Hitman: No One Is Untouchable | A Video Essay

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  • Опубліковано 18 лип 2021
  • Who gets to be a target in Hitman? What do the games have to say about them? In this video I break down the narrative and themes of the recently released Hitman games: the world of assassination trilogy.
    0:00 Intro
    1:55 Plot Summary
    6:35 Agent 47
    16:15 Power
    21:24 Capital C
    27:04 Disguises
    29:32 Providence
    37:09 Conclusion
    Twitter - @18conorryan
    Letterboxd - Con83
    Bibliography
    ‘Pandemic Response Sparked ‘Widespread' Wealth Inequality Rise’, Ben Stupples, Marion Halftermeyer, 2021 (www.fa-mag.com/news/pandemic-...)
    ‘Most Americans Say There Is Too Much Economic Inequality in the U.S., but Fewer Than Half Call It a Top Priority’, Juliana Menasce Horowitz, Ruth Igielnik and Rakesh Kochhar, 2020 (www.pewresearch.org/social-tr...)
    ‘The Scale of Economic Inequality in the UK’ (www.equalitytrust.org.uk/scal...)
    Six Days in Fallujah ‘not trying to make a political commentary,’ creator says, Charlie Hall, 2021 (www.polygon.com/2021/2/15/222...)
    ‘The UK’s top-earning CEO bags record $422 million payday’, Vicky McKeever, 2019 (www.cnbc.com/2019/12/18/uks-t...)
    ‘The UK's Covid-19 unemployment crisis in six charts’, Richard Parington, 2021 (www.theguardian.com/business/...)
    ‘Prospering in the pandemic: 2020’s top 100 companies’, 2021 (www.ft.com/content/f8251e5f-1...)
    Group of Senate Democrats and Republicans vote to keep $15 minimum wage out of Biden's COVID stimulus bill, Nicholas Wu, 2021 (eu.usatoday.com/story/news/po...)
    Video Game Storytelling, Evan Skolnick, 2014
    Corporate immunity to the Covid-19 Pandemic, Wenzhi Ding, Ross Levine, Chen Lin, Wensi Xie, 2020
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 593

  • @conorryan4019
    @conorryan4019  2 роки тому +833

    Seems like UA-cam is recommending this video to people all of a sudden, so thats cool. If you enjoyed it and want to help out with algorithim nonsense, commenting, liking, sharing etc. is much appreciated. Thanks for watching!

    • @SomeRageHard
      @SomeRageHard Рік тому +4

      I'm late to this video, but speaking as someone who has logged hundreds of hours in each game, you've done a magnificent analysis mate.
      Well done.

    • @stevenheston7598
      @stevenheston7598 Рік тому +1

      First video of yours I've seen - great analysis and editing, but your sound mixing is a little off. You have a quiet speaking voice but had really loud chapter transitions/gameplay interludes. Thanks for the content!

    • @FaeTheMf
      @FaeTheMf Рік тому

      Good video ong

    • @quietdignityandgrace
      @quietdignityandgrace Рік тому +2

      I like how your calm subtle voice gives way to a GRENDADE TO THE FACE at 25:43. Laughing so hard. Thank you, I needed that.

    • @gohmingxiu9527
      @gohmingxiu9527 Рік тому

      The Stupendium made a rap that captures just about everything you described here, thought you’d enjoy it. My favorite line:
      I.C.A. (I see a) hole in the ark
      ua-cam.com/video/25P7Jb0d0rU/v-deo.html

  • @77professional
    @77professional 2 роки тому +1684

    I would have to disagree about the idea of monsters replacing other monsters being underutilized. Watch the the legacy cutscene from Hitman 2016 and listen to Lucas Grey's words.
    "You were always the best. Nobody ever came close. You defined the art and it defines you. Your actions have changed the world. Powerful men have fallen by your hand, but by the same token, others have risen. Do you realize what kind of world you've been shaping? Does the ICA? Does your Handler? I live in that world. I have seen the consequences. I have felt the cost. That's what defines me."

    • @feckoslovakia
      @feckoslovakia Рік тому +75

      I really want to like this but I won't because the like count is 47 lol

    • @Kirbyte1
      @Kirbyte1 Рік тому +28

      @@feckoslovakia same because its 470 now

    • @feckoslovakia
      @feckoslovakia Рік тому +17

      @@Kirbyte1 ok now I can like the comment, thanks for the reminder :D

    • @furioussherman7265
      @furioussherman7265 Рік тому +51

      Excellent point. Everyone creates their own demons and the consequences of our actions often outlive us. The difference between 47 at the beginning and at the end of the trilogy is that he's taking responsibility for his own actions for the first time. He's becoming fully cognizant of what kind of world he creates. He will likely create new monsters by his own hand again, but this time he and Diana are actively looking to make sure they can't cause the sort of damage Providence did. I think it's quite interesting to consider; there are certain things about people that will never change, but people can still change the way they go about, react, and make choices for the future based on those unchanging things. It may not be a sweeping, cinematic change like what you might expect in a sweeping, cinematic story, but continuing with the idea of the Hitman trilogy pulling from the state of the modern world for inspiration most major changes for the better are structured the same sort of way: The initial approach remains largely intact, but this time they take what happens as the result of their actions into account and are more careful about it. It may not be perfect, but it's a step in the right direction and it does net better results. I dare say that 47 and Diana doing this in the epilogue is a small piece of subtlety in a game that otherwise uses a sledgehammer to get its points across.

    • @Tactical_Tailgater
      @Tactical_Tailgater Рік тому +6

      This is also an important part of why not every solution is not the adequate, while we got a Swedish bank CEO stealing Morrocco of its future, ending economic freedom will only give us another guy with the same plots and damages.
      While we take emmotional choices (Like we all do), we will always have either the same problems, or things turn even worse

  • @frankwest5388
    @frankwest5388 Рік тому +876

    I feel like you missed one element of the “no one is untouchable” idea, which has to do with 47s character arc.
    Since he has no emotional attachments, he can’t be hurt. You can not point a gun at his wife and daughter to get him to do what you want.
    He is thought to be untouchable.
    But as the game reveals he isn’t untouchable.
    He has memories that scar him and despite having trouble making meaningful relationships, he feels a deep attachment to his handler Diane its the only intimate, if purely platonic, relationship he has

    • @TheMelvinV
      @TheMelvinV Рік тому +3

      Absolution disagrees with you

    • @chuckled125
      @chuckled125 Рік тому +94

      ​@@TheMelvinV World of Assassination trilogy disagrees with Absolution so who cares

    • @tinpan6052
      @tinpan6052 Рік тому +4

      Did you perhaps cover wars, ya know?

