Years after Set’s defeat, Egypt enjoys a fragile era of peace under Horus and Hathor. Temples are rebuilt, mortals and gods coexist once more, and belief restores divine power. Yet beneath the sands, an ancient darkness begins to stir—older than Set, older than the gods themselves.
The chaos serpent Apophis, long imprisoned in the Duat, awakens as human faith starts to fade. Feeding on fear and doubt, Apophis poisons the Nile, twists the night sky, and sends monstrous omens across the land, signaling the end of Ma’at—cosmic balance.
Horus struggles to hold the gods together as their powers weaken. Ra, once the supreme sun god, is fading, and rival deities argue over how to stop Apophis. Some believe the serpent cannot be destroyed, only reborn, and that Egypt’s age of gods is ending.
A new mortal hero emerges—Nefer, a fearless warrior-scholar chosen by Thoth. Carrying forbidden knowledge, Nefer discovers a prophecy stating that only the unity of gods and mortals can bind Apophis again, but at the cost of divine immortality.
Set returns from exile, warning that Apophis seeks to devour the sun itself. Though mistrusted, Set joins Horus in an uneasy alliance. Old enemies fight side by side as Apophis unleashes colossal serpentine forms, turning deserts into battlefields and the sky into chaos.
In a final confrontation within the Duat, Horus, Set, and Nefer face Apophis as Ra sacrifices his remaining power to reignite the sun. Nefer seals the serpent using ancient magic, while the gods pour their essence into the spell, knowing it will change them forever.
Apophis is defeated, but the gods emerge weakened and bound to the mortal world. Egypt enters a new age where humans shape destiny, guided—not ruled—by the gods. As the sun rises, Horus watches over a changed world, knowing the era of absolute gods has come to an end.