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Forums - Microsoft - How did you finish the fight? *Reach Spoilers*

after the credits i was soo angry that noble 6 was alive until it said survive i thought survive for a while right then i kept dodging covy ship shots for 5 mins and killing elites my helmet almsot full cracked then i realised that i have to die i went down fragging two elites and the third killed me then the cutscene rolled in i was like no why did i want him to die i was sad.its the first time i was cheering for someone to die and when he dies i was like why did i want him to die



 

 

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AnthonyW86 said:

I thought we ''finished the fight'' in Halo 3?



As this is a prequel, the fight only just started. Though with that said, this CC style ending sounds awesome.



PS One/2/p/3slim/Vita owner. I survived the Apocalyps3/Collaps3 and all I got was this lousy signature.


Xbox One: What are you doing Dave?

Khuutra said:

My brother and me - how could I play through in any way but in co-op? - booted up the level after taking a break for food. We thought it was going to be the grand finale, some huge explosive thing that would justify the horror and death we had seen up to that point.

But we hadn't been to Reach. We didn't understand.

We should have realized things were different from the start, but it took a minute of just looking around. I think it was the light, ultimately, that betrayed everything. Harsh enough that you couldn't see more than a hundred yards in any direction. After the huge and sweeping vistas of the entire rest of the game, there was a certain inevitability implied by the light. The world had drawn in, shrunk down to this microcosm where we were dooomed to meet our end. It was me, and my brother, and whatever monsters were lurching in from the light. Yeah. Yeah, it was the light that betrayed everything.

The first thing we did was run for the shack - for the shadows. We braced ourselves there, pulling out our DMRs, scoping our surroundings. We saw them out there, shadows moving against the background of the universe. Neither of us moved - it was probably only fifteen seconds, but it felt like a long time. We talked for a minute. We knew what was coming. We agreed on one thing:

We would stay by each other. We would not die alone.

The battle was almost meaningless, but those final moments had more meaning than can be communicated in any other way. We picked off Grunts whose heads exploded like firecrackers, throwing grenades behind the defensive lines of Jackals and picking off the remainders. He would handle the Grunts who supported them with his DMR while I lay down suppressing fire with my Assault Rifle, giving the Jackals no opportunity to come together. For one long minute we were unstoppable avatars of death, and I felt Heroic, as if I had earned the title.

Then the Elites came.

It didn't last long. A grenade that fell between us nearly killed us both - I took the worst of it, was knocked down into the red health. To my own credit I never stopped firing. I saw the one who threw the grenade, and I stuck him, and he died in a hail of blue fire. My brother was peppering the lot of them, tossing grenades to make them jump, trying to buy seconds.

When things ended, it was my fault. I broke the line, but I was dying and I was angry and I was afraid. I picked one Elite with a fancy crest on his head, and I said to my brother "That one's mine." He didn't argue. "Go for it," I remember him saying.

I did. I went forward, and every round from my DMR found his head. I threw a grenade, he jumped, I tracked, I kept firing. The other Elites were bearing down on me, my shields were gone again and my health was evaporating, but I got in its face with that last round and bashed in its skull with the butt of my rifle. It was the sweetest kill I had ever made.

Then one got me in the back and it screamed in triumph as I fell. I saw my brother kill it, leaping onto its back and pulling back its head and jamming his knife into its neck. He fought after that, but nobody could last long. One grenade thrown, a few Assault Rifle bursts fired into the unfeeling throng, and then an Elite hit him from behind.

"Hey," he said to me as I lay in the dirt, "we did good, didn't we?"

"Good?" I said. "Good? Little man, we conquered the world."

Then we died together. Fifteen hundred miles apart, me and my brother died together at the end of a long journey that had been frought with dying. This death was final. It was the end of everything. I can't explain what it was like, lying there in the dirt as my brother died.

But I think you know. You were there. You have been to Reach.

That was amazing, I think you brought a tear to my eye...

I mean cool, yea manly stuff and cheese burgers!



                                           

                      The definitive evidence that video games turn people into mass murderers

Khuutra said:

My brother and me - how could I play through in any way but in co-op? - booted up the level after taking a break for food. We thought it was going to be the grand finale, some huge explosive thing that would justify the horror and death we had seen up to that point.