    • @TheMelvinV
      @TheMelvinV Рік тому +1

      @@chuckled125 suffering from tunnelvision seems so stupid to me.

    • @thebadplayer2615
      @thebadplayer2615 Рік тому +33

      Man I love this.
      An agent, created for the purpose of being absolutely untouchable. So much so to be used to reach the powerful "untouchables."
      But in the end, *No one is truly untouchable.*

  • @PanMan47
    @PanMan47 2 роки тому +1588

    As a huge hitman fan I can safely say I love this video, it’s sad most people don’t pay attention to the story

    • @lobaandrade7172
      @lobaandrade7172 Рік тому +58

      Especially because it was told episodically per map (at least at first), pretty unique for a 2016 game before the now normal “games as a service” with season updates. Since it was slowly told, many players ignored it until they just didn’t care for it in 2 and 3.
      It’s an interesting story akin to a spy flick

    • @Battle_mista
      @Battle_mista Рік тому +4

      47 likes ✌🏻

    • @Bale4Bond
      @Bale4Bond Рік тому +9

      The current trilogy's story is cliché dog shit, though,

    • @yahc2041
      @yahc2041 Рік тому +19

      if instead of targets we had to defeat bosses with surreal powers and instead of Diana talking to us in real time we would have been stopped at each codec ringing for a face to face of 2 to 20min in cinematic, people would have proclaimed the genius of the screenwriter and the artistic vision of the project director

    • @stickyman3786
      @stickyman3786 Рік тому +5

      @@Bale4Bond i prefer blood moneys or silent assassins

  • @Cyrus_T_Laserpunch
    @Cyrus_T_Laserpunch Рік тому +256

    One thing in Hitman I find fun personally is that Diana Burnwood is the best handler 47 could have had for this series about power and control. She helps with opportunities, never telling him he should do something, just giving ideas from her own skill in assassination, no matter what silly things you do she never tells you to stop and instead watches to see what your plan is, putting faith in your choices.
    In a way, she's part of why 47 is growing into his own person. She could say "47, disguise as this person and head to where the target is, I will tell you what to do next when you get there", but she doesn't direct you like that. Diana could order you around and achieve a silent assassin rank every mission easily, she's a very talented handler, but she values your autonomy. Freelancer is an extension on this as Diana finds intel on a bunch of syndicates, but now is letting 47 himself choose which one to pursue, trusting his judgement. As 47 grows as a person, he makes more choices for himself.
    Note: I have personally come to the conclusion that Diana genuinely cares about 47's growth and wants him to have more autonomy, I could be entirely wrong about my assessment. Unless the developers say "Now that Cyrus T. Laserpunch, he knows exactly what the story is, he's 100% correct", don't think my comment is truth.

    • @Wtf_is_this_sht_
      @Wtf_is_this_sht_ Рік тому +7

      A well written comment. Also this is at 47 likes XD

    • @ExcellentToo
      @ExcellentToo Рік тому +8

      47 was always alone on his missions. Before the WOA, Diana would only talk about the location and targets of the contract, occasionally giving a few hints.

    • @Niobesnuppa
      @Niobesnuppa 5 місяців тому +4

      Like Diana herself says at the end of the Mendoza level "All I saw was a blank slate, a weapon to wield. I told myself it was what you needed, but people aren't meant to be controlled."

  • @logarhythmic6859
    @logarhythmic6859 Рік тому +684

    19:40 The only target I feel bad about is Penelope Graves. She was a very intelligent analyst for Interpol, actually trying to take down Sean Rose. She saw corruption in the UN and tried to report it, and got shut down by her superiors. This caused her to switch sides, struggling to find the "righteous" path.
    And regarding the ending of the trilogy, it's probably because IOI didn't want to end in a place where they write themselves into a corner for a future game. It does kind of make for a weak ending though.

    • @derlesende
      @derlesende Рік тому +73

      Yes, I totally agree. I always try to make it quick for her, but ,if I’m not wrong, it’s the only contract ordered by Soders with no way of declining. So here even Diana isn’t in control. But luckily we got revenge quickly…

    • @VenetusAlpha
      @VenetusAlpha Рік тому +43

      Same. She was so similar to my best friend in terms of personality and appearance that it was genuinely painful taking her out.

    • @wesleygriffiths8748
      @wesleygriffiths8748 Рік тому +37

      I feel sorry for Silvio as well. Granted, he’s a monster by the time you kill him, but if you pick up on his backstory in the level, he only became that way after a lifetime of horrific abuse from just about everyone around him.

    • @ladywaffle2210
      @ladywaffle2210 Рік тому +31

      I actually completely disagree.
      47 is forced to become an assassin at first, targets chosen for him.
      By the end of the game, he's still an assassin, but now on his own terms. He's choosing to do what he's good at. There's nothing mandating this choice or forcing him to do this. He could just retire; he has a seven digit bank account, after all, and there will rise another person to take his place if he retires. He chooses to continue proving that no one is untouchable because he wants to. This is, effectively, a first.
      At long last, 47 has seen the consequences and felt the cost of what world he's shaped, and now, he's turning the tables to shape the world for good--or, at least, to keep the world from being shaped for bad.

    • @andyhx2
      @andyhx2 Рік тому +2

      I also felt a bit bad for Washington twins - they genuinely tried to make world dodge spiraling to apocalypse even if they were also working on a backup plan for their rich sponsors and were part of the Providence.

  • @SupercharizardEx
    @SupercharizardEx Рік тому +623

    The purpose of 47 having his conversation with the girl in the rain is meant to show how much he has changed throughout the story, especially after having met Lucas Grey. Grey helped to set 47 free by reminding him of their past and by helping him to get an antidote for the memories that he had wiped previously. With the level being centralized around the downfall of the ICA, this dialogue along with 47's final conversation with Olivia Hall show that he no longer is a simple killing machine for the ICA anymore and that 47 has grown to become a bit more human again due to his interactions with Grey, Diana, and Olivia.

    • @vksasdgaming9472
      @vksasdgaming9472 Рік тому +47

      Agent 47 was failure because he has independent spirit, empathy and knows right and wrong. Those traits made him best at his work and also made him turn against his employers. Several times. There is hint of tragedy in him.

