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#251
Persephone

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plnero wrote...

Persephone wrote...

Alikain wrote...

I don't get people who choose to let loghain join the warden. Here is a man who killed his best friend son, for his own selfish reason.


Cailan's death was his own doing. If you fight on the front lines, give incompetent commands and ignore everyone's advice, your fate is sealed.

Loghain urged Cailan to stay away from the front lines. Cailan refused. Then he must bear the risks/consequences. War is merciless that way.


He entered the battlefield thinking Logain would stick to the plan and have his back. If he had told Logain he wasn't willing to risk his troops on Cailans plan that's one thing, but he let Cailan go in thinking he had his back when really he didn't. He was expecting the Warden to light to beacon and was going to use that as an excuse. Logain never intended to help in that battle.


None of this is proven.

Besides, Return To Ostagar confirms that Cailan himself knew Ostagar to be a lost cause. He KNEW that and still persisted in his glory hunt.

#252
TEWR

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plnero wrote...

Logain never intended to help in that battle.


Wrong. He intended to charge into the battle if it looked like the plan would work. But Darkspawn kept pouring out of the Wilds, the Tower's beacon was lit late as Alistair tells us, and Cailan's group was cracking under pressure.

Had Loghain charged, the army of Ferelden would've been sandwiched between the Darkspawn.

Cailan's idiocy at the start of the battle is what doomed it to oblivion. It may not have succeeded had he not been giving idiotic orders, but he didn't help things by ruining Loghain's battle plan.

Loghain wanted Cailan to stay in the valley with the walls of Ostagar protecting Cailan's group's left and right flanks, yet Cailan ordered his men to charge out into the open. Thus their front and side flanks were exposed.

Persephone wrote...

Besides, Return To Ostagar confirms that Cailan himself knew Ostagar to be a lost cause. He KNEW that and still persisted in his glory hunt.


I don't remember that being talked about in Return to Ostagar. :huh:

Modifié par The Ethereal Writer Redux, 27 octobre 2012 - 09:16 .


#253
Persephone

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The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...

plnero wrote...

Logain never intended to help in that battle.


Wrong. He intended to charge into the battle if it looked like the plan would work. But Darkspawn kept pouring out of the Wilds, the Tower's beacon was lit late as Alistair tells us, and Cailan's group was cracking under pressure.

Had Loghain charged, the army of Ferelden would've been sandwiched between the Darkspawn.

Cailan's idiocy at the start of the battle is what doomed it to oblivion. It may not have succeeded had he not been giving idiotic orders, but he didn't help things by ruining Loghain's battle plan.

Loghain wanted Cailan to stay in the valley with the walls of Ostagar protecting Cailan's group's left and right flanks, yet Cailan ordered his men to charge out into the open. Thus their front and side flanks were exposed.


Precisely.

#254
Persephone

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The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...

Persephone wrote...

Besides, Return To Ostagar confirms that Cailan himself knew Ostagar to be a lost cause. He KNEW that and still persisted in his glory hunt.


I don't remember that being talked about in Return to Ostagar. :huh:


Cailan's confidante tells you that "Even Cailan, for all his bravado, knew that there would be no victory at Ostagar."

#255
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The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...



Wrong. He intended to charge into the battle if it looked like the plan would work. But Darkspawn kept pouring out of the Wilds, the Tower's beacon was lit late as Alistair tells us, and Cailan's group was cracking under pressure.

Had Loghain charged, the army of Ferelden would've been sandwiched between the Darkspawn.

Cailan's idiocy at the start of the battle is what doomed it to oblivion. It may not have succeeded had he not been giving idiotic orders, but he didn't help things by ruining Loghain's battle plan.

Loghain wanted Cailan to stay in the valley with the walls of Ostagar protecting Cailan's group's left and right flanks, yet Cailan ordered his men to charge out into the open. Thus their front and side flanks were exposed.


So do you think that if Cailan acted according to the plan, he would've charged?

#256
Persephone

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hhh89 wrote...

The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...



Wrong. He intended to charge into the battle if it looked like the plan would work. But Darkspawn kept pouring out of the Wilds, the Tower's beacon was lit late as Alistair tells us, and Cailan's group was cracking under pressure.

Had Loghain charged, the army of Ferelden would've been sandwiched between the Darkspawn.