But we hadn't been to Reach. We didn't understand.

We should have realized things were different from the start, but it took a minute of just looking around. I think it was the light, ultimately, that betrayed everything. Harsh enough that you couldn't see more than a hundred yards in any direction. After the huge and sweeping vistas of the entire rest of the game, there was a certain inevitability implied by the light. The world had drawn in, shrunk down to this microcosm where we were dooomed to meet our end. It was me, and my brother, and whatever monsters were lurching in from the light. Yeah. Yeah, it was the light that betrayed everything.

The first thing we did was run for the shack - for the shadows. We braced ourselves there, pulling out our DMRs, scoping our surroundings. We saw them out there, shadows moving against the background of the universe. Neither of us moved - it was probably only fifteen seconds, but it felt like a long time. We talked for a minute. We knew what was coming. We agreed on one thing:

We would stay by each other. We would not die alone.

The battle was almost meaningless, but those final moments had more meaning than can be communicated in any other way. We picked off Grunts whose heads exploded like firecrackers, throwing grenades behind the defensive lines of Jackals and picking off the remainders. He would handle the Grunts who supported them with his DMR while I lay down suppressing fire with my Assault Rifle, giving the Jackals no opportunity to come together. For one long minute we were unstoppable avatars of death, and I felt Heroic, as if I had earned the title.

Then the Elites came.

It didn't last long. A grenade that fell between us nearly killed us both - I took the worst of it, was knocked down into the red health. To my own credit I never stopped firing. I saw the one who threw the grenade, and I stuck him, and he died in a hail of blue fire. My brother was peppering the lot of them, tossing grenades to make them jump, trying to buy seconds.

When things ended, it was my fault. I broke the line, but I was dying and I was angry and I was afraid. I picked one Elite with a fancy crest on his head, and I said to my brother "That one's mine." He didn't argue. "Go for it," I remember him saying.

I did. I went forward, and every round from my DMR found his head. I threw a grenade, he jumped, I tracked, I kept firing. The other Elites were bearing down on me, my shields were gone again and my health was evaporating, but I got in its face with that last round and bashed in its skull with the butt of my rifle. It was the sweetest kill I had ever made.

Then one got me in the back and it screamed in triumph as I fell. I saw my brother kill it, leaping onto its back and pulling back its head and jamming his knife into its neck. He fought after that, but nobody could last long. One grenade thrown, a few Assault Rifle bursts fired into the unfeeling throng, and then an Elite hit him from behind.

"Hey," he said to me as I lay in the dirt, "we did good, didn't we?"

"Good?" I said. "Good? Little man, we conquered the world."

Then we died together. Fifteen hundred miles apart, me and my brother died together at the end of a long journey that had been frought with dying. This death was final. It was the end of everything. I can't explain what it was like, lying there in the dirt as my brother died.

But I think you know. You were there. You have been to Reach.


Dear God, Khuutra! I wasn't ready for that.

I am glad you enjoyed the last level, and I'm so happy to hear it made such a great impact on many others besides me. I also didn't know the details of Reach fully, and I really wasn't expecting this ending. I don't know if I mentioned in my first post, but when Cortana "chose" us, I thought we were Master Chief. I was getting all pumped up and when I was at the Pillar of Autumn I thought: "This is it! Time to escape and then save the world!"

 

But then........ :(

 

Amazing post. Thank you for sharing your story, Khuutra.



I just beat it this morning so I can finally read this thread!

The credits were rolling and I went to take a shit.  When I came back, I was alone on the platform and the Covenant were everywhere.  I grabbed a turret, hopped down and started wrecking shop.  The turret ran out of ammo so I switched to my weapons......a fucking pistol and a sniper rifle.  Noble 6 took the beating of a lifetime before finally dying.  I think I'm going to start playing Halo 3, now.  I think a little revenge is in order.



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Khuutra said:

My brother and me - how could I play through in any way but in co-op? - booted up the level after taking a break for food. We thought it was going to be the grand finale, some huge explosive thing that would justify the horror and death we had seen up to that point.

