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apprentice
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OP
apprentice
Joined: Oct 2020
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As I play the game more and more often I regret choices and the consequences that followed. My game with my warrior seems inconsistent to me. I wish to do good and I do evil instead of saving I kill. It's a shame we don't have a choice guide (Good, neutral, bad) I feel like I'm going to start over for a path that suits me better after if you want the unfiltered version detailing the game. Tell me.
After that I don't want to go further in the game because my experience becomes uncomfortable
Last edited by Zedd; 30/10/20 08:38 AM.
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old hand
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old hand
Joined: Oct 2020
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Huh. I did fine as the ultimate hero-of-the-hour. Failed to save one kid, but made up for it at the beach. Stopped a mill, some Ogres... Noticed a Dwarf on a grill and murdered *each and every Goblin in a battle that lasted well over an hour*. Then breached their interior and the same thing, saving a bunch of refugees *and* a Druid *and* the protagonist from Chicken-Chasing in the process. I killed a terrible evil in a swamp, talked to a native animal afterwards, which allowed me to share in super happy feels. Inspired some bard, listened to her sing. Slaughtered a bunch of Gnolls, but then - the curiosity got the better of me and I stole a box with a bottle. STill, I then helped some mushrooms in a cave and a mushroom picker.... There is plenty of 'good' options? I'm not asking for 'unfiltered', the whining and complaining on these boards is terrible; but an insight into what you wrongly perceived as good would make sense.
Fear my wrath, for it is great indeed.
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member
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member
Joined: Oct 2020
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Do I understand this correctly: you want to know beforehand what is "the right choice"? I think it would take a lot away from the experience if you knew beforehand whether your choices would ultimately result to good or bad
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apprentice
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OP
apprentice
Joined: Oct 2020
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In fact, for example, I am in the forest and I see 3 people, one of whom is in agony. I try by discussion to save him. He dies. His friends ask me if I am like them and am I their guide. I tell them yes and in the end he attacks me. In the end, I kill them and I didn't want them dead.
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old hand
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old hand
Joined: Oct 2020
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Ah yes. Those three people. Well. They are in service of the enemy, the same enemy that has Goblins and Drow and Gnolls and so forth. That's why they attacked. There isn't anything particular good or evil to do here. But a righteous lawful stupid paladin could easily have justified killing them.
Last edited by rodeolifant; 30/10/20 10:56 AM.
Fear my wrath, for it is great indeed.
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enthusiast
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enthusiast
Joined: Oct 2020
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I don't agree. You are roleplaying not "option selecting". You pick an option that you think fits with your character's personality. How the world reacts to it isn't in your hand. Honestly this is what makes BG3 a great game, where there are choices, but not the "Blue for good, red for bad" style that Mass Effect gave you. In fact, for example, I am in the forest and I see 3 people, one of whom is in agony. I try by discussion to save him. He dies. His friends ask me if I am like them and am I their guide. I tell them yes and in the end he attacks me. In the end, I kill them and I didn't want them dead. Just because you don't want an out come doesn't make you evil for it happening. Sometimes shit happens. (PS: You have the option to knock people out you know?)
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old hand
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old hand
Joined: Sep 2020
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I don't agree. You are roleplaying not "option selecting". You pick an option that you think fits with your character's personality. How the world reacts to it isn't in your hand. Honestly this is what makes BG3 a great game, where there are choices, but not the "Blue for good, red for bad" style that Mass Effect gave you. In fact, for example, I am in the forest and I see 3 people, one of whom is in agony. I try by discussion to save him. He dies. His friends ask me if I am like them and am I their guide. I tell them yes and in the end he attacks me. In the end, I kill them and I didn't want them dead. Just because you don't want an out come doesn't make you evil for it happening. Sometimes shit happens. (PS: You have the option to knock people out you know?) Agreed. Good and evil are too subjective. If someone does what they feel is the right thing then this is the "good" outcome. Having a controlled outcome makes the game play itself, you are only watching it pass by. The freedom to pick choices that your character (or you) would pick, imo is the way to feel a part of the story. This knock out option would probably be the best thing if you do not wish to kill someone. This does make me wonder if a no kill playthrough is possible, maybe kill only those that are needed to progress the plot. The dice rolling may make you uncomfortable, best to save your game often if you are sensitive to failing rolls. Just like in DnD, even if you excel at something it doesn't mean the dice will favour you.
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Stranger than life
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Stranger than life
Joined: Oct 2020
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"The words of this wizard stand on their heads. In the language of Orthanc help means ruin, and saving means slaying, that is plain." Dual-wielding dwarven ranger with damage die to spare and too many hits a round to worry about semantics.
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