Wait—no, scratch that. In Her Son, Her Sin, the real flame was betrayal all along. Artemion trusted too much. Hades'son planned too well. That scene where he helps Artemion up only to stab him metaphorically (and literally)? Peak dramatic irony. Also, those hooded statues? Creepy AF.
Artemion didn't lose because he was weak—he lost because he believed in goodness. Her Son, Her Sin thrives on that tragedy. His fall into the vortex isn't death—it's transformation. Maybe he'll rise again. Or maybe the underworld claims another soul. Either way? I'm obsessed.
Hades'son didn't need allies—he needed pawns. Her Son, Her Sin shows how easily loyalty turns to liability. Artemion's'I won't back down!'became his epitaph. That final close-up of Hades'son smirking as the flame floats away? Villain origin story perfected.
Artemion walked through fire for love. Hades'son walked through lies for power. Her Son, Her Sin makes you choose sides—and then destroys both. The visual of Artemion sinking into black water while red bubbles rise? Symbolism overload. Beautiful, brutal, unforgettable.
Artemion thought he was the hero, but Her Son, Her Sin flips the script hard. Watching him get kicked into that swirling abyss after trusting his so-called ally? Chilling. The blue flame wasn't power—it was a trap wrapped in family love. Hades'son played 4D chess while everyone else fought with swords. That final smirk? Iconic.