
The quest in question is Steel Resolve in Avowed’s Emerald Stair region. Completing the quest and making the right choices allows the Envoy to minimize damage when the Steel Garrote attacks Fior mes Ivèrno. If the quest isn’t completed, Fior is burned to the ground. While preventing Fior’s destruction is the better outcome in the world of Avowed, from the perspective of an audience member, the game’s story improves if Fior is allowed to burn. This failure gives the game’s narrative beats going forward a bit more weight.
Fior Mes Inverno Being Destroyed Is The Envoy’s First Great Failure
Earlier Parts Of The Game Don’t Have Any Major Disasters Like This






Although the Envoy is sent to the Living Lands on a quest of great importance, Avowed’s main story quests start off a bit more personal. First, the Envoy is focused on getting to Paradis, and once they finally enter the city, they are then tasked with finding the person who tried to kill them. It isn’t until the Emerald Stair that the main quest of Avowed starts to widen its scope and focus on the impact the Envoy’s actions have on the Living Lands as a whole. This also makes the burning of Fior a perfect turning point.
Up until Fior, there is little major harm the Envoy can do. Some decisions will come back later in the game, but for the moment, the consequences of the Envoy’s actions seem small. It’s also rare that things don’t go in the Envoy’s favor during the opening hours of Avowed, with even their own assassination being a minor hurdle. This makes the burning of Fior the Envoy’s first major experience with failure in the Living Lands, and it’s a wake-up call to the reality of their situation.
Saving Fior from being entirely destroyed also lessens the event’s emotional impact on the Envoy as a character. Not only is the city in better shape, but the Envoy can feel confident in knowing they did all they could to prevent the damage. This confidence may be rewarding in gameplay, but it is less impactful than the Envoy experiencing their first major failure from a narrative sense.
While Fior is attacked regardless of whether the Envoy completes Steel Resolve, it isn’t as devastating when the city is left standing after. Seeing an entire city razed on their watch is much more of an emotional gut punch for players than seeing it sort of damaged. Not only does seeing Fior getting destroyed create a stronger dramatic beat, but it also works better for characterizing the Steel Garrote.
If Fior Is Destroyed, The Steel Garrote Seem Like More Intimidating Villains
Foiling The Villains’ Plots Too Early Makes Them Seem Weak

While Avowed strays away from directly establishing a “good” and “bad” side – instead allowing the player to choose a side for themselves – it’s pretty clear that the Steel Garrote are the game’s villains. They don’t just enact violence on the people of the Living Lands, but they seem to revel in it. This isn’t just reserved for Avowed‘s big bad Inquisitor Lödwyn. Lower-raking Garrote officers like Captain Aelfyr and Captain Carnet also seem to enjoy killing anyone who stands in their way.
The more successful the Steel Garrote are in their attack on Fior, the more effective they seem as an antagonistic force in Avowed’s narrative. Apart from a short meeting with Lödwyn earlier in the game, the Emerald Stair is the first place players will actually come face to face with the Steel Garrote. If players first encounter them while burning down Fior, that leaves a much stronger impression than if their first experience is foiling their plans.
Since the end result is largely similar regardless of the player’s actions, the story works better when the Steel Garrote is even more successful in their attack.
Fior’s Destruction Is A Stronger Motivator For Giatta
Giatta And Other NPCs Are Deeply Affected By The Events In Fior

Giatta – one of the Envoy’s companions – has strong ties to Fior. Not only is it her home, but her parents are also (sort of) still there when the city burns down. Regardless of whether the city fully burns or is partially damaged, Giatta is understandably upset with the Steel Garrote, but there is extra weight behind her motivation when the city is completely destroyed. “They destroyed my home and I can never go back,” is a much stronger motivating force than, “they burned parts of the city I lived in and now there will need to be some repairs.”
What happened to Fior comes up in many future conversations with Giatta and other NPCs. Characters invoking Fior’s memory hit a lot harder when the city is gone, and it’s partially the Envoy’s fault for not stopping it. In general, the burning of Fior creates more dramatic tension in the later parts of the game.
The Stakes Are Higher In Avowed If Fior Is Destroyed
Fior’s Destruction Sets A Tone For The Rest Of Avowed

Watching a city burn and feeling partially responsible for it is a great way to raise the stakes for the protagonist in a story. After Fior’s destruction, there is a real sense of danger about what might happen next. Yes, the stakes are still somewhat raised if Fior is only partially destroyed, but seeing a worst-case scenario is a good way to establish the stakes of a story. The climax of Star Wars would likely be less exciting if Alderaan just suffered some superficial damage earlier in the story instead of getting blown to pieces.
It can be a little more challenging to view the story of a choice-based game like Avowed as an objective audience member. Players take on the role of the story’s main character and will likely want the best outcome for that character. This means that unless they are siding with the Steel Garrote, most players will likely want to save Fior. However, taking a step back and looking at the events of Avowed strictly as a story shows that it works better if players make major mistakes.
News
ILLEGAL WEAPON TECH: Reworked Stance Loophole and New Skill Synergy Break the Path of Exile 2 Balance Matrix
Grinding Gear Games just dropped a new skill in Return of the Ancients, and it has a hidden weapon tech that is absolutely ILLEGAL… 🤯 Top-tier melee theorycrafters have just cracked a broken mechanical exploit in Patch 0.5 that forces…
THE LOOT SYNDICATE: How Path of Exile 2 Multiplayers Are Using ‘RarityBots’ to Exploit Group MF Scaling and Corner the Market
They claimed group play was dead and unprofitable in Path of Exile 2… they were playing it completely wrong. 🤯 Top-tier gaming syndicates have just exposed a broken “RarityBot” support template for Duos and Groups that is unironically PRINTING mirror-tier…
LOGBOOK PRINTING PRESS: Reworked Expedition ‘Rumours’ Exploited to Shatter the Path of Exile 2 Economy
They claimed Expedition was too slow to be profitable in Path of Exile 2… they had absolutely no idea. 🤯 Top-tier economy barons have just cracked a broken “Rumour Stacking” loop in Patch 0.5 that is unironically PRINTING high-tier Logbooks…
THE ULTIMATE APOCALYPSE: Final Rework of the Gemling Infinite Explosions Build Obliterates Path of Exile 2 Pinnacle Content
They claimed no budget build could solo the ultimate pinnacle bosses in Path of Exile 2… then this FINAL VERSION dropped. 🤯 Top-tier theorycrafters have just leaked the absolute definitive endgame upgrade for the Gemling Legionnaire, pushing the “Infinite Explosions”…
ABYSS REBORN: How Elite Path of Exile 2 Players Are Defying Expansion Nerfs to Bank 20+ Divine Orbs per Hour
They screamed that the Return of the Ancients expansion completely gutted the Abyss loot table… they were completely blind. 🤯 Top-tier economy barons have just cracked a revamped “Abyss Hoard Loop” in the new expansion that is unironically pulling in…
UNDERGROUND CASH MACHINE: Reworked Abyss Mechanics Exploited to Flood Path of Exile 2 Market with Rare Omens and Divine Orbs
They claimed Abyss was a dead mechanic in Path of Exile 2… but right now, it’s unironically PRINTING Omens and Divine Orbs! 🤯 Top-tier economy barons have just cracked a high-yield “Spire Splitting” loop in Patch 0.5 that turns dark…
End of content
No more pages to load