Cailan's idiocy at the start of the battle is what doomed it to oblivion. It may not have succeeded had he not been giving idiotic orders, but he didn't help things by ruining Loghain's battle plan.

Loghain wanted Cailan to stay in the valley with the walls of Ostagar protecting Cailan's group's left and right flanks, yet Cailan ordered his men to charge out into the open. Thus their front and side flanks were exposed.


So do you think that if Cailan acted according to the plan, he would've charged?


I do. If Cailan had acted like a competent Commander, if the horde had not been MUCH STRONGER and MUCH LARGER than anyone had anticipated and if the SIGNAL HAD NOT BEEN LATE.....yes, I believe he would have risked it.

#257
Riverdaleswhiteflash

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hhh89 wrote...

The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...



Wrong. He intended to charge into the battle if it looked like the plan would work. But Darkspawn kept pouring out of the Wilds, the Tower's beacon was lit late as Alistair tells us, and Cailan's group was cracking under pressure.

Had Loghain charged, the army of Ferelden would've been sandwiched between the Darkspawn.

Cailan's idiocy at the start of the battle is what doomed it to oblivion. It may not have succeeded had he not been giving idiotic orders, but he didn't help things by ruining Loghain's battle plan.

Loghain wanted Cailan to stay in the valley with the walls of Ostagar protecting Cailan's group's left and right flanks, yet Cailan ordered his men to charge out into the open. Thus their front and side flanks were exposed.


So do you think that if Cailan acted according to the plan, he would've charged?



Depends. Could his men reach the darkspawn horde's flank without charging straight through the darkspawn horde? If so, probably. What does Loghain get from the whole country being in very serious danger of being destroyed? (Other than headaches from the Guerrins?)

Modifié par Riverdaleswhiteflash, 27 octobre 2012 - 09:21 .


#258
Scott Sion

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Persephone wrote...

The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...

plnero wrote...

Logain never intended to help in that battle.


Wrong. He intended to charge into the battle if it looked like the plan would work. But Darkspawn kept pouring out of the Wilds, the Tower's beacon was lit late as Alistair tells us, and Cailan's group was cracking under pressure.

Had Loghain charged, the army of Ferelden would've been sandwiched between the Darkspawn.

Cailan's idiocy at the start of the battle is what doomed it to oblivion. It may not have succeeded had he not been giving idiotic orders, but he didn't help things by ruining Loghain's battle plan.

Loghain wanted Cailan to stay in the valley with the walls of Ostagar protecting Cailan's group's left and right flanks, yet Cailan ordered his men to charge out into the open. Thus their front and side flanks were exposed.


Precisely.




I'm pretty sure you're wrong there. The game makes it look like Logains were at the tower before the battle to dig that giant hole, you know the one that in no way is natural? Also, right after the meeting about the beacon Logain Says something like "Yes, it will be a great victory for us all" the way he says it you can tell he was up to no good.

Logain wanted Cailan dead because he didn't think he had what it took to be a king "I thought you were like Cailan, A child trying to play at war". Logain is clearly the type of person who is willing to sacrifice anything to keep Ferelden safe.

Modifié par plnero, 27 octobre 2012 - 09:22 .


#259
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Persephone wrote...

The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...

Persephone wrote...

Besides, Return To Ostagar confirms that Cailan himself knew Ostagar to be a lost cause. He KNEW that and still persisted in his glory hunt.


I don't remember that being talked about in Return to Ostagar. :huh:


Cailan's confidante tells you that "Even Cailan, for all his bravado, knew that there would be no victory at Ostagar."


So Loghain, which is far both experienced and intellligent than Cailan, would've known too.
And Cailan did suggest that they talked about waiting the Orlesians, and probably he wasn't completely against the idea, while Loghain was adamant about not wanting Orlesian's help.

#260
Persephone

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plnero wrote...

Persephone wrote...

The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...

plnero wrote...

Logain never intended to help in that battle.


Wrong. He intended to charge into the battle if it looked like the plan would work. But Darkspawn kept pouring out of the Wilds, the Tower's beacon was lit late as Alistair tells us, and Cailan's group was cracking under pressure.

Had Loghain charged, the army of Ferelden would've been sandwiched between the Darkspawn.

