Yeah, IIRC he was sent to the Chantry because his parents thought he'd sire a bastard that'd basically be all "I am a secret bastard and I challenge the throne, on top of his already considerable leeching, partying and being a burden on his siblings.
Vol wrote:That and giving EDI a sex-bot frame. The relationship with Joker was much more meaningful with EDI inhabiting the ship, a prisoner of "her body" as much as Joker was, but them finding a weird form of love with each other.
I did like the whole "EDI is the ship" thing. But I also kind of thought that the whole "EDI takes over Joker's love for the Normandy" was kind of present and a little bit annoying as Joker had the healthy appreciation for the ship and it's performance, on top of his love and nostalgia for the old Normandy Name and all the burden that comes with serving on a new one.
Granted EDI could help Joker through that and in reality EDI was still always the ship, but now she had a way to help Joker through his old feelings and the body helped their relationship form the distinction of not associating the old ship feelings onto the new EDI love feelings.
It serves as a divider between EDI's identity and the Normandy's identity for Joker.
Now her body being as endowed as it is. Yeah I kinda get it and also don't.
There is a theory of "some people looking away to not get caught gawping at the hot woman" but I feel that's still too much of a risk for an infiltration unit and was kind of called out on in Miranda. She states she dressed that way to make people stare at her and get caught up and off their game so she can deceive them, but that still draws attention to the infiltration unit in EDI/AVA's case.
But my horny brain goes "heh, sex-bot, noice!" so I don't complain too much.
If she was just kind of attractive and not literal sex-bot I think it might have worked better as no matter what I think any moderately attractive female visage would have been seen as a sex-bot.
Vol wrote:Liara didn't need to become the Shadowbroker,
Liara didn't need to become the Shadowroker, it's true. But we did need some form of ally controlling things.
Mind you it's kind of the case that Liara's story kind of goes nowhere after ME1 as they kind of just didn't really think of a good story for her. The 180 twist of her not doing anything close to what she was in ME1 was kinda weird. A welcome change from the meek character she was before but still weird.
I mean her taking over Benezia's old resources and turning them to a force for good would have made more sense. Maybe she should have stayed on as an archaeologist and been more active for Prothean stuff and given the Shadow Broker plot to someone new. Maybe Miranda was investigating the Shadow Broker for TIM and that led her down the path for protecting Oriana with the Shadow Broker's resources?
We'd still have an ally as the Shadow Broker at the end of ME2 and the canon would still be Miranda telling TIM to fuck off at the end of the game, but this time she'd be telling him to fuck off AND locking him out of the Shadow Broker's stuff, meaning her going on the run makes even more sense, and would explain where Cerberus got a bunch of stuff in ME3 as that'd have been all TIM could have grabbed before being locked out by Miranda.
Vol wrote:Tali didn't need to become an admiral
I kinda agree with this one.
If she still [i]had[i] to become an admiral then maybe there should have been more fight for it or something.
Maybe her taking Shala'Raan's place due to Shala finding the work too much or Tali feeling she wasn't being a good mediator for her trial or something.
It does kind of come out of left field that a youngster as Tali is kind of thrust into a position of power because she was on a couple of missions with the protagonist of the games.
If this was after the Geth/Quarian War and Legion was also made an Admiral then maaaaaybe but it still would have felt forced.
Actually Legion becoming an Admiral would have made for a better story and Tali supporting him for the good he had done in turning the Geth around and brokering peace would have made a lot more sense.
Vol wrote:Garrus didn't need to become whatever his deal was,
I mean he kinda did seeing as all he was doing was being a consultant on Reaper forces and trying to get Palaven to raise up it's defences in time.
Now I kinda think he failed/left it too late but seeing as all he was given was a token task force, and only after his dad had talked to his friend who happened to be a Primarch, Garrus is kind of the most believable as he really didn't have much power. At most he had a small garrison so, maybe the same level as a colonel or a major?
Vol wrote:Wrex didn't need to become King Krogan.
If not then the Krogans really didn't have much going for them story-wise.
Wrex was old, he had the drive and he had fought and united Clans by ME2. By that time he had been given Grunt, so that kinda helps.
