PreviousLater
Close

The War God's Regret EP 29

4.7K16.3K

The War God's Regret

War God Sebastian repeatedly drains his wife Stella's divine essence, manipulated by the deceitful nymph Mia. After abandoning her, he loses Stella forever. Reborn through the Abyss, Stella becomes its Queen with Julian's power. When Sebastian discovers she once sacrificed herself to save him, he regrets. But it's too late.
  • Instagram

Ep Review

More

Trapped in Chaos

The tension between the two leads is electric! Watching them argue inside the Chaos Cage feels like a cosmic breakup gone wrong. The visual effects of floating debris and glowing chains add so much drama. I love how The War God's Regret explores emotional imprisonment through fantasy elements. Their chemistry is off the charts!

Magic Meets Melodrama

This scene from The War God's Regret hits hard. She's not backing down, and he's desperate. The dialogue cuts deep—'You told me to rot in regret' gave me chills. The glowing sword and staff? Chef's kiss. It's rare to see magic used as metaphor for emotional baggage. Netshort nailed the vibe here.

Cage of Consequences

The Chaos Cage isn't just a prison—it's a mirror. Every chain represents unresolved pain. Her line 'I'm not the girl who cuts out her heart for you anymore' is iconic. The War God's Regret doesn't shy away from messy ex dynamics. Visually stunning, emotionally raw. I'm hooked.

Swordplay & Soul-Baring

When she points that glowing sword at him? Instant goosebumps. The War God's Regret turns confrontation into art. His plea—'Just don't go back to him'—shows vulnerability beneath the power. The floating rocks and neon chains make this feel like a divine therapy session gone rogue.

Regret Has No Exit

No door. No Olympus. Just them. The War God's Regret traps its characters in literal and emotional limbo. Her verdict—'You live. You watch.'—is brutal poetry. The cinematography makes every glance feel epic. This isn't just fantasy; it's relationship autopsy with sparkles.

Fire, Heart, and Chains

He needed her heart to fix his fire? Now he wants her whole life? The War God's Regret dives into toxic dependency with style. The glowing tattoos on his chest? Gorgeous symbolism. Their standoff feels like a galaxy-sized couple's therapy. I can't look away.

Until One Dies

The stakes? Life or death. The setting? A shattered cosmos. The War God's Regret doesn't do small drama. When he says 'Chaos Cage holds both target and caster,' it's clear: this is mutual destruction. Her calm delivery of 'Then here's my verdict' is pure queen energy.

Exes in Orbit

Floating asteroids, glowing chains, and two exes screaming truths at each other? The War God's Regret is peak fantasy romance. Her star-adorned forehead and his cracked skin tell stories without words. The line 'Rot with me' is darkly romantic. I'm obsessed.

Verdict in the Void

She doesn't kill him—she makes him witness his own guilt. That's next-level punishment. The War God's Regret turns revenge into reflection. The way the camera lingers on her eyes as she delivers the final line? Chilling. This short film packs a novel's worth of emotion.

Chaos as Character

The Chaos Cage isn't just a set piece—it's a character. It reflects their inner turmoil. The War God's Regret uses sci-fi visuals to explore very human pain. His desperate grin, her steely resolve? Perfect casting. Netshort's production quality is insane. More please!