After the Empyrean Foundation event was completed, Destiny 2 announced the Trials of Osiris Crucible event will return from Destiny on March 13. Players who are looking to have a more chill time with the game before that mode returns could take a page from Kimber Prime on YouTube, who put together a relaxing 15-minute documentary called "Creatures of Destiny."

The documentary focuses on the "surprisingly large variety of critters hidden in plain sight" in Destiny 2 according to its video description. Kimber Prime, who focuses on Destiny 2, Overwatch, and Dota 2 content, is clearly looking to emulate the nature documentaries produced by places like the BBC — narration provided by "The Bored Chairman" even sounds like a parody of  Sir David Attenborough.

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"Creatures of Destiny" ultimately has an environmentalist message for Guardians in that they should stop the Vex from terraforming planets and killing all wildlife, even name-dropping the Exo Titan Saint-14. Some of the wildlife they highlight are frogs in the Artifact's Edge on Nessus, shining golden butterflies in the Dreaming City, and the different kinds of dragonflies living on Mercury versus Earth.

What makes Kimber Prime's documentary stand out as something truly charming is how committed they are to really emulating the feeling of watching a documentary by using bits of lore from the game and actual facts about the biology of creatures like butterflies. There are plenty of entertaining moments, including one focusing on the relationship between hens and wolves in Destiny 2's social space The Farm and another hunting for an elusive sea monster on Titan.

There is not a ton of downtime to be had in Destiny 2 given the combat-oriented nature of its existence as Bungie's continually active free-to-play online first-person shooter. As a result much of the discourse around the game tends to focus on what is or is not viable in the meta, especially now with Season 10 removing gear and activities.

Kimber Prime makes a strong case for slowing down to smell the roses, or taking a look at some of the small creatures Bungie programmed to populate its first-person shooter, as it were. If Destiny can be a catalyst for relationships, why can't it also inspire a little more appreciation for the natural world?

Destiny 2 is available now for PC, PS4, Stadia, and Xbox One.

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