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Recap / Fate/Grand Order S3 E5A: Atlantis

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Dragging others down is an awful feeling. In some ways, it's a lot worse than death. It can make you want to drown your sorrows in booze, or end things altogether. However! I'm still the captain of this ship, and I'm not letting any of my crew take the easy way out! So you're going to help us hoist the sails, raise the anchor, and conquer this sea with anger and laughter alike! Because you're an Argonaut, and that's what we do!
Jason

Full title: "Lostbelt No. 5 - Ancient Ocean of the Dreadnought Gods, Atlantis [The Day to Bring Down Gods]". Written by Yuichiro Higashide.

The day Chaldea has long been dreading and preparing for has finally come. With the assistance of Captain Nemo and Sion, the Shadow Border has been retrofitted within the bowels of the Nautilus with top tier equipment. But Kirschtaria Wodime's army has been sent in full force to await them at the entrance to the Greek Lostbelt...

Watch the trailer here.


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"Well then, everyone, farewell. And to you, my dear, farewell, forever. ——Please, live a good life!"

Tropes appearing in this episode:

  • Adapted Out: The gods Hermes and Dionysus are missing, with Hades and Hestia taking their places in the "Twelve Olympians."
  • Alternate Character Reading: "日" in the Lostbelt's subtitle can be read as either day or sun, as it's Apollo via Paris who provides the special arrow needed to take down Artemis.
  • Anyone Can Die: By the end of the chapter, none of your allies made in it are around anymore. Chiyome allows herself to be devoured so she can poison Echidna. Francis Drake gets disintegrated by Lostbelt Artemis, incapable of fleeing the island due to a curse. Corday has a Mutual Kill with Odysseus. Bartholomew Roberts sacrifices himself to get Orion into firing position against Lostbelt Artemis. Paris and Apollo become the arrow Orion uses to shoot down Lostbelt Artemis, but it claims the lives of all three in the process. Achilles is killed by the Lostbelt version of Chiron. Hector destroys himself in order to deflect an attack from Lostbelt Artemis and gives his weapon to Mandricardo so he can do the same to deflect her next one. Jason is left bleeding out as he tells the others to go on without him as he confronts Chiron one last time on the collapsing Lostbelt Poseidon.
  • Arch-Enemy: Lostbelt Poseidon and Francis Drake, due to the latter being responsible for killing his Proper Human History counterpart. He hates her so much that, when Francis stole one of Lostbelt Poseidon's cores, he cursed her into being trapped on Heracles Island, and will violently attack anyone who associates themselves with her.
  • Bittersweet Ending: The Atlantis Lostbelt ends with Chaldea defeating the Atlantis defenders, two gods included, to make their way to Olympus, at the cost of the new Argonauts. Meanwhile, Kirschtaria still has the Dioscuri as well as the remaining Olympians, not to mention the Lostbelt King-level power Kirschtaria himself wields. The other half of Hephaestus's brain is also still alive and siding with Olympus. To top things off, there's implications that there's a Beast active in the Lostbelt as well. On the other hand, Chaldea reaches Olympus with an upgraded ship and they have help soon in the form of Musashi and the resistance forces within Olympus itself.
  • Brought Down to Badass: Achilles has some extreme nerfing to make him vulnerable to the Lostbelt forces, as his heel's been shot so he's only operating at 30% speed and will be killed by anything that can destroy his spiritual core. He's still a formidable force that can take out most monsters but is absolutely no match for Chiron in that condition.
  • Call-Back:
    • Way back in Okeanos, Artemis expressed annoyance at being unable to harm Heracles due to Orion's Saint Graph and claiming that she could totally use her Divine Authority to blow through his God Hand easily. Come Atlantis, it turns out she wasn't lying about that and actually did kill Heracles before Chaldea arrived.
    • Jason remembers what happened to his Okeanos self (including his very gruesome death at the hands of Chaldea) and isn't pleased to meet the MC and Mash again.