Cailan's idiocy at the start of the battle is what doomed it to oblivion. It may not have succeeded had he not been giving idiotic orders, but he didn't help things by ruining Loghain's battle plan.

Loghain wanted Cailan to stay in the valley with the walls of Ostagar protecting Cailan's group's left and right flanks, yet Cailan ordered his men to charge out into the open. Thus their front and side flanks were exposed.


Precisely.




I'm pretty sure you're wrong there. The game makes it look like Logains were at the tower before the battle to dig that giant hole, you know the one that in no way is natural? Also, right after the meeting about the beacon Logain Says something like "Yes, it will be a great victory for us all" the way he says it you can tell he was up to no good.

Logain wanted Cailan dead because he didn't think he had what it took to be a king. Logain is clearly the type of person who is willing to sacrifice anything to keep Ferelden safe.


So you think Loghain had his men HELP THE DARKSPAWN? He, who wants TO SAVE FERELDEN, no matter the cost? No, really, NO.

He never wanted him dead. Had he wanted him dead, he'd have supported his idiotic desire to fight on the front lines.

#261
robertthebard

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TheBlackAdder13 wrote...

David Gaider wrote...

Monica21 wrote...
That completely changes your point. If your original assumption is that you are making all these decisions with no input from anyone with any knowledge, then you can't disregard that Riordan is that knowledge. Therefore, your decision is not selfish, regardless of how you feel about Alistair. Your decision is based on what a senior Warden is telling you is the best course of action.


And you picked him over the man you said you loved, and who trusted you. And that doesn't constitute a betrayal on your part whatsoever. Yes, got it.


What about this? In my playthrough, my warden clearly saw that Alistari had absolutely no desire to be king and told Anora he'd make her queen in accordance with Alistair's wishes. However, in the conversation, he also told Anora that there's no way he could spare Loghain, her father, for his crimes (as Alistair clearly would want), leading Anora to betray the warden and Alistair at the landsmeet. Had the warden made Anora queen after this incident at the landsmeet she clearly would have had Alistair executed (this is the great betrayl of Alistair). However, as a result, my warden made Alistair king and he STILL ****ed about it and acted as if it was some massive betrayl. Is this then not selfish of Alistair? My warden was always looking out for Alistair's desires and yet, Alistair still ****ed about it. Is this not then selfish of Alistair? It seems that even if you RP exactly as Alistair would want, he's still unpleasent and unhappy. #Irpedtheonlyselflesswarden 

Welcome to my world, and the kleenex box in my sig was designed specifically for Alistair.  It is exactly why he spends every non quest required moment sitting in party camp, playing with his dolls action figures.  I love the way he is written, but despise him as a person.  This is not a contradiction.  It is, instead, a tip of the hat to Mr. Gaider for wringing that response out of me.  I had no illusions, at the Landsmeet, that I was thumbing my nose, to put it politely, at Alistair.  I knew it would hurt him, and I did it.  Was I being selfish, you bet ya'.  Just like he was when, in Party Camp, when I didn't bring him to Redcliffe, and thus found out from somebody else that he was Maric's son, and heir to the throne, and had him reject me for his lie.  I was all shades of petty with my revenge, and enjoyed every second of his reaction.  To me, it suited him fine.

#262
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Persephone wrote...

I do. If Cailan had acted like a competent Commander, if the horde had not been MUCH STRONGER and MUCH LARGER than anyone had anticipated and if the SIGNAL HAD NOT BEEN LATE.....yes, I believe he would have risked it.


I'm not sure if he'd have charged, but I'm not dismissing this possibility.

Modifié par hhh89, 27 octobre 2012 - 09:27 .


#263
Nerevar-as

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Persephone wrote...

SeptimusMagistos wrote...

Honestly, I find it easiest to let Alistair duel Loghain. That way the entire mess is bypassed and Loghain dies as he lived: a total failure.


Wow.

Just WOW.

Read The Stolen Throne.


No need. It´s stated in the game it was thanks to his tactical brilliance Ferelden kicked Orlais out. Then went overparanoid about Orlais trying to reinvade with the excuse of a Blight and the GW. Then turns out Cailan wanted to switch Anora for Celene, which considering his personality is quite clear who would have ruled. If he hadn´t screwed after Ostagar, he would have saved the country again.

