I guess he sent it back to Dr. Evans. But I'm a bit confused why the pocket watch was tightly gripped by the monkey, as I'd the monkey died with it.
The finger on the monkey's paw curls. The Obra Dinn will return home.
Crewless. 60 souls missing. 56 dead.
RIP the Monkey. Spotted you in like 2 memories and thought "hey, I wonder what happened to that Monkey?". Miss you, pal.
Ok
I only saw him in one.
@@Gboy86ify Chapter 2 in the scene where the cow got slaughtered?
Fun fact: the monkey was in four scenes total: first during the second part of a bitter cold in the surgeons room, then in the third part of bitter cold sitting on the surgeons shoulder, then in part two of murder standing near another caged animal, then finnaly is shown one last time in its death scene
@@dinkle1013 where and when does it die? i cant find it for the life of me
I knew that almost everyone was going to die eventually, but it still hurt seeing him in there...
RIP Martin, I definitely liked you the most.
Martin was a damn hero.
Martin, Maba, the Austrian boson and the Carpenter were the best
You know the shiny thing you see in the water the whole game? That’s the mermaid who honored Martin and saw that the ship safely returned home. They touch a little on that.
La Levesque I had no idea! Martin was by far my favourite character but I somehow love him even more now.
I think all the midshipmen were pretty heroic for such young lads.
For his bravery, I think Martin deserves a medal and a posthumous promotion
His estate was granted the highest reward of all, 90£. That's big sum, not fully reflected by just looking at inflation numbers. Still, not enough recognition possibly but the adjuster didn't know the full extent of his service when he wrote the report.
@@M2orNot Ikr, it would've been cool if they made an update report.
He could been survived if his steward didn't mention about the 'shall', it triggered the mermaid.
Anyone who spoke about the word 'shall' in front of mermaids has been killed by them.
Henry has 500 fucking IQ. The man knew about time travel, and killed his fucking monkey so you could have an excuse to get to this chapter
I like to think he used the watch in his role as a surgeon and so he knew what to do.
yet he gave laudanum to a man with a respiratory infection :(
bro could have saved hok-seng lau had he just used the watch earlier though
For that reason, we can probably assume he knew about them but didn't actually have one.
The finest act of heroism in the game.
The Monkey?
Bi$harp martin
Considering Dahl was Witteral's steward for so many years, I wonder if when the captain went down to the lazarette to confront the mermaids in order to call off the kraken, as he sees the dead body of Dahl, despite what he did to Naples... if there was a tad bit of realization that he was right about the shells carrying a curse, and angered by what the curse did to his loyal friend, part of Witteral's rage in killing those two mermaids was vengence for Dahl.
I think that him throwing the shells back in the ocean was part of his regretness for not listening to Dahl and the feeling of guilt for being indirectly responsible for the death of his tripulation.
You know, I think the Kraken killing his wife may have affected his judgment as well.
@lapislacooli5939 at that point he probably didn't know his wife was dead, since Martin says to Abigal he was below deck in her death scene
Imagine how the insurance agent feels. They've waited a whole year for that letter, spilling some of their tea upon the package's arrival, the story of the Obra Dinn has left a mark on their life.
The insurance assessment that preceded helped convert the passage of time to the player, now we too can feel the emotional impact of finally getting to revisit the story we've grown so fond of, like meeting an old friend.
Not using a violin would've been a crime.
Lucas Pope is a man of magic
The Monkey's Paw - the mermaid fulfilled her promise of returning the Obra Dinn to harbour (the sparkling in the ocean you see as an investigator was the shell in her hair) - but no more no less.
Even after the bargain was made, many more people still were killed (driven by a haze of greed and bloodlust and desperation - the mermaid's influence perhaps? Or maybe the shells, if they are still lying at the bottom of the lazarette with the dead merfolk) before it arrived, empty of life.
And once it arrived, it was sunk by a terrible storm (as evidenced in the insurance documentation which note total loss of cargo and vessel).
We already know that the mermaid seem to be in command of the kraken and it was be reasonable to assume they had some control over the storm and lightening that hit the topmen on the high ropes. It seems reasonable to me that she'd have the power to sink the ship as soon as she fulfilled her promise - a la monkey's paw / fulfilling the wish in a way you might not expect, subverting the intention of the wishmaker.
Truly excellent game and storywriting.
