![]() Resurrection always requires life essence. Sekiro’s narrative justification for this system makes sense. Dragonrot is the consequence (or the effect) of resurrecting without pink circle icon payments. ![]() If Wolf dies and can’t (or doesn’t) use a round icon to power Resurrection - if he comes back to life at a Sculptor’s Idol, in other words - then that flavor or resurrection must consume the life essence of NPCs in the world. ![]() Here’s another way to look at it: Those pink circles in the lower left of your screen are the result of Wolf’s actions, and the consequences of paying circular icons to use Resurrective Power are limited to Wolf - not NPCs in the world. He’s just making his payment right there on the battlefield. Wolf already collected what he needed to pay for Resurrection. Using those icons to power Resurrection and come back from the dead has no effect on Dragonrot (which we’ll talk about below). When he’s collected enough (or he rests at a Sculptor’s Idol), the round, pink icons at the lower left of your screen fill up. Resurrection on the battlefield (round, pink icons)Īs Wolf kills certain enemies, he collects their life force. At a Sculptor’s Idol with the life force of characters (NPCs) in the world of Sekiro as payment.On the battlefield using the round, pink icons at the bottom left of your screen as payment.So, to be clear, Wolf can pay for Resurrection in two ways: Why? Because every living thing in Sekiro has something like a life force, and Wolf must always consume that life force to resurrect. If Wolf doesn’t have Resurrective Power resources on hand (again, the pink circles) or chooses not to use them, then coming back to life automatically at a Sculptor’s Idol has an effect on characters in the world. If Wolf has Resurrective Power resources on hand (those pink circle icons in the bottom left of the screen), then resurrecting on the battlefield has no effect on characters in the world. Sometimes, Wolf pays for it himself.f Sometimes, others in the game pay it for him. In Sekiro, the process that allows Wolf to die and come back to life always has a cost. This guide now incorporates that knowledge and information directly from Sekiro publisher Activision. Update (April 9): Since Sekiro’s release, we’ve continued to learn more about Dragonrot, Rot Essence, and Resurrection. The distinction matters because the consequences are different. In short, Wolf comes back to life in two ways (and places): on the battlefield and at a Sculptor’s Idol. In this guide, we’ll explain what that means, how it works, how to avoid it, how to cure Dragonrot, and how to get Rot Essence out of your inventory. After you use Resurrection in Sekiro to return from the dead, you’ll occasionally receive an item called Rot Essence.
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