Patricier21 Member. BlackOsprey said:. That door there was the Door to Darkness. A portal to the realm where Heartless originate, and the plane of existence that the one true Kingdom Hearts disappeared into. That light that destroyed Ansem like he was a vampire? It came from the Kingdom Hearts that Ansem created using mashed-together hearts of destroyed worlds. If you take a look inside of the RoD from the door's perspective, you can see a faint white light illuminating the background.
Who knows? I guess the realm borders can be kind of wonky, especially if you're someone like Riku. He could've accidentally phased through without knowing it. For now, assume "Disney magic, video game logic, or plot shenanigans" and don't worry about it. Ansem wasn't calling the door "Kingdom Hearts," he was calling out to what was beyond that door. As I said before, it is a door to darkness, and a light shines in that deepest darkness.
Enough light to vaporize a villain, it would seem. KeybladeLordSora Motivation. Well, for Riku getting to Castle Oblivion, let's sweep that under the rug. Chuman Dad of Boy. How did they get there? Where the heck is it? Why does it just so happen to lead to Castle Oblivion? Is it a place that can lead to a lot of worlds, or is it just some scenic borderland around the worlds situated in the Realm of In-Between?
Oathkeyper97 New member. Joined Jun 3, Messages 82 Reaction score 0 Points 0. Vexen asks "Riku, you say? Has he emerged from the realm of darkness? Oathkeyper97 said:. He's referring to the girl without a body that he meets in the Final World, which all evidence points to being Ava, the one Foreteller who doesn't appear in the scene where Xigbar summons them. Because Yozora was able to visit The Final World, this would be how Ava knows about him, and how she was able to tell Sora about him.
But that also brings up the question of how Yozora knows Sora. Considering he brought Sora to Shibuya, Yozora could have heard about him from the TWEWY characters, or it could be part of the Master of Master's schemes, considering we see him in the secret ending of the base game.
The Master of Masters seems to be the link between everything right now, despite how little we've seen of him. He gave Xigbar his task, which leads to him summoning the foretellers. Past this, the final scene of the secret episode shot-for-shot recreated one of the trailers for Final Fantasy Versus XIII, and the good ending holds another interesting clue. In this ending, the driver of the car wakes up Yozora, and you might notice he has the exact same voice, and voice actor, as Luxord - as well as the same haircut.
ReMind hints at a secret identity for Luxord when he's talking to Xigbar, and there's still the matter of the wild card that he gives to Sora near the end of the game. With Luxord in the final scene of the Secret Episode, the wild card is undoubtedly going to come into play as you learn more about Yozora. So what's next? That's the question on every fan's mind with the end of the Dark Seeker Saga.
Well, the next game is Project Xehanort on mobile , likely explaining more backstory on Xehanort and his connection with the Master of Masters. With Xehanort out of the way as a villain, however, we'll start to see more and more of the grand scheme that the Master of Masters has been building, as well as what's in that infernal box that's been teased for multiple games. He flies into the moon of Kingdom Hearts in the sky as a ghost, helped along by his old friend Master Eraqus whom he had slain in Birth By Sleep after getting too greedy about darkness.
Holding one another, their ghostly selves turn into their young teenage selves, about the same age as the rest of the crew. Smiling, they fly up and fade away, finally at peace. Maybe that's a debate for another day. I mean, does anyone ever really die in Kingdom Hearts? Even folks torn apart by light, like Ansem, Seeker of Darkness from the first game, reappear thanks to time travel when Xehanort gets his many fragmented selves back together.
Then again, we did see the death of Xehanort earlier, so it does happen. Anyway, in the ending, Sora embarks on one last journey to save Kairi, who was punted off in the harrowing events of the finale. Xehanort, being the big bad he is, dangles her over a cliff and then kills her. Despite Donald and Goofy's insistence to come along, Sora says he must go it alone. After all: his story began with losing Kairi, and now he's lost her again.
Hardened with resolve, he assumedly journeys into the Realm of Darkness or wherever else to find her. In a sweet final cutscene with all the characters on Destiny Islands, Riku glances away from the crowd and sees Kairi and Sora holding hands on the distant bench-like palm tree. Then in a shocking moment, we see Sora fade away, signifying that wherever Sora saved Kairi from, he did not make it back alive. So yes, Sora dies.
Or is lost. Or something. Probably not? We did see all the Organization XIII members "perish" after our boss battles, but as we see in the Epilogue, at least one survives the dramatic closure. Xigbar, who vanishes following a boss battle against him in the lead up to facing Xemnas and Ansem, Seeker of Darkness, isn't so dead after all. In the universe of Kingdom Hearts, only trust death if both the body and heart are obliterated.
In the last Battlegate located in the Keyblade Graveyard world, you'll stumble across an intimidating foe—and you won't be able to have Goofy and Donald at your side. The boss is familiar too: it's the swole heartless that Terra's heart drifted back into, that under his control aids him in saving Aqua and Ventus from Terra-Xehanort's clutches.
Here, the scary Heartless is bad again though, and he has a bone to pick with Sora. The ending to Kingdom Hearts 3 is a long one. From journeying to the Keyblade Graveyard to dealing a final blow to Xehanort on Scala ad Caelum, there's about five or so hours of boss fights. Their valiant efforts prove moot though, when all the heroes are obliterated by a shadowy Heartless mob and a subtitle describes that light failed and darkness won. That's not the end of the story though. Sora, being the strong-hearted lad he is, finds himself in a sort of limbo, and is tasked with recovering the hearts of his friends.
He chases a boss through all the worlds he's visited , recovering each of their hearts along the way. Riku visits Radiant Garden and meets up with Namine, who has been reawakened by the scientists using one of the spare vessels.
We then cut to another ending video. In this one, all members of the main cast are seen on the beach of Destiny Islands. We then cut to see Sora and Kairi sitting on a branch of the iconic Paopu tree. Kairi is back, but Sora is… gone. The figure picks it up, and four of the Foretellers union leaders from the ancient era before the Keyblade War appear in front of the figure.
He was also entrusted with a Black Box, the contents of which we are yet to understand. After more protesting, the hooded Luxu then reveals himself to be Xigbar, who we thought perished during the Skein of Severance. Unfortunately, Xigbar is fairly tight-lipped about this. We then return to Young Eraqus and Xehanort, who are playing chess once more. Eraqus then places down just one piece of light before the epilogue ends, which appears to be symbolic of our missing protagonist Sora, though the next Kingdom Hearts saga could easily be fronted by a new protagonist.
The makeup of this chessboard is essentially the backbone of the next Kingdom Hearts game. This suggests that the Foretellers will fall to darkness in some shape or form.
In the video, a sleeping Sora wakes up in a puddle. After Sora, we cut to Riku, and we see somebody watching Riku from atop a tower, and it turns out to be Yozora, the protagonist of the game Verum Rex that was teased in the opening movie to the Toy Box world earlier in Kingdom Hearts 3.
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