#264
Persephone

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hhh89 wrote...

Persephone wrote...

The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...

Persephone wrote...

Besides, Return To Ostagar confirms that Cailan himself knew Ostagar to be a lost cause. He KNEW that and still persisted in his glory hunt.


I don't remember that being talked about in Return to Ostagar. :huh:


Cailan's confidante tells you that "Even Cailan, for all his bravado, knew that there would be no victory at Ostagar."


So Loghain, which is far both experienced and intellligent than Cailan, would've known too.
And Cailan did suggest that they talked about waiting the Orlesians, and probably he wasn't completely against the idea, while Loghain was adamant about not wanting Orlesian's help.


He wanted Orlesian help to continue the plot set up by Eamon and to needle Loghain. (Which included Cailan ditching his wife for not being a proper baby machine) It had nothing to do with the Blight. When Duncan urges Cailan to wait for Eamon's men, Cailan blows it of as "Eamon is just in it for the gloooooooooory."

#265
TEWR

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hhh89 wrote...

So do you think that if Cailan acted according to the plan, he would've charged?


Probably not, for much the same reasons he left the battle in the first place: tactical retreat. The Darkspawn would've probably still been pouring out of the Wilds in massive numbers that would've ultimately destroyed the army and the Tower's beacon would probably still have been lit too late.

So even had Cailan acted according to the plan, I don't think much would've changed other then more Darkspawn being killed -- but not enough to make the battle seem winnable.

He probably wouldn't have charged, because it still would've been highly likely that the battle would be a total flop.

Now if the army had the strength of the majority of Circle Mages and Templars aiding them... Loghain would've created a different battle plan that would've factored those two groups into the equation.

And had Cailan acted according to whatever plan Loghain crafted with the available army, the Mages, and the Templars at his command -- along with the Wardens. And had he and Cailan been told of certain Warden information that would've made him see their true necessity -- as opposed to fanciful tales and vague comments the Wardens gave -- he would've factored them in as well.

Ostagar failed due to a confluence of various factors. Cailan's idiotic commands to his section of the army was the straw that broke the camel's back, really. Even had he stuck to the plan, I don't think it would've succeeded using what forces were there.

Had the Darkspawn not been far more numerous then anyone expected and had the Tower been properly secured -- which the whole Tower/Ostagar ignorance Loghain displays goes completely against his established character, so Bioware failed in that department -- he would've charged to save Cailan.

Modifié par The Ethereal Writer Redux, 27 octobre 2012 - 09:29 .


#266
robertthebard

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Persephone wrote...

plnero wrote...

Persephone wrote...

The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...

plnero wrote...

Logain never intended to help in that battle.


Wrong. He intended to charge into the battle if it looked like the plan would work. But Darkspawn kept pouring out of the Wilds, the Tower's beacon was lit late as Alistair tells us, and Cailan's group was cracking under pressure.

Had Loghain charged, the army of Ferelden would've been sandwiched between the Darkspawn.

Cailan's idiocy at the start of the battle is what doomed it to oblivion. It may not have succeeded had he not been giving idiotic orders, but he didn't help things by ruining Loghain's battle plan.

Loghain wanted Cailan to stay in the valley with the walls of Ostagar protecting Cailan's group's left and right flanks, yet Cailan ordered his men to charge out into the open. Thus their front and side flanks were exposed.


Precisely.




I'm pretty sure you're wrong there. The game makes it look like Logains were at the tower before the battle to dig that giant hole, you know the one that in no way is natural? Also, right after the meeting about the beacon Logain Says something like "Yes, it will be a great victory for us all" the way he says it you can tell he was up to no good.

Logain wanted Cailan dead because he didn't think he had what it took to be a king. Logain is clearly the type of person who is willing to sacrifice anything to keep Ferelden safe.


So you think Loghain had his men HELP THE DARKSPAWN? He, who wants TO SAVE FERELDEN, no matter the cost? No, really, NO.

He never wanted him dead. Had he wanted him dead, he'd have supported his idiotic desire to fight on the front lines.

Wanting to help the darkspawn has little to do with him wanting to save Ferelden, on his terms.  No, he didn't know the darkspawn would attack the tower, but, I'd be willing to bet that his men were under orders to not light the signal fire.  Trying to convince Cailan to stay out of it was his way of trying to save him, but I do believe he wanted the Wardens dead.  They may, after all, be representatives of Orlais, trying to gain favor with the populace.  He never intended to enter the battle.