  • Central Theme: Pride. Everyone in Chaldea's party either never had any self-worth or lost what gave them theirs. Proud sailor Drake was cursed to never sail again. Chiyome always saw herself as nothing more than a cursed object. Corday is historically remembered only for a murder that didn't accomplish anything on the larger scheme of things. Bartholomew saw himself as someone incapable of doing good due to being a pirate, and even as a pirate he still felt lesser than Blackbeard. Paris, similarly, is a hero wannabe with a huge inferiority complex towards his hero brother. Achilles got heel pierced, taking away his Invincible Hero status. Jason had all his True Companions dying to protect him. Mandricardo is a Monster of the Week in his legend and accomplished his dream on a technicality. Even the generic Atlantis denizens see themselves as nothing compared to the Olympus denizens and are happy to be disposed of, because it means they were enough for the gods to bother acknowledging they exist. Caenis has a similar thematic moment, where they're being tortured by Dioscuri, who tells they're nothing more than a woman and being raped was the only thing that gave them worth. At the end of the story, Jason tells Chiron that his party end up winning because the Atlantis' guard's pride made them feel like they had already won, while the prideless underdogs of Chaldea had to put their wills to the test at every breathing moment.
  • Cerberus: The Cerberus is a recurring boss fought through out Atlantis.
  • Characters Dropping Like Flies: Allied Servants don't have a good shot in Atlantis, it's mentioned plenty of times that the servants you find that were tasked to help you are a skeleton crew that were whittled down by the Odysseus and his army. When it comes time for the final battle eight out of the nine allied servants are killed trying to deal with Odysseus's forces and destroy Artemis leaving a mortally wounded Jason as the sole survivor before he ultimately gives in after helping the party kill Poseidon
  • Chekhov's Boomerang: The Poseidon Core Drake gives to Jason before her death. It’s first fired off by letting the heroes bypass Caenis’s defenses using Posidion’s authority. It’s then later used near the end with Posiden himself to bypass his shields.
  • Chekhov's Gun: The Mystic Code that Medea Lily leaves behind for Jason. Its function is initially unrevealed, showing only Jason questioning what possible use it could be. It turns out to have the ability to project illusions, which Jason uses first to make himself appear confident in his planning, then to appear unhurt after he escapes his ship's destruction.
  • Cool Ship:
    • Their navy can be best described as "Ancient High-Tech," complete with giant "cross-bows" that look more magically high-tech than anything else.
    • Lostbelt Poseidon's true form is a massive, cross-shaped ship that guards the way into Olympus itself and serves as this for the Greek gods. It serves as the Final Boss of Atlantis.
    • The Storm Border looks like something taken straight out of a Space Opera, and is the coolest vehicle Chaldea has ridden in to date. It also carries and can deploy the Shadow Border as an Awesome Personnel Carrier.
  • Creative Sterility: Played with. While the technology of the Atlantis Singularity is well in advance of Proper Human History, and even the Chinese Lostbelt, Hephaestus reveals that they plateaued at Nanomachines, being unable to move past them to the next panacea, and though he doesn't outright state it, it's implied that this figured into his decision to side against Zeus. In addition, the fact that all this technology was developed millennia ago, has left the Humans of Atlantis stagnant due to the lack of change, resulting in many of them lacking in any desire to see the world beyond their villages.
  • Creepy Twins: The Dioscuri (known better as Castor and Pollux), who serves as Wodime's other Servants and revel in the Cold-Blooded Torture they inflict on Caenis.
  • Darker and Edgier: The Lostbelt has many similarities to the lighthearted, adventurous Okeanos Singularity from Part 1, even possessing several returning characters from it, but the situation therein proves to be much more dire and dangerous.
  • Defector from Decadence: It's revealed partway through the story that half of the Olympian gods sided with Proper Human History when Zeus decided to back Wodime. Outraged, Zeus led his faction to strike down Hades, Hestia, Ares, Athena, Hephaestus, and Apollo for opposing his decision.
  • Dialogue Tree: In Section 17, the protagonist is forced to make a choice of whether or not to use the Hephaestus Klironomia to save Charlotte Corday. The choice the player makes has a minor effect later in the story when they try to extract the Zeus Klironomia from her..
    • Choosing to use them will go to Section 18A, where the protagonist blames themselves for prolonging her misery.
    • Choosing to hesitate will go to Section 18B, where the protagonist instead feels bad for not immediately trying to save her.
  • Divine Conflict: It's revealed that not all of the Olympic pantheon is in the Lostbelt as part of its nail. The Olympians and Hades held a vote 10000 years ago on whether to continue their rule with Hades, Apollo, Athena, Ares, Hephaestus and Hestia voting no, with Zeus, Artemis, Hera, Demeter, Poseidon, and Aphrodite killing them in response. Olympus reveals that in actuality the other gods unsuccessfully rebelled against Zeus. Zeus then reprogrammed surviving gods to be loyal to him.
