I was saying that it wasn't just the ebony stone that creates or maintain the eternal night but also Walter's presence as well, when Leon already destroyed the ebony stone as I've already said, the night is still on Walter's side as he said before the real boss fight with him.
The morning was slowly returning as noted by Mathias only just right after Walter was killed for good and his soul was captured by death to create crimson stone.
I really don't think so man. "I am beloved by the Night" and "With my power, I will SURELY come back to life!" sound like pretty bog-standard evil-dying-and-desperate gloating. I doubt there's much substance behind it, or he would have said it much more confidently or even more likely he wouldn't have even brought it up at all. Even Dracula, when he addresses future resurrections says it in a tone of
"Aww shucks you win this round, Belmont. I'll see you next time though! But not YOU specifically because you'll probably have aged to death. I'll give your regards to your descendants though."Walter says these things because he
knows they aren't true for him but he's trying to hold onto his delusions of grandeur before he dies.
Like I've said before: not everything in Castlevania has to actually mean what is said, especially when it comes to an untouchable supervillain who has discovered for the first time that he is vulnerable and that his opponent truly represents a real threat to his very life. People can be delusional, mistaken, or even out-and-out lie.
By the time Leon confronts him in the throne room, Walter is scared to death, and tries to act tough because he finally realizes he went squishy underneath his "armor" that was provided by the Ebony Stone decades or even centuries prior. He just hadn't been able to feel it before because how could he when the Stone made him invincible? Suddenly, alone, without allies or true friends, facing an enemy he soberingly knows has the capacity to truly destroy him, Walter is without the crutch he has come to depend upon to even function. So he blusters. He talks up his own game.
"YOU CAN'T KILL ME! I AM
WALTER BERNHARD! WALTER GODDAMN BERNHARD! THE DARK LORD!
I'M BELOVED BY THE NIGHT! INVINCIBLE! YOU CANNOT POSSIBLY IN ANY WAY HARM--
okay you've killed me. BUT THAT DOESN'T MATTER! Death is cheap! Obviously I'll come back to life! I'm just that great! I'm too bishonen to stay dead-- *Death harvests his soul* ...
well shit..."
Unfortunately for Walter, that's all it is. It's just bluster. As we find out, though he was indeed a powerful vampire even without his Ebony Stone crutch, there was nothing special about him. Whether Death had intervened or not, it was clear Leon had fatally wounded Walter and he would have died either way.
It's actually very realistic writing that accurately portrays how powerful, untouchable men face death as soon as they realize that none of their power matters when death comes figuratively knocking at their door. Political sway, henchmen, money, industry, armies or empires that one might rule over will do nothing to halt death. And Jameison Price's wonderful VA really sells it. Walter is used to being unstoppable, but it was the Ebony Stone that was unstoppable, not him. Only finally realizing this as he's in his last moments means he doesn't exactly face death with dignity.
It's either that BRILLIANT writing, or incredibly lazy writing if you're correct. If he IS beloved by the night, all that narrative intelligence and brilliance goes away, and Walter reverts to being another generic example of
"Off the Shelf Stock Supervillain/Final Boss #384"So I'm gonna stick with my explanation, because it makes Walter a phenomenally well written and executed character instead of a drab cookie cutter poor-man's Dracula stand-in.