Are they overdoing the whole "no one believes you" thing?
#1
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:20
This is asking, from a writing perspective: have they overused this plot device?
I guess I’m a little frustrated that they are still using it even in game two, and was wondering if anyone felt the same. It’s like reading all of The Order of the Phoenix and seeing the Ministry deny the truth for 800 pages, having Voldemort himself pop into the Ministry of Magic in front of eye witnesses, then picking up The Half-Blood Prince and discovering that in the time Harry was away the Ministry had gone back to denying everything and was handwaving the whole event as a practical joke some hooligans played to give people a scare. But I spent a whole book putting up with this crap and fighting to make the truth known!
Then you hop on the forums and people tell you, “I beg your pardon, it’s realistic that politicians would do a 180.” Well yes, but purely as a player I can’t help but think enough’s enough. I don’t like the No One Believes You trope in the best of times, but in excess it induces dangerously impatient foot tapping and exasperated sighs, which aren't good for my story enjoyment.
#2
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:24
#3
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:30
#4
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:33
In ME2: Yes. They've had clear evidence by then, and not some visions from a guy/girl who was knocked out cold by an alien device.
#5
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:35
Edit: Few typos
Modifié par Bourne Endeavor, 17 janvier 2011 - 08:38 .
#6
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:35
#7
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:36
#8
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:38
In ME2, unsightly when it is raised, but still no: the primary actors who don't believe you (the Council) may be a bit unpleasant to look at, if they aren't lying, but many other informed people do know and believe you.
#9
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:40
The question has never been if Sovereign, the ship, existed. Even it having an AI isn't necessarily in dispute.Stupidus wrote...
I don't know either it's stupid. The council was in the Destiny Ascension and probably saw Sovereign, and even at the end if you save the council even the god damn Turian one aknowledges the word 'Reaper' at the end. Yet in ME2 we get "Ah yes, Reapers...". Even more disappointed by Kaidan/Ashley not believing you.
The matter of debate is if Sovereign, the ship, is necessarily a Reaper, an immortal race of sentient space ships that kill everything for no apparent reason and then leave without leaving any real proof each time.
#10
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:41
Okay by this post I think I made it clear I absolutely hate the council for their actions and would like nothing more than to watch them die, can't get myself to sacrifice the destiny ascenion in ME1 though (that's a waste of a good ship)
Edit: The worst part of it was kaidan/ashley not believing the entire reaper/collector story. I mean it was like they had been brainwashed by the alliance, I mean.. HELLOO? You were there when vigil told us about the reapers remember?
The question has never been if Sovereign, the ship, existed. Even it having an AI isn't necessarily in dispute.
The matter of debate is if Sovereign, the ship, is necessarily a Reaper, an immortal race of sentient space ships that kill everything for no apparent reason and then leave without leaving any real proof each time.
No, they were aware of Sovereign being something different entirely. They said that sovereign could've been a geth ship. I doubt even they believed their own words when they said that... To me it was clear the council knew about the reapers. I believe if you talk to avina having samara in your party there's an option that talks about reapers. Avina says she (it) doesn't know that term, samara replies it has been actively wiped from the extranet.
Can't remember exactely how to trigger it but it's there. Further evidence the council is just covering it all up.
Modifié par Robhuzz, 17 janvier 2011 - 08:47 .
#11
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:44
Everyone knows the Geth built Sovereign, then Saren took Sovereign and tricked the Geth into believing it was really an ancient god and not something they built themselves. He is just that charismatic...Dean_the_Young wrote...
The question has never been if Sovereign, the ship, existed. Even it having an AI isn't necessarily in dispute.Stupidus wrote...
I don't know either it's stupid. The council was in the Destiny Ascension and probably saw Sovereign, and even at the end if you save the council even the god damn Turian one aknowledges the word 'Reaper' at the end. Yet in ME2 we get "Ah yes, Reapers...". Even more disappointed by Kaidan/Ashley not believing you.