    • @elvingearmasterirma7241
      @elvingearmasterirma7241 Рік тому

      ​@@vksasdgaming9472 dont forget his dry biting humour. It is a hint to the fact he is human underneath the veneer

    • @vksasdgaming9472
      @vksasdgaming9472 Рік тому

      @@elvingearmasterirma7241 Most of Agent 47's comic potential is not with him being funny. It is his stiff, matter-of-fact and utterly stoic and unfzaeable demeanour placed in utterly bizarre situations that makes him funny. Without Diana Burnwood's guidance he is horrifyingly brutal and merciless. Just ask Lenny Dexter who got ride in vintage-car's trunk and had to dig his own grave in desert and in the end 47 didn't even kill him. 47 did kill his gang whose only crime was being part of gang of morons lead by even bigger moron.

    • @elvingearmasterirma7241
      @elvingearmasterirma7241 Рік тому +10

      @@vksasdgaming9472 I never said it made him good or kind now did I? He has a personality. Its just
      Sandpaper

    • @FangxIggy
      @FangxIggy Рік тому +28

      He also can have a pretty long conversation in the winery level with a woman near the entrance serving drinks. It was the first time I saw him just sit and talk with someone like that, as I missed the girl in Chongqing. He really has softened up by the end.

  • @FlamingLily
    @FlamingLily Рік тому +166

    I actually quite like the ending, it strikes an interesting notion of "Now that he has control, he can decide where he goes, but he has decided to stay, because despite everything, that is who he is. Now, he just does it on his own terms, not anyone else's."
    And I think the recent addition of the freelancer mode (which isn't really part of the main story but I'm mentioning it anyway) which shows 47's personal life slowly develop from being only about murder into what seems to be a rather fulfilling life of hobbies.

    • @ButMadNNW626
      @ButMadNNW626 Рік тому +46

      Agreed on what you said. And just a couple days ago, I hit the Freelancer Mastery level where you can update the kitchen to show bread baking in progress. And next to the sink, it went from one plate, one fork, one knife… to a sink full of dirty dishes.
      At first, i tsk’d at 47 for letting his dishes pile up. 😂 But then I had one of those quiet “ohh 😮” moments, as it hit me that each thing unlocked in the safehouse evolves the scene in a way that, to me, says that he’s settling in, feeling safe, not feeling like he has to constantly be on the move with one eye over his shoulder. He’s home.
      IOI really are amazing at environmental storytelling.

    • @ladywaffle2210
      @ladywaffle2210 Рік тому +18

      I completely agree. He could've retired, but he's staying in the game, not because he must--because if he doesn't, someone else will--but because he wants to define the art of contract killing. He defines the art as it defines him, and if he can define the art, he's defining it as Justice, and therefore it defines him as Nemesis.

    • @LDaemontus
      @LDaemontus Рік тому +17

      It makes narrative sense with the other games within the franchise, too. He's already tried to get out of the life of being a Hitman in Sicilly and as a consequence, he was dragged back into being a contract assassin. It wouldn't have made sense for 47 to try again because he knows he cannot. He is what he is. He doesn't have a family. He doesn't have children. He's been witness to so many atrocities, himself being a victim of them, that any chance of a normal life was stripped from him. Even the creation of him wasn't birthed from a place of natural pregnancy. He was robbed of a personhood and made to be stuck memoryless, with anyone he made contact with being murdered to keep him within his puppeteer's control.
      Diana geniunely believed in him and was trying to help him find himself, despite everything they were doing for the ICA. It's why Diana's betrayal broke 47 psychologically, spiralling him into questioning his own existence, every contract he fulfilled for her and for the rest of them. He ends up drowning in the blood of his sins and inevitably reliving the moment he had killed her parents, about ready to accept that her betrayal was just for a tool like him, a monster like himself. Even Lucas Grey, the psyche version, agrees that Diana had every right to stab him in the back for what 47 had done to her as a child.
      But, it's Diana. The one person who had his back when others' did not and their life has not been kind, with them both being united to survive it together for a reason. She's one of the few humans who understood: "Nobody is Untouchable". And since she picks the contracts, she made sure to vet them enough to know that who they were killing were unrepentently evil people.
      So, knowing in the end he cannot have a life of peace, Agent 47 takes a break and returns, understanding truly who he is and what he's gifted at, knowing he is needed in the world to do what other people refuse to and he knows he can only do it with someone like Diana because Diana actually has a moral compass. She doesn't kill for the sake of it. She's not interested in power and she's proven she can resist it.
      Thus, he's able to be his own boss rather than a tool of an agency that can easily be corrupted from within. Together, they broke the cycle that the very early games of Hitman had begun to spin while acknowledging the reality that, yeah, there is no escape for people like them.

    • @Niobesnuppa
      @Niobesnuppa 5 місяців тому +2

      @@ButMadNNW626 That's a really good observation. I never thought I would find a pile of dirty dishes heartwarming, but here we are, haha

  • @Hammerhead547
    @Hammerhead547 2 роки тому +461

    If you take some time to listen to the conversations that some of the non target npc's have in some of the levels it becomes clear that the targets themselves aren't the only terrible people in the game world.
    This is particularly noticeable in the haven island level.

    • @Jade_the_jester
      @Jade_the_jester 2 роки тому +77

      this is is also pretty noticeable in isle of sgail

    • @Sssneksss
      @Sssneksss 2 роки тому

      @@Jade_the_jester Isle of Sgail is literally a congregation of paranoid millionaires ofc theyre all going to be horrible people

    • @anon9469
      @anon9469 Рік тому +43

      Or if you hang out upstairs in Paris.

    • @ZqTi0
      @ZqTi0 Рік тому +27

      Even if their story may be a little dull but their dialogues NPC conversations and the portrayal theme of the hitman world and all the mini details in the maps is the best in any game imo.

    • @bungiecrimes7247
      @bungiecrimes7247 Рік тому

      Most of us can live with ourselves because others are willing to be worse than us.

  • @noah_body_cares
    @noah_body_cares Рік тому +368

    35:31 I really enjoy the Constant's line during this scene. That little laugh he does mid-sentence sounded so genuine that I like to think the voice actor truly laughed at the ridiculousness of that man's attitude.

    • @archivist_13
      @archivist_13 Рік тому +3

      Same here

    • @NEBE_THEFIRST
      @NEBE_THEFIRST Рік тому +12

      another cool line from the constant is the 'We won a long time ago. This is maintenance'

  • @FailcopterWes
    @FailcopterWes Рік тому +362

    Fantastic essay, very well presented, but one thing you said got me thinking:
    While 47 himself isn't a revolutionary, it is interesting as to where some of the his contracts come from. The side missions (particularly A Silver Tongue and the Hokkaido Snow Festival) show the clients to be common people taking their control back in the only way they can, pooling resources to buy 47's services. Sort of like how Providence was a few people coming together for a common goal.
    Now that Freelancer mode has come out, we see victims striking back again. All the clients in that mode are people who have been hurt by the Syndicates you now hunt, and Diana is exclusively putting you on the path of helping people, not just those that can afford to fling money away. But, as you say, there's always another one popping up to fill the power vacuum.

