Ending Predictor
I use this tool when a run feels close, yet the last scene feels unsure. It turns key story picks into a clear end lane. β¨
π― Ending Predictor
Answer 10 quick questions and we forecast your Dispatch ending. The tool reads romance, morality, loyalty, and mission outcomes across Episodes 1-8.
In Episode 3, did you chase the Phenomaman path?
Episode 3 is the early fork that can lock romance routes later.
Did you pursue Phenomaman in Episode 3? Ending Predictor Ending Predictor
Pick Phenomaman in Ep 3 if you want power and a tight route. Skip him if you want wide romance room. The Ending Predictor can map how this fork shifts your end lane fast. That choice sets tone, trust, and who stays near you. A bold pick can lock a bond but cut other ties. A safe pick keeps more talk paths live. It is a fork that feels small yet shapes your last scene.
Think of Ep 3 as a gate. The Ending Predictor weighs your gate with later beats, like Ep 4 lock, Ep 5 bar, and Ep 7 trust. If you chase Phenomaman, you lean into risk and big power gain. If you pass, you keep calm lines open for Blazer or Invisigal. This is not just a love pick. It shifts team vibe, task flow, and who backs you in the end. A calm route often leads to steadier trust, while a bold route pays off in sharp, high notes.
I treat this choice as a path lock, not a soft hint. If you want to role play, go with gut feel. If you want a clean end, check a few quick marks and read the tool output with care. The pace of your bond matters as much as the pick. It helps to note who you back in Ep 4 and how you act in Ep 7, since those add or cut end flags.
- Chase Phenomaman: more power, less room for other love beats.
- Keep routes open: more chat paths, less raw power late.
- Stay pro: less love heat, more team focus.
A good rule is to tie the pick to your run goal. If you chase high power and fast wins, Phenomaman fits. If you want more romance space, keep paths open so you can test tone and trust. *Small shifts add up.* A soft line in Ep 3 can echo in Ep 6 and Ep 7. Your end is not one pick; it is a chain of calm or bold moves. That is why I scan the chain, not just the first link.
If you like a clear map, skim a basic tree view of story forks. A fast read on decision trees can help you frame a fork as a node with cost and gain. You do not need deep math. Just note what you gain, what you lose, and how much time it takes to fix a bad pick.
| Pick | Likely shift | Risk feel |
|---|---|---|
| Phenomaman | Power up, romance lane narrows | High |
| Keep open | More talk paths stay live | Mid |
| Stay pro | Team focus stays clean | Low |
βI kept routes open in Ep 3, then used Ep 4 and Ep 7 to lock my end.β
One more note: the team vibe can tilt your end as much as romance does. If you back the team in key talks, your trust line stays high. If you push solo picks, the team line drops. That shift can move you from a warm end to a cold one, even if you kept the same love route. I use the tool to spot that drop before it feels too late to fix.
I also run a fast test path with the same Ep 3 pick. One run is for speed, one is for story. The compare view helps me see how much risk I can take in Ep 6 and Ep 7. If the path stays in the same tier, I know I can play loose. If the tier drops, I keep a tight plan for the last beats.
Missed a beat? Do not panic. Use the next ep to build a trust win. Back a key ally, keep a soft line, and skip harsh replies. The tool will show if that gain is enough to keep the same end lane. This is why I log each main pick, so I can spot the one that needs a fix.