Sekiro - All Bosses - No Damage, No Kuro's Charm, NG+7, Demon Bell

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Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=masRaAbRkrE



Duration: 1:18:51
521 views
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The footage was recorded on a standard PS4 using the share feature, as I do not have any recording hardware. So the actual footage is simply 720p 30 fps. Due to Youtube compression, the video has been rendered at a higher resolution.

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Timestamps:
0:00:00 - Genichiro Ashina (Prologue)
0:01:37 - Gyoubu Oniwa
0:03:48 - Lady Butterfly
0:06:42 - Genichiro Ashina
0:09:57 - Folding Screen Monkeys
0:12:25 - Corrupted Monk
0:15:45 - Guardian Ape
0:24:36 - Headless Ape
0:32:34 - Final Boss (Shura Ending)
0:37:16 - Great Shinobi - Owl
0:43:44 - Owl (Father)
0:49:20 - True Corrupted Monk
0:54:31 - Divine Dragon
1:00:08 - Demon of Hatred
1:10:45 - Final Boss

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Personal backstory:
During 2018 my health had begun to significantly decrease due to issues I wasn't aware of back then. These health issues had been affecting me for an even longer time than I had thought, as near the end of that year I had learned that I had been diagnosed with B12-vitamin deficiency over 10 years ago, yet it had never been treated. By the time I was getting treatment for it, my Posterior Funiculus (or what ever part of the spine creates the sense of balance, as I don't know what term the doctors were using would translate to) had been severely damaged to the point that even now my sense of balance is near non-existent. And wouldn't you know it, this was only the smaller issue I had.
At the start of 2019 I ended up in a hospital for a few months as I had been diagnosed with Guillain Barre Syndrome, a nerve root infection where the human body creates anti-bodies against itself that destroy the nerves. My feeling from knees below is still barely there even after all of this time recovering, and apparently I only have a sense of pain there. Sense of touch and pain are apparently two different senses. I would've preferred to learn about that in a different way, but to be fair, I probably wouldn't have cared if it didn't have such personal meaning to me right now. The nerves on my hands were also significantly damaged, but they have recovered much better than the legs. The hands are still rather imprecise, they sometimes refuse to function at all or function in a belated manner. Writing a single sentence with a pen was and still is rather difficult for me. Don't get me started on trying to organize paper work when it comes to paying bills.

So what does any of this have to do with this game? Well there was that whole hoopla about journalists complaining about Sekiro being hard and that it was unfair towards people with disabilities. Well, I am now a person with nerve damages and other issues, so I guess I'm involved in some manner. My take on all of this is that people can adapt to these sorts of things if they enjoy doing them, and can pull through. They just need to find their own way of doing things so they can make up for their own issues. These games are all about the challenge itself and overcoming that challenge, that difficulty is the fun. Regardless of my issues, I want to show that I can adapt and find my own fun in these sorts of things.
But I'm only speaking from my own perspective of course, I cannot speak for others. I enjoy challenging games, and I won't let some random rare disease prevent me from doing what I like.







Tags:
Sekiro



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