I dunno, him seeing al the problems of the Krogan in ME1 and him fixing them in ME2 and 3 was kinda okay.
He recognised that Krogan's listen to strength so to be listened he had to become the strongest leader of the biggest Clan to make the changes he wanted to happen.
If it wasn't Wrex then we'd have been all "Oh so all those problems Wrex mentioned were either nothing or they got fixed by some new guy".
Either way if the story was going to involve getting Krogan on board then something needed to happen that we could identify with as a springboard.
Vol wrote:It's a common problem in sequels, granted, where you have to push the stakes ever higher. Then we run into, "Why the fuck is the Shadowbroker, the most knowledgeable quarian admiral about the geth/Reapers, a chief adviser to the turian generals, an unshackled AI, all on one little ship?!"
Don't see what the thematic purpose was, either, since the promotions are not all that vital to the narrative as I recall.
It's because the Normandy was a pretty damn good ship.
Even by the mid point of ME2 it was still pushing above it's class as a small cruiser.
And it was rebuilt to be a mobile command centre for Anderson, so it's not as if it wasn't going to be a ship of some importance.
It's clear putting all your eggs in one basket is a bad idea, granted, but thematically it's a stealth command centre that can move unseen and has the combined capabilities of all on board able to direct all forces.
It's more accurate to ask why there were not 5-10 other SSV Normandy SR-2's made for all the other commanders? And that's just resources and time.
Vol wrote:Back to pure waifus: Is there any demand for young, inexperienced men tho? Off the top of my head, Alistair was the only one, and he was also a king, clearly not "Fresh out of high school." But the archetype is completely foreign to me. Only ever seen the male version of a blushing young maiden to be intended for mockery.
Though thinking to DA2, seems like that was the last hurrah of offering traditional male romance fantasies, as per Halper's infamous interview about Merrill and the pirate chick. More realistic, perhaps, but Bioware's supposed to be making sci-fi/medieval power fantasy RPGs. Or was, anyway. Having just finished Persona 5, they go to (relative) lengths to make sure the waifus appeal to the player's presumed tastes (in Japan). But Mass Effect, Dragon Age, their characters are more well-rounded, intended as more than the scrap of romance content, to be fair.
Actually, were any of the romance options in DA:I, ME:A, ever said to be virgins? Seems like Bioware's entirely shifted away from that kind of storytelling.
Also, as I said then, as I say now: Tali >>> Samara > Liara > Humies
It's usually the case that the "fresh faced young dude-maiden" is the protagonist.
The rookie.
It's harder to make a fresh faced guy come of seriously IMO as their usually just seen as an obnoxious youngster character. You'd basically appear to just be telling them what to do until they get it, if they're a squadmate. If not then it's just the story writing itself and you have no impact on that character's growth. It's easier to make them the guy we grow with than show their growth as it's just some guy learning to be less obnoxious.
I think the only character in all media I can think of at the moment is Jaune Arc from RWBY. He starts off knowing basically nothing but perseveres and eventually becomes competent after his love interest dies. He's kind of a squadmate if it was translated into Bioware game terms but the growth is kind of out of the protagonists hands. It's just....there.
I am not sure it'd translate as well as it seems that some form of tragedy or event turns a young obnoxious guy into a less obnoxious "I am putting my srs mode on now" guy.
As far as virginity in romanceable characters I think it's pretty much because the whole "first time" scenario is a really annoyingly hard trope to write correctly without being super cliche or super cringey.
And I am glad for that.
Having the old trope of "I don't wanna die a virgin and I like you so let's bang" die off in these games is a big win for me as it's just dull.
TTTX wrote:TheodoricFriede wrote:Sabastian lived a live of debauchery and hedonism before joining the church.
I don't remember he mention that, then again he wasn't a great character.
He was a fine character.
He didn't have much to do in terms of Kirkwall though IIRC so he didn't feel as strongly as he was just there as a church guy investigating his family's murder.
Mind you I am still of the opinion that DA2 feels more like a collection of small stories rather than one big one.
I need to go back and replay it at some point to see if things were as bad/good as they were when I last played it.