    • @lieutenantlettuce8306
      @lieutenantlettuce8306 Рік тому +30

      The mode just kind of turns you into an exterminator, just because you kill some roaches doesn't mean they won't move in again.

    • @vksasdgaming9472
      @vksasdgaming9472 Рік тому

      Diana Burnwood wants justice instead of money. That's why Agent 47 doesn't kill journalists or honest police officers or arrange terrorist attacks.

    • @negative6442
      @negative6442 Рік тому

      @@lieutenantlettuce8306 Kill enough roaches and the problem goes away

    • @kunstlermann
      @kunstlermann Рік тому +37

      @@lieutenantlettuce8306 but they have to adapt. They have to give up part of their power to appease because they know now they are touchable.
      So it isn’t a solution but it’s still better then acceptance

    • @OhNoTheFace
      @OhNoTheFace Рік тому +2

      @@lieutenantlettuce8306 Sounds like an excuse to just be complacent

  • @noco-pf3vj
    @noco-pf3vj Рік тому +130

    The first mission in Hitman (2016) is memorable to me, your mission to kill Viktor and when you enter the first room, he is there in the spotlight by the crowd.
    You saw him, your prey, he seems untouchable, but no one is untouchable.

  • @GodsBadAssBlade
    @GodsBadAssBlade Рік тому +66

    The mission apex predator was a real gut punch to my senses and even emotions. Starting at a empty dinner that feels like a place of purgatory, being totally blind and unaware who your targets are, unsure of olivias safety and well being due to the event, as well as dianas seemingly gone with hints she may turn bad and even more than that.. being left completely alone. that is one of the few if any missions i WISH i could experience for the first time again.

    • @ButMadNNW626
      @ButMadNNW626 Рік тому +13

      Some friends wanted to watch me play through the trilogy’s story and I’ve been doing so on a fresh save file so I’d have no tempting shortcuts: none of the gear I’ve accumulated since 2016, no shortcut starting spawns, I start almost all missions with the default loadout. It’s been a fun experience.
      We just hit Berlin a couple nights ago and I alerted them to be quiet before starting the level, so they could fully appreciate that first time there. No music, no Diana, no minimap… I even felt unsettled myself when I instinctively (heh) hit the Instinct button and it didn’t work - I’d completely forgotten that part.
      It truly was a masterful way to communicate the situation and emotions involved, really put the player in 47’s shoes.
      And then the call with Olivia. 47 being the calming influence. The supremely confident way he assures her, “I’ll handle this.” And THAT’S when the mission title appears: “Apex Predator”. Chills.

  • @LDaemontus
    @LDaemontus Рік тому +35

    One comment that needs to be made is the choice of ambience we got in the Chongqing mission. In earlier Hitman games within the franchise, there was extensive narrative choices surrounding Agent 47 being Catholic as he attempted to try living a life away from that of being an assassin, the iconic theme song of the Hitman games being Ave Maria. The Hitman III team cleverly ensured that they used an ambient soundtrack that invoked the sorrowful and human nature of Agent 47 through the use of choir/hymn music mixed with the rain that the player can hear as they go about exploring. It's legitmately titled "Chingqing Requiem" otherwise known as "Repose of the Souls of the Dead", a type of Roman Catholic Mass. It's also used to mean "a token of remembrance".
    The nature of the music that accompanies the player as they come face to face with the atrocities of medical abuse upon the homeless, the all seeing eyes of technology upon its people as an abuse of their privacy and overarching power structure that this international collective rules over their everyday lives and that over other countries just brings back that sense that these villains are godless people. They're empty of a moral system. Which creates comparison to Agent 47, who does have a moral code. Agent 47, for all his own actions, is capable of admitting them for what they are and even confesses them to a priest, Father Vittorio. He's capable of admitting to himself of what he is and is able to take it to God. The other villains don't care to self-reflect on their own actions, let alone shed any guilt for committing them. They think of themselves as "just" and above the law. Sometimes, even as a God when it comes to manipulating the medical industry to develop inhumane technologies, which Agent 47 himself was a victim of.
    This is reflected in how Agent 47 confronts Jordon Cross. Of all the ways you can kill a spoiled rich kid, the one that takes focus is 47's confrontation where Jordon is presented with the reality of his crime and the sole choice you're given as a player is to simply put a single bullet into the man's flesh. It's one of the main deaths that felt more like Agent 47 than it did the player's choice. The difference between 47 and Cross is where it highlights that Cross doesn't actually fathom the consequences of his actions and presumes he can simply pay off 47 like he does everyone else.
    When begging and bribing doesn't work, he just becomes this pathetic mess at the feet of an almost mythological killer who simply sits and dispenses quiet justice. It's merciful. There is no fanfare, there is nobody to witness the corpse. For all his fame, his money, the power his father owns, Agent 47 disposes of him alone, empty, with the tape of his crime echoing about the room.
    It's a reminder that everything comes to an end and that one's sins eventually return to remind us of our past crimes and when confronted with the reality that death stood in front of him, Jordon Cross died an unrepentent failure of a human being. He thought money and power could buy off death but one's immortality isn't purchaseable; a theme that's rampant in other missions, like Chingqing's target being obsessed with transhumanist ideals or Robert Knox's obsession with robotic war crimes.
    These people don't just have power. They also think of themselves as untouchable by the rules of nature, of death. In the last mission when you awake in the train, you can listen in on a conversation between a scientist and one of the guards as they discuss being able to erase painful memories from peoples' lives, of being able to rid anything a patient desired from their known conscious. In other words, the ability to never remember (or live with) painful consequences of life.
    This is why the Constant's ending, with his memories being erased, is poetic. He's not murdered in the stereotypical manner that Agent 47 would have every right to achieve but the Constant's entire personhood is taken from him. He exists as nothing more than a husk of a person and has to suffer for the crimes that he doesn't even remember committing. Agent 47 gave the Constant the worst death imaginable; the inability to repent. Ever. There is no good life for the Constant; not in the material and certainly not in the spiritual.