The matter of debate is if Sovereign, the ship, is necessarily a Reaper, an immortal race of sentient space ships that kill everything for no apparent reason and then leave without leaving any real proof each time.
#12
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:45
hawat333 wrote...
In ME1: No.
In ME2: Yes. They've had clear evidence by then, and not some visions from a guy/girl who was knocked out cold by an alien device.
^ Agreed. In ME1 the Council is portrayed as over-cautious regarding "delicate" issues; still, I get the feeling the Council supports Shepard with the reaper thing even if they won't fully admit it. I get this feeling from the conversations with the Council aboard the Normandy; they don't fully support your theories but they encourage you to go on. I vaguely recall a sentence from the asari councillor stating something in the lines of "We have spectres for this kind of work in the shadows while we pretend not to know about their issues".
In ME2, after they saw Sovereign with their own eyes and many human lives were sacrificed for saving their diplomatic asses (in my playthrough)... yeah, their attitude freaked me out. I think it was necessary to let the story go on with all the Cerberus thing, though (I mean, it wouldn't make any sense to stay with Cerberus if you can get fully support from the Council - therefore from the Alliance too)
#13
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:46
I expect the council is trying (in their own 'special' way) to maintain galactic stability. I sincerely doubt that they (or even the Alliance, for that matter) has been doing absolutely nothing. I expect it's more likely that Shepard is deliberately being kept out of the loop for the plans to deal with the Reapers...for whatever reason.
Modifié par TS2Aggie, 17 janvier 2011 - 08:47 .
#14
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:46
#15
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:47
#16
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:49
#17
Guest_Guest12345_*
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:50
Guest_Guest12345_*
#18
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:50
Ah yes me aknowledge word "reapers" after citadel attack i have dismissed that claim.Stupidus wrote...
I don't know either it's stupid. The council was in the Destiny Ascension and probably saw Sovereign, and even at the end if you save the council even the god damn Turian one aknowledges the word 'Reaper' at the end. Yet in ME2 we get "Ah yes, Reapers...". Even more disappointed by Kaidan/Ashley not believing you.
#19
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:50
#20
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:52
i got geth, krogan,rachni,quarians, humans,
but in accoradnce to this thread yes it is they cleary have enough evidence to back reapers, the asari councilor could meld with shepard and see the truth
#21
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:52
#22
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 08:56
#23
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 09:00
#24
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 09:01
In ME 1 we saw the Council slow to act due to misplaced trust and general apathy. But they do take action when a threat becomes clear. And in the end they believed you (if you saved em) In ME 2, I wonder if they didn't check the wiki closely enough...
#25
Posté 17 janvier 2011 - 09:02
TS2Aggie wrote...
In the council's defense, I expect that they *do* know the truth, but are trying to cover it up to prevent mass hysteria. Think about it: if you knew that there was an immortal race of sentient machines lying in wait to pop up and kill everyone deader than dead and that there was little to no hope of stopping them, would you bother continuing to live your life normally? Go to work? Pay your bills? Generally be an integral part of society? Probably not.
I expect the council is trying (in their own 'special' way) to maintain galactic stability. I sincerely doubt that they (or even the Alliance, for that matter) has been doing absolutely nothing. I expect it's more likely that Shepard is deliberately being kept out of the loop for the plans to deal with the Reapers...for whatever reason.
This, pretty much.
At the end of ME1 the Council believe in the Reapers and tells the public that Shepard is off cleaning up Geth to avoid inciting panic, not searching for a way to stop an army of Space Cthulus from killing and mind-controlling all life in the galaxy. The public would not react very well to that.
When Shepard comes back in ME2, s/he's with Cerberus and god-knows-what rumours TIM's been spreading around. The STG have been studying Reaper Indoctrination (mentioned somewhere in Mordin's loyalty). They don't know if they can trust Shepard yet, so they go back to good ol' stonewalling.
I imagine the actual reason for this was the same why all the choices in ME1 are played down in ME2, to make sure the narrative is nice and tight so everything is binded together for ME3 and nothing has de-railed too far.





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