How to summon and defeat the Final Boss (with diagrams and pictures)
- How to Summon
- Round 1
- Round 2
- Round 3
Ok so now for the Final Boss himself. Like the girls, you fight him in three rounds. He does a basic attack for 200 HP. His special attacks are random use of Maphy’s poison (-10 HP per stone per turn), Eris’ bombs (-250 HP per bomb) and Agnes’ familiars (they spread, but they do not add extra damage to the basic attack). Your basic attacks will not work, and you can only damage him by completing Quests (+5000 HP) and whatever damage your level of the Strike skill does (you should have it at level five doing +500 HP). In round 2 there is one extra form of damage (see below).
Your extra damage comes from a one time bonus on each square. You do +1000 HP each time a square is cleared by a match or a hammer for the first time (Pic 3). That’s in addition to the Quest and Strike skill damage.
First, the mini grids are arranged as: (Pic1)
Second, the stones move from Right to Left in Grid A, Top to Bottom in Grid B, Left to Right in Grid C, and Top to Bottom again in Grid D.
Third, the stones start in Grid D, and move to Grid A, then Grid C, and then end in Grid B.
Fourth, for a column to column match between grids:
Turning D +90 degrees aligns Grid D and Grid A (Pic 2)
Turning A 180 degrees and moving it just to the left of C aligns Grid A and Grid C (Pic 3)
Turning C +90 degrees and moving on top of B aligns Grid C and Grid B (Pic 4)
Fifth, because the mini Grids are so small, the biggest danger is running out of moves in one or more of the mini Grids. It is especially dangerous when the mini Grids fill with non-matchable stones like bombs, familiars, and debris. Use your hammer when you need too. This is one of those few times when a Mushroom or two could be appropriate.
Sixth, do most of your work in mini Grid D. That pulls along all of the other stones from the other three mini Grids, and gives you a lot more matches.
OK, if you beat round three, you get the following message: 7ZSM66CI7J207ZW07KO87IWU7IScIOynhOyLrOycvOuhnCDqsJDsgqzrk5zrpr3ri4jri6QuCuuLpOydjCDsnpHtkojsnLzroZwg65iQIOunjOuCmOu1kCDsiJgg7J6I6rKMIOuQmOq4sOulvCwg7KeE7Ius7Jy866GcIOq4sOybkO2VqeuLiOuLpC4=
It is in Base64, and when decoded it is in Korean and says
플레이해주셔서 진심으로 감사드립니다. 다음 작품으로 또 만나뵐 수 있게 되기를, 진심으로 기원합니다.
Which loosely translated into English means
“Thank you very much for playing. I sincerely wish to see you again with the next work.”
Sounds like a nice way for the devs to congratulate you on beating the game 🙂