Will Dracula return in the next season?
Netflixvania Season 4 Expectations
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well it is dracula and it's nigh impossible to keep him dead for long
If they do not include Death in the plot, then the series will not be worth the time
Alucard needs to get a cute bf.
How would resurescting Drac help anyone if he wants to stay in the afterlife with his wife?
I expect Isaac-kun to still be The Best while Hector continues to get his dignity destroyed
Cause crazy cultists and shit
Bringing back Dracula would just make most of the show feel like its wasting our time.
Honestly I was very dissapointed in this season. The writing was all over the place, the show now feels more like GoT lite than Castlevania, there was no iconic music from the series anywhere and most of the new characters felt like cringey OC donut steels from deviantart. I don't have high hopes for any future seasons at all, I was already mildly dissapointed by the time season 2 ended but this season has killed a lot of interest for me.
I agree. While watching the new episodes I was expecting to see my boy Death show up in some form. I thought that he'd secretly be the judge (in one of the games he uses a human disguise which very looked similar to the judge) or that he'd show up when the creature in the church opened the portal. I was very dissapointed to see that he was ommited once again, considering how important Death is in the games and yet there's not a single mention of him here. Then again, that hack writer of this show Warren Ellis has admitted that he has never played the games himself and has only read a Wikipedia summary of the series. Fuck that overtly pretentious douche.
My theory is that, if Isaac doesn't end up replacing Hector as the Forgemaster who joins the heroes's side, they will have him turn into Death
it kinda does that already with the vampire arguments
Dante's Inferno did reserve the lowest level of Hell for Traitors.
Probably not Season 4 but I can see them bringing him back in Season 5, which will probably be to Curse of Darkness as S2 was for Dracula's Curse.
If he wanted to stay in the afterlife I feel like he would’ve just killed himself or let someone kill him once his wife died. His problem was he wanted humanity to pay, and it’s very easy to just have him say “I wasn’t done punishing humans just yet” as a justification
What was the reasoning for Death following Dracula anyway?
Doubt there will be a season 4
Dracula was mopey and boring in every scene he did appear in.
There's no way Isaac will join the heroes, especially when you know he'll realize they killed Dracula. Isaac becoming Death would be way more interesting.
Wait, in the CoD, one of the Forgemasters was needed as a sacrificed vessel for the resurrection of Dracula which was arranged by Death. How can they do "Death" Isaac?
Later games Igarashi-era games dictate that for whatever reason that Death follows whoever holds the Philosopher's stone, though in time they became genuine friends. It's why he initially served under Walter (or at least pretended to) before stabbing him in the back.
Dracula is losing more of his humanity with every resurrection. In addition, due to the fact that Alucard took the honor to kill Dracula in season 2, it is possible that Trevor will kill the recently resurrected Dracula instead of Hector.
I just find it too suspicious that he's the one being shown that there can be kindness in humans and that the path he's following may not be the best, plus he has a reason to go against Carmilla so it can like Hector at the beginning of CoD where he just wanted to murder a guy in cold blood for his revenge but ended up helping saving Wallachia. I guess you're are right that it might feel OOC but for se reason I can see it happen
They can always use Hector as the sacrifice, he was the preferred vessel in CoD after all. And Hector in CoD rejected the curse thanks to his strong will while here Hector is not only already pretty weak willed, he's also probably gonna end up completely broken mentally by being a fuck toy
I really want this Hector to grown up and survive, this series and specially his arc really needs a CoD moment
Too bad that what is going to happen is just that he gets a small 5-min boost of badassery (that is worthless on the grand scheme of things) and does some sort of spectacle like killing one of the Sisters or some big dumb monster, just so Ellis can go "Hurr, here I referenced CoD, are you faggots happy" before Isaac just kills Hector to ressurect Dracula (despite Isaac becoming the vessel in CoD) as Ells has a torture-murder boner for the voice actor of Hector
He could get his moment if the council turns on Lenore and her death frees him from the ring.
Yeah, it's nowhere near the best Castlevania but I have a soft spot for CoD so I wanted to see Hector grow more into the character he was there, I even got my hopes up the moment he threatened Lenore but as the season progressed I started to feel like it's not going to happen
And lel, is that really Ellis's beef with Hector? And here I thought it would be something like he thought it was unfair a traitor ended up rewarded and the loyal one ended up dead or whatever
Didn't he end up bound to all the sisters cause they all got a ring? All of them should have to die for him to be free
Unless there's a clause that he only swore his loyalty to Lenore and not to the others
Simon when?
cancelation because pirate bro will not appear
I wouldn't be surprised if Lenore's ring is the master ring and she has a failsafe to backstab the other vampires
At best, in season 6-7. And even so with a 50/50 chance.