  • Downer Beginning: Wodime orders a complete assault to take out Chaldea before they can even summon one Servant. The end result is Chaldea is immediately forced into a heavy defensive before the Nautilus is destroyed and the protagonist washes up on a beach, stranded and separated from everyone else.
  • Dramatic Irony: As Achiles is making his Last Stand against Lostbelt Chiron he mocks the latter for needing to cripple Achilles and needing the help of an army in order to beat him. Saying that the PHH Chiron would have beaten him easily. Anyone familiar with Fate/Apocrypha would know that Achilles is giving his teacher a bit too much credit.
    • Odysseus in Proper Human History was favored by the goddess Athena, who intervened multiple times on his behalf. The Athena Klironomia give Charlotte the ability to kill her killer - the Lostbelt Odysseus.
  • Eldritch Abomination: Echidna, the Olympians' Titan counterpart to Tiamat, Mook Maker, and ancient, emotionless alien that partly created the gods themselves. She is a gigantic, albino figure with a vaguely female upper half, though with numerous eyes where they shouldn't be and a crown of horns where her eyes should be. Topped off with a pair of what-would-be feathered wings, only with snakes instead of feathers. And that's not getting into her lower half, the most noticeable feature of which being the giant cephalopod head she has for a stomach that vomits out her birthed monsters. See for yourself, if you dare.
  • 11th-Hour Ranger: Hektor of Troy is summoned by Achilles to help the heroes block off Artemis's attack. His words of encouragement to Mandricardo aids him to do the same, while his younger brother Paris is inspired to be the final arrow Orion needs.
  • The Empire: The Lostbelt Olympians' advanced civilization is this, as their subjects are all incredibly loyal, and their tech is more advanced than S.I.N.'s.
  • Everybody Hates Hades: Subverted; Hades led the faction of Gods that chose to side with humanity and was promptly crushed for it.
  • Friend-or-Idol Decision: When the Zeus Klironomia inside Charlotte goes berserk, everyone is presented with a choice. They can either act pragmatically and let her, a weak Servant with no strengths just die, or they can use the Hephaestus Klironomia they need to upgrade the Nautilus on her instead, but at the risk that she'll die anyways and take the Hephaestus Klironomia with her, dooming any chance of destroying the Lostbelt. They choose to save Charlotte anyways, which pays off when she kills Odysseus in the climax because he underestimated her.
  • Final Boss: Not the Tree of Emptiness Atlas, the Lostbelt King, or even Wodime himself. Instead, it's Poseidon, in its true form of the god of the seas as a Cool Ship, and it's a series of battles to destroy its cores so to bypass it and reach Olympus, with the last battle being against Lostbelt Chiron and the final core.
  • Foreshadowing: Due to being directly connected to Olympus, there are plenty of moments here that hint at the plot in the next chapter.
    • When Wodime is asking whether or not the initial assault wiped out Chaldea, Caenis states that they would be willing to join their side if they actually survived out of respect. while they quickly backtrack on it when it's revealed that Chaldea did live. Caenis does end up joining the hero's side for a good chunk of Olympus.
    • Hephaestus, despite being heavily damaged when first found is noticeably in a better mental state in comparison to what we see of Poseidon and Artemis. This is because Hephaestus wasn't tampered with by Zeus to be on his side.
    • It's mentioned a few times that Wodime only plans on fighting in the Lostbelt twice and is dissuaded from fighting the Chaldean because that would take up his second fight. This is the first hint of his Secretly Dying nature and the fact that he plans on fighting again after beating Chaldea is a big indicator that he plans on facing the gods himself.
    • During the Crypter meeting, as Wodime mentions that all the Trees of Emptiness are connected to each other, Beryl gives an ominous smirk at that info. This is because he can use his own Tree of Emptiness as a vector to infect Atlas to weaken it for his betrayal in Olympus.
    • Orion's stats are absurdly high for a support servant, being at level 100 when the only other supports to reach that were Kingu, who was boosted by a Grail in Babylonia, and Karna, who was powered further by multiple divine blessings in the last chapter. Like Karna, Orion is boosted beyond his normal self-thanks to being the Grand Archer.
    • Speaking of, as Orion notes, Grand Servants are only summoned for a specific purpose, fighting the Beasts and he’s been in Atlantis for a while. This not only provides further indicators that becoming one is Koyanskaya’s endgame but it also hints at the true nature of the Foreign God as they are set to arrive from the Atlantis Lostbelt.
