Baldur’s Gate 3 player learns one companion death can haunt you from hell

A Baldur’s Gate 3 player found that, after sacrificing a companion during Act One, his death came back to haunt them, even from the Nine Hells.

Baldur’s Gate 3allows you tojoin forces with various other travelerson your journey across the Sword Coast.

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But while the game lets you befriend and bond with your companions, it also provides plenty of opportunities to be cruel to them.

This doesn’t always come without consequence, though, as one player learned after sacrificing Gale and trying to send him to the Nine Hells.

two co-op characters bg3 in split screen

Note, spoilers for Gale’s storyline to follow.

Gale’s nuclear corpse explosion ends Baldur’s Gate 3 run from Avernus

At this point, most Baldur’s Gate 3 players have probably heard about theconsequences of killing Gale. The Wizard of Waterdeep has what is essentially a nuke in his chest, and if he dies, it will blow up and kill your entire party if you don’t resurrect him within a few days.

One player decided to test the limits of this by trying to send Gale’s corpse to a different realm, but even that doesn’t stop him from blowing up and entire playthrough.

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As Reddit userThePawn08 shared, they “reverse-pick-pocketed Gale’s corpse into Raphael’s inventory,” presumably sending him to The House of Hope in Avernus.

However, rather thandestroying Raphael’s homeand leaving the party intact, Gale did ultimately explode and kill everyone, though the player noted “I got a lengthy black screen instead of a cut scene.”

A screenshot of Baldur’s Gate from Steam

This most likely is a result of the game not expecting anyone to stuff Gale’s body into a cambion’s pocket to detonate on another plane, some have proposed in-universe explanations.

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One suggests “raphael probably so pissed you obliterated his house he came to kill you in your sleep,” which would explain the lack of a cutscene showing Gale exploding. Others have assumedRaphaelwas on the Material Plane at the time, as he does seem to travel around messing with mortals quite a bit.

Perhaps the funniest part of the entire situation is that Raphael, somehow, doesn’t notice the player giving him Gale.

As one player put it “It’s killing me that we’re rationalizing a believable ‘headcanon’ of where Raphael must have been for this to have happened, ignoring the fact that Raphael needs to have somehow been unaware he was carrying the body of a grown man in his pocket the entire time.”