At the start of the fight, he says that the Ashen One may 'have rest', as though he sees slaying them as a Mercy Kill. But you may rest here too, if you like." line can seem like he's snarking over your death, but think about what he's actually saying. Lothric's " This spot marks our grave.
![dark souls 3 gestures dark souls 3 gestures](https://res.cloudinary.com/lmn/image/upload/c_limit,e_sharpen:150,f_auto,fl_lossy,h_360,q_80,w_640/v1/gameskinnyc/2/0/1/20160427132846-8b0aa.jpg)
He cares so much about Lorian that he's willing to expose himself to danger to cast the revival spell.
![dark souls 3 gestures dark souls 3 gestures](https://venomhideout.files.wordpress.com/2014/05/wpid-1400519837159id1406533.gif)
Almost as if he came back to say " Hey! Remember cheesing me out last time, you cheeky little upstart? Let's have at it one more time.the proper way, this time!", and boy does he give the players a proper final showdown. The second/last phase of the fight is a rematch with Gwyn himself.Their use of spells from Dark Souls II indicates that they might also be incarnations of Bearers of the Curse who took the throne and linked the fire.Every Chosen Undead who ever linked the First Flame, embodied in the Final Boss of the Grand Finale. But not just one Chosen Undead, they're all of them. It's likely only when they take up their curved sword moveset and does a Dark Wood Grain Ring backflip that you realise: they're the Chosen Undead. At first, they attack you with a sword and it seems like just another big, armored enemy. You walk into the Final Boss fight, unsure what to expect. On a meta level, the Soul of Cinder's first phase.Even at the end of the world, there are still warm moments to be found in the ashes.Īs a Moments subpage, all spoilers are unmarked as per policy.