oneliner
Educated
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2014
- Messages
- 59
Did the cat die?
No but he was born souless
Did the cat die?
"Also, I think the most striking parallel that I can put here is that 15 years ago when you killed a dragon in Baldur’s Gate 2, you could take its scale and craft yourself a bitchin’ suit of armour that would outshine most other ones in the game. In PoE, you can use the scale to add yourself a +2 damage reduction to your generic plate mail..."
That paragraph is fairly shit though. Since you can also add DR to a unique piece of armor you have already found and not simply to generic platemail.
He isn't trolling, he is genuinely retarded.That paragraph is fairly shit though. Since you can also add DR to a unique piece of armor you have already found and not simply to generic platemail.
Not sure if trolling. If yes then
"Anyone who loves PoE unquestionably is a Fanboy."
Duh. Anyone who loves anything unquestionably is a fanboy.
What kind of bullshit thread is this?
You do know that these questions have been asked and debated upon since humans first found faith?And... I loved the way the game was an obvious parable of the stuff that's going on in our world right now. Also the way nobody's appeared to pick up on it, despite its obviousness.
What exactly do you mean by that, care to elaborate a bit on this point?
There's a lot of stuff, but I was thinking mostly about religion and science/technology in society and politics. Animancy and the animancers are a pretty obvious parallel for secularists and scientists; religions are religions. While the writers take a pretty fucking big stand on the matter
humans made gods, not the other way around
the reasons people follow gods, or not, and the consequences of following them, or not, are presented in nuanced, relatable ways.
You do know that these questions have been asked and debated upon since humans first found faith?
It is not something "that's going on in our world right now".
In fantasy cRPG's though people follow gods because they give them badass spells
In fantasy cRPG's though people follow gods because they give them badass spells
Not really. If this is a dig at D&D-related settings, look up what Wall of Faithless is. TES, as an example of another big fantasy setting, doesn't even have priestly magic, it's all in the learning, aedra and daedra give minor boons at best.
WTF? No they don't.You do know that these questions have been asked and debated upon since humans first found faith?
It is not something "that's going on in our world right now".
Of course.
In fantasy cRPG's though people follow gods because they give them badass spells, by Clangeddin's beard. Not because they feel like they need redemption. Nor do they struggle with their faith, fear that they've lost their god's favor, or have been betrayed by their god and found another. Evil gods are evil because they're evil, not because they embody the silent, powerless rage of the enslaved. And so on.
As to "going on right now," the peculiar science/religion fight going on the US is highly contemporary. Most of Europe is already secular and that sort of thing is in the fringes; for most of history in most places, the converse was true. So yeah it is contemporary.
Your review of my review read like a kid's who wants too hard to fit in with the edgy crowd. You're welcome.
What, it does feature religion? I've only played Morrowind and that ages ago, not a TES fan so I don't know jack shit about its lore.
P:E features believable religions and deities people adhere to, follow, and struggle with for understandable, human reasons
(2) by far most cRPG's do not
Please explain the relevance of the Wall of the Faithless of whether TES features priestly magic or not to these points.