What' I'm asking is if you fail at a persuasion, re-load the game and try again is there a chance that you could succeed where you failed before or are you going to just fail every time. I'm basically trying to get the green blade from the Missing Child quest in Redcliff. But I keep failing the conversation.
Is there any reason to retry persuasion/intimidate convo's?
Débuté par
vyvexthorne
, nov. 12 2009 12:34
#1
Posté 12 novembre 2009 - 12:34
#2
Posté 12 novembre 2009 - 12:46
There is no random chance. You either succeed or you fail. Reloading don't help (I think).
#3
Posté 12 novembre 2009 - 12:49
Your coercion skill level determines your success, there is no rolling involved.
Not sure if cunning comes into play, but it seems to be a 'no'. I had barely enough cunning to pass Coercion's fourth level requirement on my mage and I still never failed any speech checks.
Not sure if cunning comes into play, but it seems to be a 'no'. I had barely enough cunning to pass Coercion's fourth level requirement on my mage and I still never failed any speech checks.
#4
Posté 12 novembre 2009 - 12:49
I'm pretty sure its just a flat check..either pass or fail..there is no random..I could be wrong though.
#5
Posté 12 novembre 2009 - 03:14
That's what it seemed to me.. That's slightly disappointing that's it's a flat check.. I would hope cunning would come into play otherwise it's forcing you to put points into coercion where as other party members don't need coercion... I'm already feeling like the rogue doesn't get enough skill points.
#6
Posté 12 novembre 2009 - 03:33
While there is no random pass/fail, your cunning (or strength) is used in the "are you persuasive/intimidating enough to do this" decision. In fact, the skill adds onto your cunning/strength for these checks (you can succeed without any coercion skill, if your strength or cunning is high enough, and conversely, with the skill your cunning/strength doesn't need to be as high).
And, in case it wasn't obvious, strength is used for intimidation, while cunning is used for persuasion.
And, in case it wasn't obvious, strength is used for intimidation, while cunning is used for persuasion.





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