    • @lonepylon
      @lonepylon 26 днів тому

      This analysis goes crazy. Kudos 👍
      The inability to repent never crossed my mind but oh my god, it hits so much harder now

  • @ShadowKestrel
    @ShadowKestrel Рік тому +61

    Came for the funny bald guy game, stayed for the deep and hard hitting socioeconomic analysis

    • @Tactical_Tailgater
      @Tactical_Tailgater Рік тому

      Social**
      Socioeconomic is more annoying

    • @randomcoloradan2878
      @randomcoloradan2878 8 місяців тому +2

      @@Tactical_Tailgater socioeconomic is the correct term though

    • @Tactical_Tailgater
      @Tactical_Tailgater 8 місяців тому

      @@randomcoloradan2878 Nah, the bro on the video went full on sociology view and ignored the rest

  • @DuctTapeJake
    @DuctTapeJake Рік тому +25

    The thing I remember striking me even playing the original game back in the day was that the 'genetically enhanced super assassin' basically just made him a standard video game protagonist. He walks faster than everyone else, he never gets tired even while climbing things, he can take multiple gunshot wounds without dying and so on. The comment about him being the perfect game protagonist also applies in-universe as well.

  • @grimlockgreg3063
    @grimlockgreg3063 Рік тому +65

    I think freelancer shows his true goal, he now works by himself, not tethers to anyone, but instead of going out and becoming a killer, he now work to make the world a better place, one syndicate at a time.

    • @korvo3427
      @korvo3427 6 місяців тому +1

      He still takes jobs Diana has chosen for him.

    • @whitezombie10
      @whitezombie10 5 місяців тому +1

      @@korvo3427yeah but they’re partners

    • @korvo3427
      @korvo3427 5 місяців тому

      @@whitezombie10 They always kinda were. She provided the jobs he could either take on or refuse, provided mission intel etc. so what really changed?

  • @khloeg1649
    @khloeg1649 Рік тому +130

    that conversation you showed with the girl in the rain is probably one of my favorite moments in the whole franchise. it's so simple, so mundane. so normal. it makes 47 seem so... human. what he says to her, the way the line is delivered... it genuinely seems like he cares about this random woman. not on a deep level, necessarily, she's a stranger to him, but he at least wants to reassure her and give her advice and help her stop worrying about whether her friend is gonna come meet her. it really is such a beautiful and impactful scene.
    especially since this is one of the mission starting points, like as you said, the player doesn't even start this -- they just choose not to stop it. no one tells him to do this. he makes that decision himself. which is just so wonderful to see, considering how before this, he was always being controlled. he's finally starting to take his life into his own hands. and he deserves to.
    "she agreed to meet you in the middle of the night. in the rain. nobody does that if they don't care."
    it's just such a subtlety emotional and meaningful moment. I genuinely love it so much.

  • @andyhx2
    @andyhx2 Рік тому +28

    12:38 I think that one detail you missed about this encounter is that it takes place just after Lucas Grey aka Subject 6 - the childhood bestie of 47 just died as she talks to this woman about her childhood bestie. Even a slight bit of sense of grief from 47 can be felt soaking through as he basically says to her - don't ever give up on your friendship, only true friends like that stick around.

  • @woodneel
    @woodneel 2 роки тому +142

    13:33 goodness, I just now realized that this conversation is a parallel between 47 and Diana's own relationship and that's why it matters that 47 is engaging in such a (for a non target) lengthy dialogue!

    • @Tactical_Tailgater
      @Tactical_Tailgater Рік тому +3

      Explain please, I am stupid

    • @Niobesnuppa
      @Niobesnuppa 5 місяців тому +6

      @@Tactical_Tailgater Late reply, but basically this mission is set after Diana has gone silent for a while and 47 hasn't heard an update from her regarding her plans with Providence. Much like the woman chatting to him, 47 is worried that Diana is outgrowing him as she becomes more powerful, that she no longer needs him. He's worried that she's changing and growing as a person, while he's just staying the same, and that she'll drop him like dead weight eventually.

    • @Tactical_Tailgater
      @Tactical_Tailgater 5 місяців тому

      @@Niobesnuppa Makes sense, a lot of sense

    • @flavafee
      @flavafee 5 місяців тому

      oh shit you're so right! i like that interpretation

  • @angelinasurzhyk6655
    @angelinasurzhyk6655 Рік тому +90

    There are a few lines in The Stupendium’s songs on Hitman 2 and 3 on UA-cam that came to my mind and I think resonate just perfectly with the theme of the video:
    “In a palace or a manor, manned with killers at your care
    If you’re penciled in his planner, chance is he’s already there”
    “So till your hour chimes, you hide inside your ivory monuments
    Built your tower too high, don’t be surprised when there’s no oxygen
    Where that power lies, yes, there’s a price behind predominance”
    “Grip around the populace while sitting in your opulence
    You built your own sarcophagus - now *that’s* what I call providence”
    Great songs and also play really well on the theme of “no one is untouchable”!

    • @cookiebombcasualemail5284
      @cookiebombcasualemail5284 Рік тому +9

      The Apex is basically the culmination of the No One is Untouchable vibe. Every single lyric is a carefully constructed and unique way of saying, in the words of Gandalf, "You have no power here!"

    • @SYKRAL1
      @SYKRAL1 Рік тому +8

      As far as I (someone who never played the game) can tell, none of the targets’ power is physical or personal. It’s all social power. It’s all what they can make other people do. Oh, I’m a general who can move armies. Oh, im a fashion designer who can decide what people wear for the next decade. None of them are able to fight back once you actually get to them. They are herd animals, and unfortunately for them 47 is an Apex predator. The songs just drive that point home. It’s easy for him to take you out. “If you’re penciled in his planner”. No matter who you are, to him you are just another item checked off his todo list.

    • @ladywaffle2210
      @ladywaffle2210 Рік тому +7

      @@SYKRAL1 I've put in hundreds of hours into the games, to the point where I have SASO (Silent Assassin, Suit Only, arguably the most difficult accomplishment you can do) on every single level.
      You're absolutely right.
      There is not a single target you cannot just punch out. Soldiers and guards, when melee attacked, will give you a quick-time event series where you have to press certain buttons, otherwise they punch you. Press the right buttons, you punch them. However, non-guards don't have this. You can just punch out a waiter in one hit. The targets can also be punched out in one hit. Their entire basis of power is social; both in "I have immense sway over the populace thanks to X Y and Z" and "I am surrounded by guards under my command". Both of these give social power.
      Neither of them save them once 47 is behind them with a fibre wire or a Silverballer.

