If you decide to consume another worm first, he is relieved you didn't end up with tentacles and feels encouraged to 'help himself' too because of no side effects.
And very sweetly says, "You don't share!" with adorable animation And giggles after a sentence about watching you as an experiment.
And on the topic of the video with Astarion and Tav-illithid (ha, brutal, sure, but he's pretty disappointed...) In BG3, the theme of self-sacrifice, I see, is presented from a much more realistic angle than we're usually used to seeing in games. You can get serious negative consequences, just like in life. As with Astarion, if he sacrifices himself for others, there is no "rosy fairy tale with a good ending". You have to think logically and do what is best and most beneficial for you. It seems that this makes the character "jump" back and forth from "good to evil", like a kind of "Jekyll and Hyde", but, damn it, it's much more like life, in which "justice" exists only in the form of an idea in people's imagination. And there are no elaments as such in the game, only the paladin's oath, and if you're not a paladin, you can do whatever you want in any situation.
Originally Posted by Ametris
It happens during the 3rd long rest in Lower City after meeting Petras and Dalyria.
Somebody interrupted it for me it seems - Vlaakit or Emperor with his molestations... We also very quickly rushed to Cazador, only for the Tharchiate Codex we went to the library first, I, when I saw Cazador's mark on the map, could not think of anything else, but there were three rests, it is not possible to get there right away. It's also interesting how the game managed to create a real image of the enemy (Cazador), which you really, really hate from the bottom of your heart, with all the resulting "bloody pictures in your head" in his address, really, the battle becomes a truly significant event.