  • God in Human Form: After learning of Orion and her Proper Human History counterpart relationship with him, Lostbelt Artemis creates a humanoid terminal called Artemis Nano in order to watch and understand why her counterpart fell in love with such a disgusting man. Initially disgusted like her main self, Nano develops feelings and aids Orion after Lostbelt Artemis betrays the promise they made with Orion in the past to ensure his neutrality.
  • Have You Seen My God?: The humans across the islands of Atlantis adore the gods and wish to be noticed and worship the deities in return after they've been exiled to the ocean, yet the gods give zero attention to them. When Orion and Artemis Nano attempt to convince one island of folks to flee when Lostbelt Artemis plans on destroying it to stop Chaldea, they are happy to be destroyed by the moon goddess as it means they get the attention of the gods they long for. This obsession with their deities is implied to be the flaw of humanity in this Lostbelt.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: A succession of them takes place in the approach to Olympus.
  • Hijacking Cthulhu: Wodime has several of the Greek gods under his control. His master plan is to take control of Zeus himself so that Wodime can kill the Alien God and create a world that follows his beliefs.
  • Hologram: The Tree of Emptiness seen in Atlantis is a mere hologram. The real one is actually located in Olympus and looks much different since it's currently blooming.
  • Hopeless Boss Fight: Wodime himself. He needs no Servants, as he can dance with the best of them by himself. He has five health bars, uses attacks from the Trees of Emptiness, and has a spell on par with a Noble Phantasm, which he uses to wipe your party out.
  • Humongous Mecha: The true forms of the Olympians and Hades are gigantic robotic deities created by the Titans. In normal history their personalities gradually became more human after their robotic physical forms were killed by the White Titan, but in this Lostbelt they defeated the White Titan instead and continued to evolve their technology while staying emotionless machines.
  • Kansas City Shuffle: Jason's ultimate gambit against Odysseus is to keep him distracted by making him believe that he's just throwing his strongest tools at his fleet (The Storm Border, Achilles, and Orion) and trying to run past them on the Argo and Lucky Fortune. Odysseus is unnerved by this inexplicable boldness as he tries to figure out how Jason is tricking him but believes that Jason's plan is doomed to failure from overwhelming odds and orders his troops to take down those three ships and two Servants. This was all a smokescreen for Chiyome to sabotage Echidna from the inside and Corday to get close to him, as Odysseus constantly dismisses her as utterly irrelevant up until he's actually killed by her.
  • Kill Sat: Lostbelt Artemis serves as the great bow of Olympus, yielding a powerful Anti-Planet Noble Phantasm to obliterate their enemies.
  • Kill the God: The Japanese Lostbelt subtitle "The Day God is Shot Down" refers to Orion shooting down Artemis's true form.
  • Manchurian Agent: Charlotte is revealed to be the Servant summoned by Odysseus in the prologue to dismantle a Ley Line, before having her memories erased and being injected with Zeus Klironomia. The Klironomia in her activate on Perse Island, forcing her to attack her friends while they destroy her from inside. Thankfully, they get subdued twice with the Hephaestus and Athena Klironomia respectively.
  • Mechanical Abomination: The Lostbelt finally confirms the many teasers hinting that the Greek gods are actually giant mecha, with their human forms being a mere avatar. Artemis is a massive Kill Sat that looks like an Eva/Angel hybrid from Neon Genesis Evangelion.
  • Mother of a Thousand Young: Echidna serves as a Titan counterpart to Tiamat, being a mother who produces countless legions of beasts to serve the purposes of its creators. Unlike Tiamat, Echidna has no mind of its own and merely follows it programming, allowing the Gods to have access to an infinite monster army.
  • Nominal Importance: Subverted with Timi. At first, he seems like he would be a story relevant NPC as he is the only NPC seen so far with eyes like some other NPC, plus having a clear interest with Corday. But when Heracles Isle citizens start rejoicing that the gods are finally noticing them (read: Artemis is going to destroy the island), he ends up joining with the rest of his village and ultimately dies not long after his introduction, only receiving small amount of characterization.
  • No-Nonsense Nemesis: Wodime wastes no time in trying to defeat Chaldea once they enter the Lostbelt, noting that the reason that Chaleda have been able to get so far in the other Lostbelts before is due to them being underestimated until it's too late.
