What a clusterfuck. I know the story isn't really the point of the game but still....the twists, oh the twists. I'll admit to some feels when Celebrimbro is like "you're just a vessel." "This is about more than your petty revenge or mine." It's like, really bro? After all we've been through? After all the "I THOUGHT YOU WANTED REVENGE." "Sauron can't be destroyed." Oh really? Is that why you spent the best part of two games acting like he could be? To be one upped by another token elven dual wielding badass? The sense of betrayal was fairly real.
Not that it made any sense. Nor what comes after. So Celebrimbro and Sauron are now Sourbrimbro, and he's abandoned you to die your actual death. But you use Isildur's Ring to become a Ring Wraith to keep fighting on so you can prevent him from taking over Mordor and ruling da vurld. Ostensibly Talion should be under Sauron's control, using his power.....but he's still himself, fighting off Sauron's influence while getting all the benefits of being a Ringwraith. I guess that tracks with actual canon since the Ringbearer of the One Ring, whoever that is, fought off Sauron's influence for decades and decades, and the Ring of the Nazgul aren't as powerful as it. But it still feels like the kind of thing that "technically" works while in practice is there simply to justify the plot/gameplay movements they want to hit. You knew Celebrimbro and Talion were eventually going to be at odds, and the whole narrative of SoW and the dialog between them has been building that up. But when it happened it happened abruptly in one cutscene. The whole game Eltariel or whatever her name is made it clear she didn't like Celebrimbro and didn't trust him and worried what he would do if he got what he wanted. And then promptly dismisses all her problems and concerns at the critical moment and willingly, almost enthusiastically becomes his puppet, while Talion, after ALL the shit he's done at Celebrimbro's prompting, defies him and that one moment instantly seals his fate as Celebrimbro is like "Well clearly you aren't capable of helping me best Sauron, goodbye." The writing up to this point implied there was friction but not this level of friction. Which is why the twist works, but only "technically." I did not forsee that dominating the Ring Wraiths would be Talion's line in the sand, because of all the other horrible shit he's done he didn't bat an eye at. They set up the pretext that Talion and Celebrimbro might part ways but they didn't really sell the climax that made it happen very well. Maybe if I'd played the whole story right through I'd have seen an escalation in their problems with each other and the climax would have seemed more natural. But at the pace I did play it, it all seemed very abrupt and arbitrary. I didn't think Celebrimbro constantly disagreeing with everything Talion says meant that the first time he
did something Celebrimbro didn't agree with, he'd kick Talion to the curb and better deal him for New Elven Hotness. Can't WAIT for that DLC.
All that said.....man am I so glad to be rid of Celebrimbro. The constant Candice Contrarian dialog between him and Talion, the endless denigration of anything that isn't or wasn't elven...if the writers goal was to make Celebrimbro unlikable in this game, they accomplished it in spades. I liked him at the end of SoM but he really revealed himself to be a total twat in SoW.
And I dig the wraith aesthetic of new Talion. Evil green is my color, baby, and you get to raise the dead. I'm now playing Talion as sort of what I always thought SoM was about before I looked in to it: an evil agent that may or may not serve Sauron. I do remember going "ok, how is any of this post game shit going to work if you're severed from the wraith?" and it was answered satisfactorily within the context of their own completely bonkers narrative. Lose Celebrimbro, become a Ring Wraith. I also like that, for once, Talion is his own man/wraith thing, making his own calls. The wraith image he projects is himself and that is kinda cool in a game series where the main protagonist has been a whiny, mopey character who has constantly let themselves be led around by the nose by other people, another character that completely overshadows them.
I can see why people are pissed about the Shadow War though, now. I imagine you'll face Level 45 to 60 orcs for the duration, and that entails a fairly significant grind on your part to raise your player level...so you can raise your orcs' levels. And the leveling is soooo slow even for someone that did a shit ton of unnecessary grinding before completing the story.
I mean, I'm not sure how hard the Shadow War will be, because I haven't started it. But if my goal was to just finish the game and damn my orc captains, I don't think it would be too hard to finish in a bloodyminded rampage.
Maybe leveling is quicker if you just blast out Vendettas and Online Conquests. (Although Conquests can end up costing you orcs which you'll want for the Shadow War....but ultimately the orcs don't really matter, you can get them whenever from whereever. It's your player level that really matters at the end of the day.)
If they weren't quite so stingy with the non-story/non-mission XP, I don't think there'd be much to complain about with the Shadow War. As it is, yeah, it's a long term project to get all the way through it if you want to stop and enjoy the
roses orcses along the way.