    • @agoofyahhchannel6870
      @agoofyahhchannel6870 3 місяці тому

      THE STUPENDIUM MENTIONED GRAAAAAAAH 🔥🔥🔥

  • @lobaandrade7172
    @lobaandrade7172 Рік тому +44

    I like how you end the video in the same place as you began it but with a full suit rather than as a clown 47. A perfect example of how a player’s view of Hitman changes if they focus on the story

  • @yurinakamura1827
    @yurinakamura1827 Рік тому +65

    21:36 It feels like the cathartic revenge genre is something that kicked off in the last decade. Shows like Leverage, "Steal from the rich and powerful thieves and give to their victims and Person of interest "let's save the life of the person being threatened". Its really great and I hope we see more stuff like this.

    • @ErzengelDesLichtes
      @ErzengelDesLichtes Рік тому +20

      You’re describing Robin Hood, which dates back to the 13th century. We still haven’t solved the problem.

    • @Tactical_Tailgater
      @Tactical_Tailgater Рік тому +4

      @@ErzengelDesLichtes The problem is that when we take action, we fuck up

    • @chriscormac231
      @chriscormac231 Рік тому

      @@Tactical_Tailgater because humans are inherently fuck ups, it's a miracle we even *can* survive

  • @comfylung
    @comfylung 2 роки тому +73

    You've said so much I've what I've tried to express about the trilogy. It's very easy to dismiss the plot as paint-by-numbers spy thriller, but IO did a great job of pulling it deeply into the game, its characters, and its mechanics.
    There's a handful of spots I think NPCs reference, unknowingly, the state of the world and a reminder of what 47/Diana are working to tear down. Notably I can think of Sato's speech at the end of the fashion show, where he explains his new fashion line explores duress and the suggestion that "we are all preyed upon by sinister forces". Another is Aiden Kelly in Whittleton Creek, extolling the virtues of Charles Blake III by saying he has no ties to shadowy organizations "pulling the strings".
    In terms of unequivocally evil targets, I feel the most sympathy for Penelope Graves and Wazir Kale, who I don't think are portrayed as such. Kale especially, through his manifestos and his conversation with Neha, shows a softness and a similar set of goals to 47-to tear down the walls of oppression that plague the world.
    This video is an instant sub for me. Keep it up!

  • @TheGamer19856
    @TheGamer19856 2 роки тому +95

    This had ridiculously good production value, and a pretty unique take. Great work man!

  • @Kai-hf5wt
    @Kai-hf5wt 2 роки тому +35

    This Video Essay was an amazing deep dive into Hitman’s story, and I usually don’t see that as much when people review games. Top-Notch Stuff!

  • @thaliasaytransrights8118
    @thaliasaytransrights8118 Рік тому +11

    One interesting intersection of gameplay and story I've noticed is the Colorado mission. IOI goes to great pains to make sure that it is abundantly clear that everyone you kill deserves it, with one exception: Penelope Graves. Killing her makes you feel uncomfortable because it should. You're killing an innocent woman and aiding the shadowy cabal that control the world

  • @MrBrumbo74
    @MrBrumbo74 2 роки тому +62

    I'm just echoing everyone else, but this video is excellently made and very underrated. I never even thought to look at the view count until I read the comments. I'm flabbergasted that you don't have thousands of views. Great video, content, and production!

  • @BrendanHead
    @BrendanHead 2 роки тому +53

    This channel is extremely underrated, I don't understand how this video only has 47 views (nice) when it is so well made and has such a cool unique perspective on the narrative of these games.
    Loved your analysis of Ocean's movies too, keep up the amazing videos and you'll go far!

  • @tomtomhrair8158
    @tomtomhrair8158 2 роки тому +11

    well i'll be damned if this isn't one of the most wonderfully constructed and elegantly put video essays on hitman i've seen! your pacing is on point, the visuals are appropriate yet not distracting, and it's just an all-around delight seeing someone talk more at length about the plot and message of the games (: looking forward to more stuff from you whenever you make a comeback!

  • @zerotakis
    @zerotakis Рік тому +6

    Agent 47's character growth being the ability to resist a death pun in hilarious. Now if there were any wine present, we would for sure still be told it was to die for.

  • @scytheslash
    @scytheslash 2 роки тому +20

    You did a very good job in analyzing a game which a lot of people care about only for it's aesthetics, but it always had a solid design underpinning each and every one of its games throughout it's history. Hitman is primarily seen as a murder simulator but it has always been aware of its commentary on shifting allegiances within power dynamics and tries to stay neutral and above it, simply to market itself i feel (except for Hitman: Absolution).
    The game has always had a very strong feeling tied to its central character, 47 and his relationship with Diana was always meant to be a reflection on how human he was in each version. Personally Hitman 2: Silent Assassin is my favourite because it actually tries to explore Agent 47's humanity but it does so in very brief touches and broad strokes. The franchise is not very captivating to be honest but it has always been aware that people keep coming back to it because of the thrill of control it offers to the player, unlike many other games.

  • @DTLamia
    @DTLamia Рік тому +7

    As someone studying Game Design atm I can't wrap my head around all the effort that went into each level
    Map, Characters and especially all the character routines and reactions are planed to such a high detail

  • @megabuilder15
    @megabuilder15 Рік тому +11

    This is a wonderfully made video, with impressive pacing and a unique take on a game that means a lot to me. Thank you, I really enjoyed what you’ve made!

  • @jackofallartforms
    @jackofallartforms Рік тому +4

    This was a very well done episode, I love long form content that's as dense as this

  • @broshutup56
    @broshutup56 2 роки тому +8

    ive always wanted a critical analysis of hitman’s narrative thank u so much

  • @saints4025
    @saints4025 2 роки тому +9

    Whenever I play the hitman games, I always try to put myself in the mind of Agent 47. Instead of doing the easy routes, or the big boom, tanking my way to my target, I try and do the strategies that the game offers. It makes the cutscenes and the game much more fun and makes much more sense in my opinion.
    Plus it always makes me feel like i watched an action film, or a horror flick. Seeing him stalk down the targets.

  • @Kuso319
    @Kuso319 Рік тому +5

    Firstly, this is wonderful. The part about the random conversation moved me lmao. This was very well done!

  • @w1q2e3r4t5
    @w1q2e3r4t5 Рік тому +3

    oh my god an explanation of the plot of the Hitman series that actually explains what's going on in a way that's (sort of) easy to follow. THANK YOU. The first 5 minutes are better than like... 20 minute explainers

  • @Idkoscar1
    @Idkoscar1 2 роки тому +6

    Underrated as hell, Good job dude! Had a moment of shock when i saw the view count.

  • @towerbunga
    @towerbunga 2 роки тому +8

    FINALLY SOMEBODY WHO APPREICIATES THE GAMES STORY! THANK YOU FOR MAKING THIS AND AMAZING VIDEO!