#267
Riverdaleswhiteflash

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robertthebard wrote...

Wanting to help the darkspawn has little to do with him wanting to save Ferelden, on his terms.  No, he didn't know the darkspawn would attack the tower, but, I'd be willing to bet that his men were under orders to not light the signal fire.  Trying to convince Cailan to stay out of it was his way of trying to save him, but I do believe he wanted the Wardens dead.  They may, after all, be representatives of Orlais, trying to gain favor with the populace.  He never intended to enter the battle.


If memory serves, he considered it but decided not to.

#268
Frocharocha

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robertthebard wrote...

TheBlackAdder13 wrote...

David Gaider wrote...

Monica21 wrote...
That completely changes your point. If your original assumption is that you are making all these decisions with no input from anyone with any knowledge, then you can't disregard that Riordan is that knowledge. Therefore, your decision is not selfish, regardless of how you feel about Alistair. Your decision is based on what a senior Warden is telling you is the best course of action.


And you picked him over the man you said you loved, and who trusted you. And that doesn't constitute a betrayal on your part whatsoever. Yes, got it.


What about this? In my playthrough, my warden clearly saw that Alistari had absolutely no desire to be king and told Anora he'd make her queen in accordance with Alistair's wishes. However, in the conversation, he also told Anora that there's no way he could spare Loghain, her father, for his crimes (as Alistair clearly would want), leading Anora to betray the warden and Alistair at the landsmeet. Had the warden made Anora queen after this incident at the landsmeet she clearly would have had Alistair executed (this is the great betrayl of Alistair). However, as a result, my warden made Alistair king and he STILL ****ed about it and acted as if it was some massive betrayl. Is this then not selfish of Alistair? My warden was always looking out for Alistair's desires and yet, Alistair still ****ed about it. Is this not then selfish of Alistair? It seems that even if you RP exactly as Alistair would want, he's still unpleasent and unhappy. #Irpedtheonlyselflesswarden 

Welcome to my world, and the kleenex box in my sig was designed specifically for Alistair.  It is exactly why he spends every non quest required moment sitting in party camp, playing with his dolls action figures.  I love the way he is written, but despise him as a person.  This is not a contradiction.  It is, instead, a tip of the hat to Mr. Gaider for wringing that response out of me.  I had no illusions, at the Landsmeet, that I was thumbing my nose, to put it politely, at Alistair.  I knew it would hurt him, and I did it.  Was I being selfish, you bet ya'.  Just like he was when, in Party Camp, when I didn't bring him to Redcliffe, and thus found out from somebody else that he was Maric's son, and heir to the throne, and had him reject me for his lie.  I was all shades of petty with my revenge, and enjoyed every second of his reaction.  To me, it suited him fine.


I really don't know. After getting his status, Alistar seems to likehis position as King.

Image IPB

#269
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Persephone wrote...



He wanted Orlesian help to continue the plot set up by Eamon and to needle Loghain. (Which included Cailan ditching his wife for not being a proper baby machine) It had nothing to do with the Blight. When Duncan urges Cailan to wait for Eamon's men, Cailan blows it of as "Eamon is just in it for the gloooooooooory."


I know why he wanted Orlesian's help. That doesn't mean that their forces are far stronger than the ones in Ferelden, and would've been useful (without considering the hundreds of Wardens that woudl've come to Ferelden).
And about the bolded part, while I think that it was a dumb thing to say (I'd say that even Oghren is far more intelligent than Cailan), I want to point out that the Orlesian forces are far stronger than the Redcliffe's.

Modifié par hhh89, 27 octobre 2012 - 09:32 .


#270
TEWR

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The game makes it look like Logains were at the tower before the battle to dig that giant hole, you know the one that in no way is natural?


Oh you mean the one that the friggin' Darkspawn created because they had an Ogre assisting them?

Fact: David Gaider has said Loghain wasn't helping the Darkspawn.

Logain wanted Cailan dead because he didn't think he had what it took to be a king.


Also wrong as word of god, in-game dialogue, and the toolset notes prove your statement to be a complete fabrication

#271
Scott Sion

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Persephone wrote...

plnero wrote...