Captain put it best- "You bastards may take exactly what I give you"
The surgeon always struck me as an odd character. I was never entirely sure of his alliances, and yet he always felt like he didn't lie, did he know what would happen maybe? He knew someone would come to use the Memento Mortem, so he shot the monkey, but it almost felt like he knew more, I just can't explain it, maybe he knew about the shell? The power of the mermaids? He probably knew the kraken was related too, even before the Captain...
I mean, of course he knew someone would use it, given that he was the one that sent it to you. It was his. Massive mystery where he got it, but it was probably of use in his career to study dead patients. (Though I imagine it'd be more useful to a coroner.)
It's entirely possible he used it a few times over the course of the game's events, but it's not like anyone would believe him if he told them the truth of various things, so kept it to himself.
Somehow the captain managed to stop the kraken attack when he went in there and they probably stole the boat to flee as soon as the sun rose, so the doc had no time to investigate it himself, killing the monkey was a way to find out what happened.
Design, Music, Programming... ALL by One man?
Lucas you are fucking genious
It's insane how well Lucas Pope can attune his music to suit the scenes
Outstanding performance of duties
Extraordinary Valor
£90
This. This just ties everything together so well. And it feels like this song just evokes that feeling of building dread, and that creeping realization.
You know how the story ends after this point.
_A.K.A the Chapter where we sacrifice two men for the Obra Dinn to see it home, without the lives onboard._
ThatOneOFFTopicPerson Well, one was a sacrifice, the other was a moron sticking his hand in... magical stuff.
_Lovecraftian Crab/mermaid/squid/whatever goop_
"ååh, quicksilver?"
_My dude could be high for all I know, high from all that chaos on the deck._
Martin was a man of outstanding valor. R.I.P.
Martin, and to a somewhat lesser extent, Captain Witterel, were some of the most badass video game characters I’ve ever seen.
Sadly the captain would not be remembered for it, his estate forfeit for the crime of suicide. Martin, however, got £90 for Exemplary performance of duties and Extraordinary valor, BEFORE this chapter was taken into account. A hero, sadly one that managed only to fling a light into the future. A tragic one.
Maba never wanted any of this
Maba and Charles went to hell.
They both went down like heroes, especially Charles who we see fight both the crab riders and the kraken
Maba got fuckin T O R N
i liked his tattoos tho
They became doom slayers
Pretty cool how the icon of the Bargain chapter is a monkey's paw, which is also the name of a short story where IIRC there is a magical monkey's paw that can grant wishes, but with consequences.
I believe the consequences here is, well... finishing the game, and solving all the mysteries, truely finishing what all could be found, meaning all other questions are unanswered forever.
And to really stab it in, this chapter was actually just a tad uneventful, ending on a bit of... a weird note. Monkey's Paw indeed.
I'm glad someone else gets it
!!
@@MarioGMan25 I don’t think it really needed one besides it was already hinted Bargain would be the last chapter.Behind the tragedy and brutality of the fates of the crew on the Obra Dinn that we witnessed.We did nothing else and i think we wouldn’t see much.
@@MarioGMan25 The monkey's paw is Martin making a bargain with the mermaid that will see the ship home, but all the crew aboard will have long since died before that.
Yep, Henry took the monkey's paw, the wish was a chance to see what happened on the Bargain chapter and the curse was the sickness that eventually claimed his life
This chapter was easy peasy, like shooting fish in a barrel.
or shooting a monkey in a lazarette
or shooting fish in a lazarette
Or shooting a monkey in a barrel... no wait....
or shooting shrimp mermaids in a lazarette
Or like shooting a martin in a lazarette.. wait a second he wasn't shot.....
Wow! Whoever voiced the captain must have sounded badass in this game and in this chapter! Nice! :)
"Call it off, damn you. This is your kraken. You brought it here. Send it back!" *stabs one mermaid* "I'll kill every last one of you monsters. Withdraw the kraken! Or I will kill you all." *stabs another mermaid*
The captain shot the first mermaid.
The captain was a bonafide badass, really. I played the game with my boyfriend watching, and from the start we just called him Captain Wick, because of how badass he is at the start of the game, in the end, and seems to have been from the beginning.
