Detroit Become Human - What happens if you are friends with Hank on the rooftop

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Published 2018-06-15

All Comments (21)
  • @darthjim1889
    How did you get Hank here? When I played this mission, Captain Allen and his team turned up because Hank killed himself previously.
  • @Jackal_XXX
    It’s so crazy that you can turn Connor into a hero or the main villain, with just a few choices.
  • @cheshirekat8273
    Hank should've been the one to turn Connor deviant, not Marcus.
  • @YamadaJisho
    I always thought this should have been Connor's Deviant/machine moment. He didn't have any real history with Marcus, but struggling with obeying his programming or listening to Hank (or not dropping him off the roof) would have made for a particularly poignant deviant moment, with Connor becoming deviant due to the positive influence of a human rather than a negative influence (or a particularly chilling machine path where he drops Hank off the roof because he believes he's just a machine).
  • What if Connor said listen I know it’s not your fault these emotions your feeling are just errors in you software to hank
  • @therebelog2971
    Man I loved playing this game. I loved hearing Mr. Krabs swear about pidgeons
  • @knightsotl796
    Its too bad that warm relationship status with hank dosent do anything
  • Hank was just like “ well that was easier than I thought it was gonna be”
  • Connor doesn’t even sound emotionless in this scene, he just sounds angry and stressed from repressing everything
  • @BigUllie
    They honestly need to remake this game and more paths/endings. Connor becoming deviant right here would be a super great moment
  • @LordBloodraven
    Connor mentioning Cole on the rooftop was so different from the warehouse. Here, Connor's not Deviant and just using Cole as a manipulation against Hank. In the warehouse, Connor genuinely understands and feels guilt that Hank lost his son while under the care of another android. Their story was definitely my favorite.
  • @TomSpeeddraw
    So if you manage to befriend him, you don't have to let him kill you. Meh, better than nothing I guess.
  • Bruh, this was so weird. It's like connor goes from attempting in a very cold blooded manner to manipulate Hank into letting him continue using the death of his son (right after being accused of faking emotion) to continuing to speak to Hank in a highly vitriolic way as he makes the very human decision to spare both his and Marcus' life.
  • @isoniazidsive
    One thing that i'm still confused about is Connor's "human" flaws i guess you can say it, the rifle is shaking, you'd think an android could stay perfectly still and perfectly hold the rifle properly.
  • @Someone7641
    It felt like Cage forgot a scene where Hank discovers that his son died due to the 'only surgeon being high on red ice', because it seemed really asspulled. Hank seemed to warming up to androids (in a friendly run-through) but I never got the "I hate androids because they killed my son!" aspect of Hank if he actually knew that the "only surgeon in the futuristic hospital that could operate at the time" was the reason that Cole died (oh David Cage writing). Also, this should've been the scene where Connor becomes a deviant (if he doesn't at Jericho). While Marcus and Connor had no real relationship up until Jericho, Hank and Connor have been together the entire game. Moving the deviant sequence from on the ship with Marcus to on the rooftop with Hank would have been WAY more impactful.
  • @dare_he_is
    Who would’ve thought Mr. Krabs would be the voice of reason.