Many are excited about the newestCall of Dutygame,Black Ops 7, as they should be.Black Ops 7isthe long-overdue follow-upfans have been wanting for 13 years, acting as a direct sequel toCall of Duty: Black Ops 2. I just replayedBO2a few months ago on Xbox PC, and it was still phenomenal.

It’s great we finally have a sequel to the entry often regarded as theGOAT ofCall of Dutygames. However, after replaying it again, I discovered something truly special.Black Ops 2’swild end credits scene blew my socks off, and it was so awesome that I don’t think Treyarch will ever try to replicate it again.

Frank Woods playing on the drums in the ending song of Call of Duty: Black Ops 2.

Call Of Duty: Black Ops 2’s End Credits Scene Blew Me Away

Let’s Rock, Baby

After the credits roll onCall of Duty: Black Ops 2, there is a nearly six-minute scene that starts normally enough. There’s a conversation between Frank Woods and Raul Menendez, and what’s so great about this intro is that it doesn’t immediately give away what the end credits scene is about. This makes the full-onAvenged Sevenfold “Carry On” music videohit that much harder.

Set in the famous Club Solar seen in the campaign, the various members of Avenged Sevenfold and the cast of characters inBlack Ops 2rock out to the incredible “Carry On.” It’s an awesome end credits scene by itself, but this is somethingyou would never expect in a huge AAA American FPS game. This is something out of a Japanese action game, like the end credits scene inGod HandorBayonetta.

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The fact that it’s included in such a mainstream American FPS game makes it all the more shocking and awesome to see. This scene really wasthe cherry on top of an already all-time great campaign, and it’s one of the standout qualities that makesBlack Ops 2the GOAT of the series.

There’s No Chance Black Ops 7 Will Have Something That Cool

Black Ops 7 Looks Great, But There’s No Way It’ll Have A Cool Music Video Like This

Having a full-on music video with the cast of characters rocking out in the campaign seems like such a taboo thing inCall of Dutynow. Sure, the multiplayer and Zombies get wacky, but Treyarch, Infinity Ward, Sledgehammer, and othersusually attempt to make the campaign as grounded as possible.

Even for an end credits bonus scene, I don’t see a full-on music video happening ever again in theCall of Dutyseries. Fromeverything we know aboutBlack Ops 7, there are tons of great additions, new features, and stuff we’ve never seen before in aCall of Dutygame. However, it does sadden me thatCall of Dutywill likely never have a moment as shocking, awesome, and cool as the end credits scene inBlack Ops 2.