See he sounded kinda sad and pathetic to me. His solution was to stab things while his crew was dying and fixed nothing
@@FaeAngst if I remember correctly, at this point his wife had died in the Kraken attack and he could have been aware of that (if somehow he got the news, as The Doom final scene tells the captain was in the brig). That's why he sounds especially angry, remorseful and vengeful in these scenes, seemingly even ignoring the fact his steward died.
One could deduce both the captain and his wife had a good relation. Risking her life, Abigail looked for Robert, and Robert took his own life to see her while asking for final forgiveness. The bitterness we can see on him during The Bargain must have been because he realized that only if he listened to Dahl, not only his crew but his wife would have been still there.
A third shell!
Captain didn't toss them all!
X Leave it. Help me lift this.
..Stop! Wait! We're to set you free!
Give it a shell.
Eh?
X Do it!
To the main deck.
Throw it over.
Lock the door when you leave.
Get the tail, boy.
X In return... the ship... the Obra Dinn... ...see it home.
Never seen such a heroic sacrifice in a game anything like this.
This is a revelation track... Beautiful
So that's why Cap. Witterel rarely seen during "The Doom",
Because he was running to the lazarette ,
arguably to find his steward for 20 years, Dahl, to see if he can helps with this situation.
But after unlocking the lazarette and seeing his lifeless steward with a shell on his chest,
He unleashed his rage unto the imprisoned monsters.
No, dude. He was there to deal with the mermaids, because of the Kraken.
@@thielenlopes Maybe he did believe his steward after seeing the kraken, but it was already too late
@@DM-Oz After all that happened, yes, i think so too. Then he saw that his friend was dead and got even more mad.
Martin: Yo mermaid, get this ship home
Monkey's Paw: Gets sliced off before it can fold a finger
Rip my man Martin, Maba, that 4th mate who blew that guys brains out and the midshipman I’ll give u guys a good steam review
Still can't tell if Martin acted on his own or if the Captain regretted his actions and commanded him to release the last mermaid
Why would the captain regret anything? The only explanation that makes sense to me is that the third mermaid gives in after the captain killed her two friends ("withdraw the kraken or I will kill you all!"). Captain goes to the main deck when she has called back the kraken ("captain came up from the hold, said he'd chased it off") and orders Martin to take a few men down to the lazarette to give the last mermaid her shell ("captain didn't toss them all!") and set her free. The mermaid doesn't know what those men are up to, so she spikes Martin when he opens her cage *without speaking to her first*, which is a very stupid thing to do. Doesn't he know those mermaids are killers? The mermaid fullfills her part of the bargain, but just like in the short story ""The Monkey's Paw" you should be careful what you wish for. The ship is brought home, no living soul on board, and it sinks in the storm the moment you finish your investigation.
@@karlokb6717 Hold up, it sinked!? How do you know that?
@@thielenlopes It's in the insurance report. See here: i.imgur.com/6Rffim0.png
@@karlokb6717 Oh, I see. So, i think he asked the mérmaid to bring it back because he knew it would sink if it was caught up into another storm and nobody would know what happened to it. It would remain a mistery.
Do you think that he somehow knew about the pocket watch?
@@thielenlopes At the end of the game, on the second page in the final report, the inspector/player lists that it sank in the storm that rolled in after they left.
At the end, when Miss Jane Bird send you a letter, she only sign "Jane Bird". It seems she got married... maybe with Davey ? (The 4th's mate steward)
Well, her last name is still the same, so who knows.
The ship has sunken.
Nope. You just don't sign your name with a miss. That's like signing your name with a mister. If she married she would've changed her last name.a
elio22bbl
She’s already married. If you look she is wearing a wedding ring in DOOM VIII
@@cloudy772 thats not miss jane bird, the only passanger thay was married we had were mrs. Hoscut Witteral and mrs. Jackson as the formosan royalty was in fact miss. Lims uncle
Third Mate...
You could have worded your request more specifically...
Dude he was dying
Maybe he got exactly what he meant.
"Make sure the ship return home without the remaining people goes bananas and kill each other"
Mermaid: Sir I am a magic mermaid not a psychologist
Rest in Peace, Third Mate Martin...
ừ
1:23 Captain...
Rip martin the best dude of the entire ship.
Noticing what Evans was doing with the monkey was so badass.
What was he doing? I didn't understood this part. Why did he killed it?
Thielen Lopes Evans killed the monkey and cut off its paw so that the Chief Inspector could use the Memento Mortem on it to see inside the Lazarrette and finish the story.
