The announcement of a newFablegame for the Xbox Series X came as a surprise to many. More surprising to some is the fact that the newFablewill be a reboot of the franchise, leaving many fans to speculate about the many directions the story could go in.

Microsoft’s Head of Studios has already said that the new game’s team has a “unique view of what’s core toFable," which to many fans likely sounds as ominous as it sounds like a fresh opportunity. With the franchise at a crossroads, there’s one antagonistFablefans would love to see make a return.

Fable alignment

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Fable’s Greatest Villain

Jack of Blades appeared as the villain in thefirstFablegame. Not only were his visual design and mysterious origins great introductions toFable’s stylized world, but he also presented some of the most difficult choices in the game. During the first game’s arena segment, Jack announces his return to Albion after an “eternity.” At this point only two heroes remain, the player, and their childhood friend, Whisper. Jack demands that the two friends fight to the death, and if the player ultimately decides to kill Whisper, Jack will reward them with 10,000 gold.

One of the best things about Jack as a villain is that, while he has his own nefarious schemes, the character was designed to give the player themselves opportunities to makeevil choices inFable. Jack represents what the Hero of Oakvale could become. He is feared shown when the scholar studying the Focus Sites abandons his work as soon as he realizes Jack is involved, and beloved, shown at the arena where he is introduced as the “hero of heroes”.

Fable Jack of Blades

Fable 1had a moral alignment system like many other games. While system’s likeMass Effect’s paragon/renegade systempunished players for doing evil to the extent that almost all players chose the paragon track, Jack stands to demonstrate that the wilyFableplayer can have it all, if they are willing the be ruthless enough.

After the player kills Jack at the end of the firstFablegame, the purpose of his character remains clear. The player is presented with a choice: kill their character’s sister, Theresa, and claim the Sword of Aeons, or destroy the sword and lose that power forever.

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Fable: How Jack of Blades Could Come Back

There are plenty of reasons Jack of Blades could return in aFablereboot. If the hero ends the first game’s expansions wearing both the Sword of Aeons and Jack’s blade they are implied to have been taken over by Jack himself, with the player’s in-game journal reading “How pathetic of this little Hero to keep a journal. Well, he is dead now, and Jack of Blades lives. Nothing in Albion can stop me now.”

Jack is also hinted to be older than humanity itself, using the mask to jump from host to host to stay alive indefinitely, as well as having origins in The Void that might mean that he returns there after his defeat inFable’s Albionanyway.

The main point, however, is that whoever the newFable’s villain turns out to be, theFablereboot’s developershould look to Jack of Blades as the template. His villainy isn’t just about being purely antagonistic, but providing the player with opportunities to become more and more like him for increasingly great rewards until they are one and the same. That was part of the genius of the original game’s morality system – it rewarded evil, but through the villain showed the player exactly what price they would pay as well.

AFablereboot could go in any direction, but if Jack of Blades is the antagonist, at least in spirit, it will likely be on the right track to recapture the series’ heights and help launch theXbox Series X’s RPG line-upfor the next-gen of consoles.

Fableis currently in development for PC and Xbox Series X.

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