

The tower debris is shattered by an Inspired and the pair are separated whilst Bayonetta fights against Loptr.īayonetta 3 Main article: Umbran Clock Tower (demon) The pair then fight the angels surrounding them at the same time that Bayonetta's past self and Jeanne are fighting on the clock face.

She and Bayonetta are forced to follow the fragments over the cliff edge after Fortitudo refocuses his efforts on them.

Rosa laments its destruction as it crumbles, referring to it as a symbol of the Umbran Way.

Though the pair of them are able to reach the site and defend it bravely from Temperantia, Fortitudo appears and destroys the main building, sending it careening of the edge of the cliff. Rosa insists that they gather at the Clock Tower with their fellow Witches to defend it from the incoming forces of Paradiso as their last stronghold. After Bayonetta is forced to travel back in time and re-experience the Witch Hunts, she encounters her mother Rosa. The Umbran Clock Tower is featured more heavily in the sequel. Upon examining it, she remarks that she has seen it somewhere before but cannot recall where. The clock face of the tower reappears 500 years later after Bayonetta is swept off of Route 666 and into Paradiso. As they eventually reconvene together on the clock face, Fortitudo appears and destroys it with his fire, sending both of the witches plummeting downwards. The tower fragments are damaged during the fall, prompting Bayonetta and Jeanne to use other pieces of falling debris to escape. As the clock face itself falls down a gigantic cliff after having being destroyed, Bayonetta and Jeanne fight an onslaught of angels together while using the Witch Walk ability to stay attached. The Umbran Clock Tower, or at least the remains of it after an attack, serve as the stage for the opening prologue.