  • @WeAreAlexandra
    @WeAreAlexandra Рік тому +4

    Absolutely love this video!! Finally, someone gives this plot the respect it deserves!

  • @caaltbleck6144
    @caaltbleck6144 Рік тому +2

    Loved the transition at 16:18

  • @TheSpyder49
    @TheSpyder49 Рік тому +4

    something thats not entirely touched on is that 47 also has a compulsion to be the funniest person in the room with nothing but dramatic irony. he literally cant help himself. why is he like this.

  • @primary2630
    @primary2630 Рік тому +3

    "He's a master of seemingly every skill"
    *cuts to Masseus 47 and DJ 47*
    LMAO I always thought it was hilarious in Bangkok and Berlin how 47 is a pro sound mixer

    • @fl2terer
      @fl2terer Рік тому

      That skill wasn't taught, he learned it himself

  • @_x3o_
    @_x3o_ 4 місяці тому +1

    this was incredibly written and very eloquently spoken, amazing work man

  • @X-SPONGED
    @X-SPONGED Рік тому +11

    I think The Constant's conversation with Block illustrates a good point. All they truly have for power is cash. Without it, they're just like you and me, ordinary people just with fatter wallets. They can order people around, command monuments built for them, make bioweapons, play chess with entire nations. But at the end of the day, strip them from everything they have and put them in a pit. They're as pitiful as a stray dog with no home to go to. When all the money in the world is meaningless, what do you have to offer? 99% of the ark society has nothing to offer if the world ends. Everyone will have to work in the end, no amount of throwing money at the problem can fix it if money doesn't have value anymore. That's why the solution is ridiculously simple in the Hitman games. A bad guy does bad stuff? Well, kill him then! Because it's seriously that simple. They're not superhuman even those that believe they are. In the end of the day, a speedy silverball to the back of the head is equal to both the poor and the rich no matter how you slice it. No matter how high you stand, no matter what power you command. No matter how many goons you pay, empires you've built, money you own, influence you have, you are NOT untouchable. Nothing in this universe is untouchable. Not the stars, nor the planets, and especially not you.

  • @MrFuzzwuzzle
    @MrFuzzwuzzle Рік тому +5

    Most people think its an action/stealth shooter
    When its actually a puzzle game disguised as a stealth shooter

  • @mlc9928
    @mlc9928 Рік тому

    Your audio is so good. Top quality. Actually soothing to listen to. I’ve noticed that a lot in various hitman UA-camrs. It’s a very good community.

  • @dodgethis5290
    @dodgethis5290 Рік тому +4

    Really great video mate! I love the chapter about power. It's true that the storytelling takes a back seat in these games (that I also love), but your thoughts on the matter really hit home with how the story made me feel.

  • @videocrowsnest5251
    @videocrowsnest5251 Рік тому +8

    While the temptation might be there, I would personally caution against labeling even the worst humanity has to offer as monsters. Because it can make it easy to forget they are just human beings, albeit very nasty ones, who choose to be horrid. The problem with labeling such people as monsters and dehumanizing them is that this easily makes one forget that they are just people, and thus we can never learn to keep an eye out for the warning signs to stop such people from developing into the end point when there is still a chance to intervene. As well, it washes the hands of the people in question a bit too much to call them monsters, because it implies that it isn't down to the fact they are choosing to be horrid, but somehow a matter of "destiny" or as if being a jerk is akin to an illness they got no control over. It's all a choice. They are people who choose to be absolute menaces, and that people component is best kept firmly in mind...you never know when you might cross paths with a person fast on their way to becoming this kind of person, and be in the position to intervene to alter the trajectory of their life path to not end up like this.

  • @GothBear
    @GothBear Рік тому

    this is a wonderful examination which put a finger I didn't know I was holding a pulse I was not truly looking for. thank you.

  • @rexesshadow8628
    @rexesshadow8628 Рік тому +1

    A great essay and and even better video in total.

  • @Niobesnuppa
    @Niobesnuppa 5 місяців тому +1

    Very good video. I'm glad to see others giving this story some love, because it's a lot more well written than many people give it credit for. I really started appreciating it more after replaying the game for a second time and playing through each level much more quickly than I did the first time, so it felt more coherent.

  • @kekmitkeks9328
    @kekmitkeks9328 2 роки тому

    Super cool Video! I really like the way you are analyzing the narrative

  • @Iceman4096
    @Iceman4096 2 роки тому +2

    Phenomenal video. Definitely worth the watch.

  • @rosemarythedrow
    @rosemarythedrow Рік тому +1

    First off -- the madlad's made a 20 minute info to state that killing the rich feels good. I mean same.
    And otherwise, that was a bloody well made piece. Thank you for the time and effort. Love your wide angle and nice delivery

  • @MrTobiasRieper
    @MrTobiasRieper 2 роки тому +5

    damn, I thought this was a pretty big channel by that prod value! A pretty good video!

  • @nuv2987
    @nuv2987 Рік тому +1

    hitman has always had a lot love for me as it’s been one of the most fun and funny games i’ve ever played, but i started paying more attention to the story in this past game and fell in love even mote

  • @conscience_effort
    @conscience_effort Рік тому +1

    This video is amazing my guy👏🏽👏🏽

  • @Khakiasp
    @Khakiasp 2 роки тому +1

    amazing video essay! as a hitman fan its great to see a video essay on the story for once!

  • @zephels
    @zephels Рік тому +8

    While the story and all that is certainly good and makes a great point, I'd like to acknowledge how damn good the dialogue is between characters. I genuinely believe that these games have some of the best random encounter dialogue in any game or movie. They managed to litter the game with heaps of subtle jokes without making it feel like a marvel movie.

  • @Sice64
    @Sice64 2 роки тому +2

    Glad this showed up in my recommended, great video! (Also your voice reminds me of Charborg)

  • @dingusmaximus4492
    @dingusmaximus4492 Рік тому

    16:29 nice edit. Simple and effective like Agent 47. You earned yourself a subscriber.

  • @undeathghost5627
    @undeathghost5627 Рік тому

    Beautifully done vid and well spoken and thought out.

  • @K4g4m1
    @K4g4m1 Рік тому +1

    I'm glad I clicked on this video. Many video essays turn out to be a lot less interesting than they appear at a glance but this was fascinating.

  • @AlejandroVargas-cx7gk
    @AlejandroVargas-cx7gk Рік тому +2

    I'm so happy that 47 it's getting so much love. I've been a fan since Hitman 2: Silent Assassin, and it brings a smile to see constant new content.
    Come to think of it, Hitman is the only one standing from the classic stealth videogame era. MGS is gone, so is Splinter Cell, Tenchu, Commandos, and Thief.

