I beat PoE2 like a red-haired stepchild. The end game has basically 5 different options. All involve you going to the lost city of Ukaizo, where the machinery that runs the forces of reincarnation in the world reside. The only real difference is how you get there. Either with the help of one of the four main factions, or totally on your own.
Since I was feeling pretty disgusted by all the factions, I went it alone. Though I do have second thoughts about maybe helping the native Huana. They are the faction I find least detestable, simply because their Deadfire is their home, and all the other factions are either colonial powers intent upon their conquest, or just plain criminals. Speaking of which, the Pirates are the faction I like second most, after the Huana. At least they are honest villains.
The final two factions are the Rauatai and the Vailians. The Rauatai remind me of Imperial Japan from the late 1800s through WWII. They are from a very hierarchical, aggressively expansionist society ruled by a military-industrial complex. The Royal Deadfire Company is their official presence in the area. But in reality it is just one part of the Rauatian Navy, staffed by the military. Along with this comes a healthy (or unhealthy) dose of contempt for members of every other culture. It is not racism per se, because the Huana are of the same race as them. Rather it is Nationalism and xenophobia. The Huana are beneath them, put in the world for them to crush and reduce them to what is slavery in everything but name.
The Vailian Trading Company is more like King Leopold II of Belgium, or the British Empire/East India Company. Where the Rauatians are overtly militaristic, they are overtly capitalistic, with absolutely no ethical or moral restraint. For example, they are blatant slavers. There is even an incident you can get involved in where the Vailians tricked a local Huanan chief into signing over the sovereignty of his island and tribe, all written in a contract that he literally could not read. Leopold II did this exact thing when he conquered the Congo. It was the pretext he used afterward to commit genocide, and start lopping off hands.
The Huana themselves are the natives of the Deadfire, the region the game takes place in. They are heavily inspired by Polynesian/Maori culture, with a smidgin of the Caribbean tossed in for good measure. Pirates and all. They have an inflexible caste system that leaves their poorest literally starving to death. There is one incident where a chief whose whole island is teetering on the brink of starvation executes a man for saving the seeds of their produce, so they can be replanted for the next year. This really got my goat. On one hand, a society too stupid to save their seeds to plant for the next harvest literally does not deserve to survive. Not from a moral standpoint. But from a Natural Selection one. If they are so incapable of surviving, nature will weed them out. That is just how reality works. But on the other hand, who the F is writing this crap? I mean, hunter-gatherers figured out the whole saving seeds and planting them thing tens of thousands of years ago. Do the game's developers really expect us to believe that these people are so utterly idiotic? It really pissed me off at the game designers themselves.
Finally there are the Principi, who are the pirates. They are divided into an old school gentlemanly breed of Vailians who like to put on airs of moral and cultural superiority, and opposite them are the new blood, who are just plain pirates with no pretensions. Turns out the old school guys are also in bed with slavers. While the new blood wants you to wipe out the slavers to destroy the old blood's power base. Not hard to choose sides after all there. But still, they were pirates, so Jan was not going to work with them. But I have to admit, Captain Aeldys of the new bloods did have a lot of flair and style. I liked her. She is a scruffy-looking scoundrel, and probably herded a few nerf in her day as well.
There are also the gods, who feature a lot more prominently in PoE2 than they did in PoE1. They seem to be written specifically to irritate me. Seriously, they are one arrogant, insufferable, repulsive lot. It really made me sympathetic to the one rogue god who is out to destroy the world. That is the plot of the game. The god Eothas who gets some mentions in PoE1 is back to finish what he tried to start before he was blown up by the Godhammer. It is not quite destroying the world, but close. He is going to destroy the machinery that created the gods in the first place. His end game is to end the gods. He knows he is going to die in the process. He knows he has to.
Unfortunately a side effect seems to be that the whole process of reincarnation in the world will also grind to a halt. Though they are kind of vague on this, as it did exist before the gods were created by this same machinery. Likewise whether or not this will actually end the gods is a headscratcher for me as well. Because some of the dialogue at the end makes me think they will still be around, just weakened. In any case the threat here is that with no way of souls to be reborn in new bodies, all life on the planet will eventually become extinct. Unless the kith (people) can find a way on their own to restore the Wheel. Whether or not that happens is left to a sequel, if another game in the series is ever made.
So in any case I went to Ukaizo, where there is an insane final boss fight before you get to talk to Eothas one last time before he ends the world. You cannot stop him. All you can really do is try to temper his actions in various ways, or push him into all-out entropy and ending everything for good. January, being January, convinced him to send his power into the souls of inventors and experimenters and thinkers and philosophers, so that they would have a better chance to finding a way to literally reinvent the Wheel of Life and Death.
Because January did not pick a side, the Deadfire was locked in chaos afterward, as all four factions continued to squabble and fight. It was open war between Rauatai and the Huana, while the Vailians exploited the countryside with the Huana's back's turned. The pirates, being pirates, of course profited by preying upon all the new Vailian ships hauling away the Huana's riches. That makes me wish I had stuck with the Huana in spite of the poor light they are portrayed in.
That is one of the things I really did not like about both PoE games. This need by Obsidian to portray every side as being awful. I get it that they are trying to create real factions/nations, all with their own unique personalities. And in the real world there is no such thing as a White Knight country. They all have their ugly sides. But I don't play computer games because I want more of the real world. I want to get away from how my country sucks, and how every other one does as well, just in different languages. I don't insist on a picture perfect society to support. But I do want the people I am helping to be worth saving. That is one of my mandates in my writing, as a matter of fact. Obsidian does not deliver that, by choice.
Will I play it again? Sure. I am little burned out right now, so I am going to move to something else. Maybe Baldur's Gate. It is worth playing? Yes. The combat - where you can find it - is really good. The world-building was really well done, if nihilistic in many respects. There are tons of options in character building. Lots to explore. Lots of quests. Much more moddable than the first game. Solid RPG fare. Buy it when it is on sale and you should not be disappointed.
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