But we hadn't been to Reach. We didn't understand.

We should have realized things were different from the start, but it took a minute of just looking around. I think it was the light, ultimately, that betrayed everything. Harsh enough that you couldn't see more than a hundred yards in any direction. After the huge and sweeping vistas of the entire rest of the game, there was a certain inevitability implied by the light. The world had drawn in, shrunk down to this microcosm where we were dooomed to meet our end. It was me, and my brother, and whatever monsters were lurching in from the light. Yeah. Yeah, it was the light that betrayed everything.

The first thing we did was run for the shack - for the shadows. We braced ourselves there, pulling out our DMRs, scoping our surroundings. We saw them out there, shadows moving against the background of the universe. Neither of us moved - it was probably only fifteen seconds, but it felt like a long time. We talked for a minute. We knew what was coming. We agreed on one thing:

We would stay by each other. We would not die alone.

The battle was almost meaningless, but those final moments had more meaning than can be communicated in any other way. We picked off Grunts whose heads exploded like firecrackers, throwing grenades behind the defensive lines of Jackals and picking off the remainders. He would handle the Grunts who supported them with his DMR while I lay down suppressing fire with my Assault Rifle, giving the Jackals no opportunity to come together. For one long minute we were unstoppable avatars of death, and I felt Heroic, as if I had earned the title.

Then the Elites came.

It didn't last long. A grenade that fell between us nearly killed us both - I took the worst of it, was knocked down into the red health. To my own credit I never stopped firing. I saw the one who threw the grenade, and I stuck him, and he died in a hail of blue fire. My brother was peppering the lot of them, tossing grenades to make them jump, trying to buy seconds.

When things ended, it was my fault. I broke the line, but I was dying and I was angry and I was afraid. I picked one Elite with a fancy crest on his head, and I said to my brother "That one's mine." He didn't argue. "Go for it," I remember him saying.

I did. I went forward, and every round from my DMR found his head. I threw a grenade, he jumped, I tracked, I kept firing. The other Elites were bearing down on me, my shields were gone again and my health was evaporating, but I got in its face with that last round and bashed in its skull with the butt of my rifle. It was the sweetest kill I had ever made.

Then one got me in the back and it screamed in triumph as I fell. I saw my brother kill it, leaping onto its back and pulling back its head and jamming his knife into its neck. He fought after that, but nobody could last long. One grenade thrown, a few Assault Rifle bursts fired into the unfeeling throng, and then an Elite hit him from behind.

"Hey," he said to me as I lay in the dirt, "we did good, didn't we?"

"Good?" I said. "Good? Little man, we conquered the world."

Then we died together. Fifteen hundred miles apart, me and my brother died together at the end of a long journey that had been frought with dying. This death was final. It was the end of everything. I can't explain what it was like, lying there in the dirt as my brother died.

But I think you know. You were there. You have been to Reach.

I just read every post in this thread and when I got to yours.....dear God.  Remember that scene in Forest Gump when he talked about the war in Vietnam (The war in Viet-Fuckin'-Nam) and when he finished, all the guy beside him could do was put his hand on Forest's shoulder?  That's how I feel right now after reading your post.  Powerful stuff.  I don't think I can remember any other video game that has provided something similar that I can relate to. 

I beat the game by myself.  My little girl (did I mention I'm a terrible father?) teamed up with me until the last level and then she went to eat some nachos and watch Spongebob.  Part of me wishes she was there for that battle.  Part of me is glad she didn't experience the horror of that scene!



In a blaze of glory. Not unlike Billy the Kid.



You're supposed to activate god mode.



Id dropped the difficulty to Normal as Id got in a tight spot at the end of the previous level, meaning I survived for a bit. Tried it on Heroic and Legendary and got killed much quicker, but will probably try again to see how long I can last. Normally, I use to turret seeing as you have pretty minimal ammo.

The level always remind of a song called Lone Wolf by some random band called The Eels, not a great song but would probably make good backing music for a youtube video of the level.

Also, notice the dead spartan next to one of the turrets, is that meant to be anyone in particular, and why was this not a firefight map?