  • Orphaned Punchline: Bartholomew tells the story of why he appreciates hair covered eyes so much, which is touching enough to leave the Protagonist in tears.
  • Ragtag Bunch of Misfits: The New Argonauts formed in the Atlantic Lostbelt is composed of Argonaut's old leader (Jason), a wild beast hunter (Super Orion), two soldiers from opposing factions (Paris and Achilles), a pirate (Bartholomew Roberts), a murderer (Charlotte Corday), an adventurer (Mandricardo) and a kunoichi (Mochizuki Chiyome). And this is not counting the help from Chaldea.
  • Road Block: All of Atlantis, the archipelago that is surrounded by infinitely reproducing monsters, a navy magically armed to the teeth with enhanced soldiers, a Kill Sat with the power to destroy the world, and Cool Ship that guards the way into Olympus itself, and despite overcoming all of that, sacrificing all of their allies found within the archipelago, it's considered just a dent in their forces.
  • Secretly Dying: Jason is in fact mortally wounded (heavily implied to be from the explosion that took the Argo that he miraculously survived) but used Medea (Lily)'s Mystic Code to help him appear fine. When he stays behind on the collapsing Lostbelt Poseidon, his wounds finally catch up to him and he dies after helping the group beat Lostbelt Chiron.
  • The Stinger: After the ending text of "Atlantis Surmount", it's revealed that Hephaestus and Muramasa are collaborating, while Musashi is on her way to meet Chaldea once again.
  • Sufficiently Advanced Alien: The Titans are revealed to be alien deities who created the Twelve Pillars and the other Conceptual Deities to help manage the planet, which would go on to become the Greco-Roman Olympians. Contact with the human race altered them, changing them from mere machines to beings with their own ego.
  • Super-Empowering: The humans of this Lostbelt have been incredibly changed, being revealed to be both long-lived, with lifespans into the 800s, and incredibly strong, managing to defeat the phantasmal beasts that none of the humans of past Lostbelts could ever hope to stand against excluding the Yaga (who require working in very large groups and magic weapons just to stand a chance).
  • Suspiciously Similar Substitute: Chaldea encounters Echidna, another goddess that spawns Mook monsters at an incredible rate, which they note is very similar to Tiamat.
  • Technologically Advanced Foe: Even worse than S.I.N., as not only the Gods themselves are machines, but they also have nanomachines, a Titan that breeds monsters, a Kill Sat with the power to destroy the world, and a Cool Ship that guards the way into Olympus.
  • Took a Level in Badass: Back in Okeanos, both Jason and Orion didn't have a good showing, with Jason being portrayed as an incompetent Jerkass, and Orion stuck in his mostly useless Butt-Monkey teddy bear form. This Lostbelt showed them to be much more competent, with Jason being a more capable general who executed the ultimate plan to kill Chiron, who once chided him as one of his worst students for good reasons, and Orion's real form revealed to be a muscular strongman as well as being the Grand Archer.
  • The Unfought: Echidna, Artemis and Poseidon are not fought in any battles, as their defeats being the result of servants defeating them in the story itself. Chiyome lets herself be eaten to merge with Echidna and turn her and her offspring completely feral. Paris, Apollo, and Orion all sacrifice themselves to take out Artemis. Poseidon is never directly fought, only though a series of Cores as the Final Boss of Atlantis.
  • Urban Segregation: What Atlantis truly is. The archipelago is essentially the "slums" of the Lostbelt, with the humans who sided with the Co-Existence Faction being exiled to it by the Administration Faction.
  • We Have Reserves: With Echidna as their living factory, the Olympians can produce and throw at Chaldea an endless supply of monsters programmed to obey Echidna's masters. Chiyome uses her curse to make Echidna go berserk, which makes her children go feral and start attacking everyone in the process.
  • Wham Episode: Good Lord, what an episode and this is just part one.
    • David Bluebook arrives in Area 51, a place that for some reason is unbleached and finds out that the scientists there experimented on an alien lifeform that is implied to of called the Foreign God to Earth. When he tries to see the corpse of the alien an unknown figure shoots him, noting that he was waiting for Bluebook to arrive.
    • The Nautilus is destroyed at the beginning, completely blindsiding Chaldea and stranding them within the Lostbelt, unable to contact Sion for further support.
    • Artemis's comments have finally been vindicated as the Olympian Kill Sat capable of taking out Heracles and Orion is revealed to be the Grand Archer.
