Talk:Frozen Reflections/@comment-1484386-20170520212805

''If you do not kill the King of the Wild Hunt and then let him take the Grand Master's soul, then finish off the Grand Master. You can also, with skill, kill the King of the Wild Hunt after.''

That wording is really confusing imo, hardly understand what it's supposed to mean, but that aside...

The second (bold) part is definitely not true (at least in TWEE). After the cutscene where Geralt kills Jaque it instantly takes you into a loading screen and back to the real world. There is no chance of even hitting the King (also he disappears in the dialog when you choose the second option). Consequently there is no way of killing him if you let him take Jaques soul. So whoever wrote this, an explanation would be nice, maybe it's only a thing in the Original Edition.

On a side note. This dialog is confusing me a bit anyway. Regardless of the option you choose Geralt gets to kill Jaque because it triggers the same cutscene. The only difference is that you get to fight the King when you take the first option (which has no rewards on its own and isn't actually a challenge either). So since Geralt gets his kill and/or satisfaction anyway, why would one take the first option, the King can take Jaques soul after the kill anyway... I really don't get it, maybe someone can explain...

Side note 2: Wikias comment system is obnoxiously aweful, I have to write every comment like 3 times because it always errors out with a session conflict and forgets what I wrote. WTF.