  • @lightninbolt986
    @lightninbolt986 Рік тому +1

    This deserves far more appreciation and interaction that it has

  • @pumpkingpie2938
    @pumpkingpie2938 Рік тому +1

    I love the way this video seems like it's made by the Hitman Devs. Amazing work, Connor!

  • @untitledgooseguy1279
    @untitledgooseguy1279 5 місяців тому

    Impeccable video essay!

  • @9393Technate
    @9393Technate 19 днів тому

    Beautiful Video Essay!

  • @MattyJii3334-5
    @MattyJii3334-5 Місяць тому

    This is the third time watching this video and it never fails to amaze me every time I watch it and this truly deserves all the praise it has gotten and more love this and I thank you ❤

  • @daniel_ghax
    @daniel_ghax 2 роки тому

    Awsome essay man! Keep it up!

  • @sobhanzahedi1290
    @sobhanzahedi1290 Рік тому

    Such a good video, really great work, i loved it

  • @MrFamma91
    @MrFamma91 Рік тому

    great video and you have made some very interesting points!

  • @onepoundfish3574
    @onepoundfish3574 2 роки тому +3

    Inrcredible essay!

  • @johnnyg1955
    @johnnyg1955 Рік тому

    amazing video, you're underrated as heck

  • @theycaIImehan
    @theycaIImehan 2 роки тому +3

    Im kinda late, but your channel is soo underrated

  • @channelnamehere3522
    @channelnamehere3522 Рік тому

    Thank you for this masterpiece of a Hitman video!

  • @weston8751
    @weston8751 Рік тому

    Awesome commentary and conclusions!

  • @ryansmith1794
    @ryansmith1794 Рік тому +1

    This video made me appreciate the Hitman story so much more

  • @Skriak
    @Skriak 2 роки тому

    Great analysis of a great series! It would ho nestly be a good primer for someone already interested in trying the games.

  • @marioformicadae6637
    @marioformicadae6637 Рік тому +3

    It's sad how underrated this franchise is, most people just think its mindless murder simulator, lol

  • @smoothcheese470
    @smoothcheese470 2 роки тому +3

    how the hell does this guy have only 139 subs !!! GET THIS MAN MORE SUBS !

  • @Swadiy
    @Swadiy Рік тому +1

    The Chongquing conversation is such a fun insight into 47’s character

  • @bundleofstyx
    @bundleofstyx Рік тому

    how do you have so few subscribers, this (and all your videos) is amazing!!!!

  • @Samv769
    @Samv769 2 роки тому +7

    The philosophy of this game is very cool !

  • @STANDARDISSUE_
    @STANDARDISSUE_ Рік тому +1

    I love how you have the option to treat this as a fun murder simulator or a serious and dangerous task you meticulously trudge through as an emotionless machine, it really changes the mood a lot.

  • @dudeman1983
    @dudeman1983 5 місяців тому +1

    A small but somewhat impactful addition: while Hitman has stealth elements, it is largely a _puzzle-solving_ game. The puzzles aren't easy to see as puzzles, but they absolutely aren't your typical stealth mission fodder, either. Like you said, Hitman is blunt, and while he can dress up easily very little of what he can do has to be stealthy.
    Looking at your analysis from this perspective, it shifts the whole idea of "what do we need to do to defeat this broken system". It is absolutely a power fantasy, but it is also ostensibly a school-playground, where students go to learn to analyze, deconstruct, and navigate these same massive, complex, and unique scenarios out in the wide world. You begin to get the idea that the devs are saying "we feel this pain, so we made a tool others can use. Practice, learn, and use."

  • @liz5100
    @liz5100 Рік тому

    I know this video is only about the newer trilogy, but I have to say that at 18:00 when you talk about the core fantasy of Hitman is I could suddenly viscerally remember what it was like to make the first kill in the Hitman game First Blood I think. As someone who grew up right before the 2008 recession I was getting that catharsis.

  • @lonepylon
    @lonepylon 26 днів тому

    THANK YOU FOR THIS!! It pains me how much this trilogy's underlying themes and overarching story are glossed over by impatient players. I have a degree in film studies, so I tend to over-analyze narratives and pay close attention to even the most microscopic details of media that intrigues me. It's been frustrating trying to find analyses that actually pay attention to the story in WoA, so this was really refreshing to hear.
    I especially enjoyed how you went into detail about the actual commentaries of the trilogy, which isn't something I've heard people talk about. Even though I disagree with your conclusion on the ending, this was still a fascinating watch. Excellent work!

  • @Ikcatcher
    @Ikcatcher Рік тому +14

    I always enjoy when people analyse game stories when the plot isn’t exactly why people played it in the first place

  • @enbybunny9940
    @enbybunny9940 Рік тому +10

    This essay is S-tier for many reasons, but my favorite part was the fact that you talked about the bridge dialogue in Chonqing.
    It’s one of my favorite pieces of dialogue in the entire trilogy, and I often find myself listening to the whole thing any time I’m put in that starting location. Being able to hear the subtle compassion in his voice is something that is so riveting and unique to hear from 47.

  • @fischyfischy7532
    @fischyfischy7532 2 роки тому +2

    i can never have enough hitman essays

  • @justhavingfunhere
    @justhavingfunhere Рік тому

    great video. it gave me goosebumps

  • @FSG-Cat
    @FSG-Cat Рік тому +7

    I would say that the conclusion to the story doesnt make as much sense until you realise it was not finished. Its more fair to say the story is finished with Freelancer as the directors commentary for Untouchable or The Fearwell makes a comment about Agent 47s own agency and his own comments about his work with Diana. Freelancer after all takes 47 and dependent on how you look as it makes him the primary controller with Diana only providing minimal assistance in the form of information of who is the target and how to identify said target in the case of Showdowns. (Plus as far as i remember the timeline is that freelancer takes place about a year after edwards is taken care of so that does align with the time skip that the new deal cutscene mentions.)

  • @erik-sr9bj
    @erik-sr9bj 2 роки тому +2

    Incredible man

  • @konstm.s.236
    @konstm.s.236 Рік тому

    I loved this video. I used to watch a video series that analyzed the plot of every mission you play. This game has so much story its sad they did do more with it in the end.

  • @lobaandrade7172
    @lobaandrade7172 Рік тому

    Finally someone who focuses on the underrated story if this trilogy rather than the over analyzed (but still genius) gameplay

  • @luminus8187
    @luminus8187 Рік тому +2

    “They’re will be no shortage of people to replace the hole that 47 create”
    Queue in freelancer BABYYY