

After evading the her air attacks, he will pull himself to her and tear off the beast's wing, which is also her frontal left leg, which prevents her from flying again. Kratos first stabs the monster with one Blade, and she flies back, but he keeps pulling her with the Blade's chain. She can also try to blow Kratos away by slammingiher wings together, but this move can be blocked. If one of these spikes hits Kratos, he needs to remove it quickly. While on the ground, the Manticore focus on tail attacks, and can throw spikes from her scorpion tail. In this fight, she could fly and spit fire at Kratos from the air. She attacks Kratos again at the top of the Tower of Delphi in a fierce fight. This first Manticore first attacks Kratos by trying to make him fall from one of the Python mechanisms and having a short fight against him in the air. The Manticore is a flying sub-boss presented with a lion-like face, the jaw of a shark, which can become unhinged, dragon wings, human arms and torso, a scorpion tail and scorpion-like plates lining its back.Ī female Manticore lived in Delphi, where numerous eggs of the monster could be found. It eats its victims whole, using its triple rows of teeth, and leaves no bones behind. There are some accounts that the spines can be shot like arrows, thus making the manticore a lethal predator. It has the head of a human, body of a lion and a tail of venomous spines similar to porcupine quills, while other depictions have it with the tail of a scorpion.

The Manticore (in early middle Persian Merthykhuwar) is a Persian legendary creature similar to the Egyptian sphinx that proliferated in western European medieval art as well.
