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The God of Alchemy might have exaggerated a bit in his description of Talos, but Amberser believed the God of Alchemy wouldn't set him up to fail.
After all, there are too many heroic epics.
Just find a random tavern, give a bard a Gold Coin to sing an epic, and if you hear a repeated one within three days, you can slap them because they're definitely a Barbarian in disguise.
There were just so many stories, every plot had already been played out.
It's really hard for a simple heroic epic to come up with any new plots.
It seemed that even if Aeolus could achieve something as Talos hoped, it would be difficult to fully satisfy Talos.
Otherwise, Talos wouldn't deliberately make things harder for Aeolus, with his lack of intelligence, not recognizing Airel, and in the end not even giving a hint, nor allowing him to reveal his identity as a Divine Child.
The result was that he piled on too many shackles, and then Aeolus crumbled.