    • Caenis, who has consistently been at Kirschtaria's side since the beginning, is deemed a failure by the Dioscuri and kicked out of his faction.
    • Lostbelt No. 6 has become so twisted that Beryl completely gives up on the Lostbelt thanks in part to a mysterious princess that terrifies even him and tricks the inhabitants into destroying the tree, with its collapse now inevitable. However, the Lostbelt still exists in spite of this only now having a barrier of light instead of storms, and there's something in there that's apparently capable of threatening the Alien God's plans. Daybit's Tree has also vanished from perception, leaving Atlas as the sole remaining Tree for the Alien God to use.
    • Wodime is revealed to possess enough raw power to fight on par with Servants despite still being a living human thanks to the Grecian Age of Gods empowering his Magecraft.
    • Senji Muramasa and not Koyanskaya is revealed to be the Third Disciple of the Foreign God, having been working with Rasputin for the past few months to wipe out the vast majority of Proper Human History Servants in Atlantis, severely limiting Chaldea's allies.
    • Finally, the mysterious hooded figure long speculated to be Roman isn't him, but in fact implied to be Goetia, who then reveals that Chaldea has been betrayed from within.
  • Wham Line: This line from Orion which helps explain his strength and has some terrifying implications for what is in Olympus.
    Orion: I renounce my Grand Status so I might finally shoot down Artemis, the Moon Goddess!
  • What Is This Feeling?: Timi, the Heracles Island boy who had a rather obvious crush on Corday, is perfectly happy to be smitten down by Artemis as it means the gods are finally recognizing the citizens, but suddenly starts to feel sad that he won't be able to see Corday again and starts to wonder if he should have left with Chaldea before Artemis's arrow finally strikes down.
  • The Worf Effect:
    • Sanson is immediately blown apart by Lostbelt Odysseus. d'Eon doesn't fare any better as their attacks and Noble Phantasm bounce off of Odysseus's high-tech armor, and then their head gets ripped off for good measure.
    • Artemis shows herself to be a threat when Jason revealed that she killed Heracles before Chaldea arrived. It's downplayed a bit as Jason also revealed that she needed two shots of her planet destroyer Noble Phantasm to kill him.
  • The World Is Just Awesome: Chaldea is speechless once they finally arrive at Olympus and see that it looks like something from another world.
    Goredolf: ...
    Nemo: ...He's so shocked he fainted. Not that I can blame him.
    Da Vinci: It really does feel like...we've wandered into the land of the gods.
  • Xanatos Speed Chess: The biggest battle between Chaldea's Argonauts and Odysseus' Atlantis navy boils down to Jason and Odysseus rapidly changing their plans in response to any possible consequence from unforeseen wrenches in their plans.
  • You Shall Not Pass!: Lostbelt Poseidon guards Atlas's roots, which is the only way into Olympus, thus making him the Final Boss of Atlantis.
  • You Wake Up on a Beach: This happens to the protagonist after the Downer Beginning and they end up on Hestia Island separated from everyone else.
  • Your Princess Is in Another Castle!: After destroying Lostbelt Poseidon, who guards Atlas's roots, Chaldea goes down into Olympus... The end. Yep. The Lostbelt is so big that it needs to be broken up in two. Atlantis is only part one. As such, the ending text is "Atlantis Surmount" to show Chaldea has merely overcome this obstacle and not yet destroyed the Lostbelt.

"She entrusted the Chaldeans' lives to the sea, as the first of their guides.
She took advantage of her own cursed body to cause havoc among enemy forces.
She fought back as hard as she could, even if it meant discarding everything but her ability to kill.
He accomplished in death something he never managed in life: bringing hope to the world.
He never stopped running, even after his crippling wound.
He answered a summon to buy them just a bit of time, and in doing so, gave them hope.
He vowed to do everything he could to help his trusted friend.
He chose to sacrifice himself to help them without a moment's hesitation, because it was the right thing to do.
He loved the moon, and brought her down to save her.
He saw everything, fought for everything, and saw everyone off when he was done.
And in the wake of all their great deeds, there is now nothing and no one left in this sea.
And so, Atlantis was breached. What awaits Chaldea now is a grand, glorious, subterranean city.
"

Alternative Title(s): Fate Grand Order S 3 E 5 Ancestral Ocean Of The Great Gods Atlantis

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