Based, Alucard is a volcel but if he ever gave dick it should be for Maria
If all rings are real and equally powerful (Lenore's isn't the One to Rule His Ass), and some of the Sisters try to make Hector do something contradictory (eg. Carmilla says go East, Striga says go West), what would happen to Hector?
The "shit-his-heart-out" level response from the ring?
His threesome with Trevor and Sypha will be purely platonic and metaphorical for Alucard regaining the ability to be intimate and trust others .
Are they building Alucard to be the final boss?
This season is supposed to be transitional, so I don't mind it being less about capturing classic Castlevania elements since it's setting up for another Dracula scale invasion of Wallachia (two if you count Isaac's horde following Carmilla's) and leading Alucard into a more stoic and emotionally stable SotN-like character once his issues get resolved (that will be at the core of the new Belmont group in S5).
I just wished it was overall shorter for better pacing and we had an estimate on S4's release so they feel more connected, like how Breaking Bad's last season had a conclusion at the midseason and followed up a few months later with the final 8 episodes.
No, his actions were entirely in self-defense and he hated every second he had to consider killing them.
Trevor will try to kill him though if he sees them still out there and Alucard's being a Gloomy Gus.
>Trevor will try to kill him though if he sees them still out there and Alucard's being a Gloomy Gus.
Something tells me that there will be more impaled corpses when Trevor returns.
Just how many people went to Alucard's castle to rape him?
Maybe. I can see it if an angry mob tried to storm the castle b/c of the first 2 and Alucard stakes those that end up dying. But I don't see him going out of his way to kill and stake more.
With that tight ass and those porcelain abs, who wouldn't?
Quite a few, apparently from the first episode.
youtube.com
who dies first?
Morana, because what the fuck is she contributing otherwise? Her death will piss off Striga and the Sisters will fall apart when she goes for revenge.
I just want to see Simon. That is it. I wanna see him fucking strut and murder this Dracula while this Dracula is tired as shit
Would you be okay with just a movie-length adaptation like S1 just so they can get to Rondo and SotN storylines faster?
Yeah, wouldn't mind at all.
Pretty fucking ballsy of them to expect one really, however if this COVID bullshit sees an uptick in money for Netflix they may luck out. Otherwise I see a Kickstarter to move on to another distributor
bah, i think i liked this new season the most because they gave warren ellis some freedom from the source material, saint germain is a cool character and the suff with the cultists and hector was entertaining
and he is gonna suck dicks
I want to see Simon as the literal terminator of Vampires.
The guy is a 8 foot juggernaugt of eastern european wrath who outwilled Dracula's fucking curse to nuke his ass harder.
>And lel, is that really Ellis's beef with Hector?
I genuinely think it's because CoD had a nearly completely forgettable story and (new) characters that were more or less just made up of bits of already existing ones
>The lesbo cabal is conquering europe
>People are desperate
>"Say, didnt some vampire beat that bitch Carmilla before?"
>Find black magic mcguffin, resurrect Tepes
>Shenanigans ensue
Honestly probably Carmilla. I don't know why people think she's written out to be some kind of mouthpiece when the this season goes out of its way to show she's vain, stupid and in way the fuck over her head. Her own people had to remind her that her so-called Ace In the Hole had no reason to do shit for her while he was kept tortured and miserable. The big vampire lady seems like she only barely tolerates her
Ressurecting Dracula so early is a VERY bad idea. Dracula and Castlevania are supposed to rise every 100 years, with a few very rare instances making it earlier.
Making Dracula so easy to summon defeats his strength, and makes actions like Simon lesser.
Was forging as easy in the games as in this series? I mean he just stab someone and puff! New demon, no mysticism whatsoever
They use powerful Alchemical Stones.
You forget Dracula is literally master of Darkness through Alchemy.
Easier in some ways, harder in others
Here they need to used dead bodies while in the games they could even use rocks to create demons, but they had to do a ritual with a cheesy chant and stuff
Oh, and no forging tools or anything they just used their hands
They're setting up Hector to become the hero that stops Dracs resurrection when he fights Isaac.
Wouldn't having 2 resurrect Dracula plots in back-to-back seasons cheapen that aspect too?
And being so soon after his death he might not have gotten angry enough to go genocidal again since he and Alucard had that moment before he died where he realized he'd have to kill his son to kill humanity.
Nah, Isaac is clearly the writer's pet, pun intended with Hector's situation
It's implied the more ressurections Dracula has the less of his humanity and Sanity he has left.
After SotN he's just basically a malicious dark demigod with no motivation.
I don't want it, but if we are forced to have it, I better be hearing some "It was not by my hand I was once again given flesh".