![]() In short, having a classical happy ending might have been a worse choice (and Daedalic isn't famous for doing happy endings either). whatever he might say to the contrary, Rufus definitely belongs on Deponia, and I can't imagine him living in Elysium with his personality. And, like Kayeka said, it keeps you thinking about it, which is a good thing.Īlso, I'm not sure that finally landing Rufus on Elysium would have actually worked. It's "different", no doubt, and definitely defies expectations, and it may also be a bit underwhelming but those are not necessarily bad things, at all. But after thinking about it for a few minutes I realised that I actually liked it very much. I had your same reaction at first (though maybe a bit less forceful XD) I wanted more from the ending. ![]() It makes me almost want to take back my positive review of the game. yet we never even get to go there, even for the final bits of the game. Yet, after the entire series, we keep getting told about Elysium blah blah blah and Utopia blah blah blah. What complete BS.Īnother thing is that you'd expect to be able to go to Elysium for at least part of the final game, or maybe even go to Utopia, because these two places play an important part in the game. and then after we do all that in the very end we jump from a spaceship and commit suicide. First, we meet this guy and convince him to kill himself (multiple times), then we get a pedophile and have to touch his genitals and make a print of it, then we have to separate a couple and sell a black woman into slavery (the said woman is then called a monkey), then we have to get hung on a skyscraper, and then we have to feed children to a monster. It's almost like the writer of the game went full emo for the final part of the trilogy. ![]() ![]() but when Rufus jumps down somehow Cletus is still saved, and we don't know what happened to Argus. They said that if one guy leaves the rotor then the other two will die. Not to mention it doesn't even follow its own logic. In addition, how did Cletus end up back on the ship after he already jumped off? To me, it just seems like a deus ex machina, except one that brings you to a bad ending. Cletus is still alive (and maybe Argus as well) and it appears that Elysium still has to either destroy Deponia or land back down. With around 20 hours of gameplay and over 100 game backgrounds, Deponia Doomsday is the largest and most elaborate Deponia game so farĭeponia Doomsday serves a timeless (!) genre and once again resurrects classic adventuresĭeponia Doomsday will get its PC release early next week, and will cost $29.99.I just finished the game, and what the frick? You just jump off and die?! I mean, I get the idea that the developers wanted to show that Rufus has changed and that he isn't selfish anymore, but what a f*cking trash ending! After 30 hours and 3 games, all you end up doing is jumping down from space and dying? And we don't even know what happens to Elysium and Deponia. The player discovers the floating city of Elysium for the first time Goal, Lonzo, Lotti and even Wenzel – Reunions with familiar and over 70 new oddball characters Rufus travels through time – with dramatic consequences Utopia mixed with Neill Blomkamp’s Elysium and Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar – Welcome to Deponia Doomsday!įan service: Some players called for an alternate ending and another part to the Deponia saga The game’s Steam listing confirms the following features:ĭystopia vs. When Rufus suddenly awakes in his bed, however, he’ll have to establish whether what he saw was a true premonition. It’s useful, then, that Rufus finds a time machine and immediately sets out to duly muddle up the past, present and future. He sees only one way out: Deponia must be blown up. In Deponia Doomsday, the flying city of Elysium has fallen, hideous Fewlocks inhabit the junk planet Deponia and Rufus is apparently the sole (human) survivor.
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