Herre, min gud!
(God in heaven!)
Era dårar!
This guy did the fucking fabulous music too?! It's too much talent!
I pray for the poor captain and the good third mate.
How about the Carpenter?
best track in the game
Put this shit on 1.5x speed, it's a banger!
It is! You're right!
Top 10 smartest people in the world:
1. Henry Evans
R.I.P Martin
I give some massive props to Henry Evans. Even though he witnessed almost the entire tragedy, he knew that he didn't know everything. He wanted to know the full truth, and that's why he enlisted our help. He knew about the Memento Mortem, so he knew we could help, even if it was only a little. However, the deaths in the lazarette was one of the incidents he knew full well about, and yet he still sent the monkey in. That entire time, he's just kept that monkey's paw on him as a reward so we could learn the full story. He PLANNED all of that and made his decision THAT quickly while the storm had still been raging outside in that moment. Dude was a freaking genius.
Martin, one of the best crew members on board the cursed ship...
I always assumed the bargain would involve you in some way, almost felt like an anticlimax when nothing more infernal than what killed the rest of the ship was involved. Almost being the key word.
I don't see why people don't get the importance of this chapter.
This chapter reveals the truth about the captain. He WASN'T a hero. If he really wanted his crew to survive, he simply had to give the mermaids the shells and release them. But the captain was greedy. He wanted the shells for himself, so when the sea creatures came to rescue the mermaids and take back the shells, he tortured them and killed them one by one. The Bargain is NOT about an agreement. It is about the captain killing and torturing living beings in order to keep treasure to himself.
People don't understand the message the chapter is trying to convey - This isn't a story about a cursed ship getting attacked by evil monsters, but a story about what greed can do to a man. If you think the mermaids are merciless, Just look how the moment they are released they help the Obra Dinn to get back home.
_This is why we have the option to blame it all on the captain._
@@Sunsetsoliloquy I'm going replay the game and do just that because it seems so fitting once you learn the full story.
@@Sunsetsoliloquy wait, what? That won't be confirmed as corret, RIGHT?!
_Just wait and see._
Perrott makes a bargain with the mermaid to get the Obra Dinn back safely. He got stabbed by them when he was just trying to help, so they take pity, I think
Spoilers
Before I figured out his identity I always called Fillip Dahl Lenin because he kind of looked like Lenin.
_Herre min Marx..._
I like Return of the obra dinn the text editor has been changed "obra dinn"t to the specification. :)
Retun of the obra dinn が好きで、テキストエディタをobra dinn 仕様に変更しました^^
*Monke goes psh*
협상 파트.. 최애 파트
oh man
is so epic and dramatic
This chapter makes for a nice ending to the story but it’s too bad the actual puzzle is really easy at this point.
RIP to Third Mate Martin though, real hero of the story
The sounds of evil mermaids getting maimed
That terrible feeling when you read the comments, and unwillingly see a spoiler ;c in such a game
Well this is the spoiler chapter in the game
Can someone explain the monkey? Why did the monkey have to die?
So he could send you its desiccated hand so you could see what happened in there
@@RamRam.720 wow, that opens up another whole can of weird crab monsters. How does he know that? Who else know about this time peeking pockwatch? Why did the monkey have the pocket watch tightly gripped, if the narrator said you kept the watch? (I might be remembering wrong)
@@geo_licious You did keep the watch, Dr Evans gave it to you, not the monkey. The watch lets you zip to where a corpse died, you got sent a monkey corpse (or part of it) so you could zip to where it died and then piggyback through the other deaths (Martin, the ningyo mer thingies, and dahl).
Dr Evan's knowledge/use of the memento mortem is...contested
@@RamRam.720 I meant that I thought he kept the watch directly after solving the events of the obra dinn. But I guess he sent it back to Dr. Evans. But I'm a bit confused why the pocket watch was tightly gripped by the monkey, as I'd the monkey died with it.
@@geo_licious The watch wasnt gripped by the monkey, the inspector (who can also be a woman) kept it after the obra dinn sunk.
This track is so haunting
The bargain chapter music sucks
Pffft, says the guy who can't even be bothered to get killed by a cannon the _proper_ way...
@@fds7476 oh yeah? How am *i* supposed to be blasted by the cannon if the next fire was above deck?