Persephone wrote...

The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...

plnero wrote...

Logain never intended to help in that battle.


Wrong. He intended to charge into the battle if it looked like the plan would work. But Darkspawn kept pouring out of the Wilds, the Tower's beacon was lit late as Alistair tells us, and Cailan's group was cracking under pressure.

Had Loghain charged, the army of Ferelden would've been sandwiched between the Darkspawn.

Cailan's idiocy at the start of the battle is what doomed it to oblivion. It may not have succeeded had he not been giving idiotic orders, but he didn't help things by ruining Loghain's battle plan.

Loghain wanted Cailan to stay in the valley with the walls of Ostagar protecting Cailan's group's left and right flanks, yet Cailan ordered his men to charge out into the open. Thus their front and side flanks were exposed.


Precisely.




I'm pretty sure you're wrong there. The game makes it look like Logains were at the tower before the battle to dig that giant hole, you know the one that in no way is natural? Also, right after the meeting about the beacon Logain Says something like "Yes, it will be a great victory for us all" the way he says it you can tell he was up to no good.

Logain wanted Cailan dead because he didn't think he had what it took to be a king. Logain is clearly the type of person who is willing to sacrifice anything to keep Ferelden safe.


So you think Loghain had his men HELP THE DARKSPAWN? He, who wants TO SAVE FERELDEN, no matter the cost? No, really, NO.

He never wanted him dead. Had he wanted him dead, he'd have supported his idiotic desire to fight on the front lines.



No, he wanted the wardens dead so the beacon wouldn't be lit and he would have a good reason to pull out his men. It's because of those idiotic decision that Logain wanted him dead. He who wants to save Ferelden was willing to let someone he thought of a son die because he thought Cailan was acting like a child instead of a King.

He didn't want him dead; however ever under the circumstances he saw it as necessary. Please go play through that whole part again and tell me if you think Logain intended to swoop in. If you do then you're ignoring the obvious.

Logain knew how the battle was going to go. He didn't leave because the battle didn't go as planned; he pulled out because it was his intention from the start.

Modifié par plnero, 27 octobre 2012 - 09:35 .


#272
Gabey5

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Someone did not 'harden' him...

As for Ostagar.. Logain is not a man who decides things on whim, he wanted the wardens gone, and Cailan as well. He is the equivelent of Arl Howe, using the darkspawn invasion and the chaos to take more power. Howe wanted what he thought he deserved and Logain did it to protect Ferelden.. His speech at the landsmeet when he loses  outlines his reasons pretty well. "No on else can protect Ferelden like i can".

Modifié par Gabey5, 27 octobre 2012 - 09:41 .


#273
TEWR

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Posting my defense of Loghain now.



Loghain was not well written. His Warden recruitment at the end was IMHO, an attempt to fix the cheesy cartoony dark villain he was until the landsmeet.

And he flips 180 degrees. Turns noble, cares about his daughter and the warden.. Very forced and not well written also. But no one can say he was pure evil because he regrets stuff and offers his life.


He always cared about Anora. That whole idea that Loghain would've killed his daughter? Complete BS. Howe approached Loghain with the idea, but Loghain refused to do such a thing -- something he'll tell you if you spare him.

That wouldn't have stopped Howe from doing such a thing though, because Howe is the very definition of Complete Monster. He does things For the Evulz.


Nope, not buying.

FFS he pratically raised Caillan and left him to die. A good general could have left the battle when he saw their forces outnumbered,


That's what he did. 

You could argue that he should've attempted to save Cailan with a contingent of men ordered to do so -- whether they would succeed is irrelevant, though given how quickly he dies by Ogre and I'm assuming the mass of Darkspawn between Cailan and Loghain he couldn't have been saved -- but he did order a tactical withdrawal from the battlefield when it became apparent that they were outnumbered.

And Cailan's death was his own doing. Cailan was a spoiled brat, wanting to play war and fascinated with glory -- be it glory he wanted or the glory of others in legends.

Had Loghain attempted to rescue Cailan and failed, that would've been a politically sound move to try and get Ferelden to unify under his banner, as he did attempt to save their king.

But no one has ever called Loghain a brilliant politician. He isn't.
 

but the same good general would not poison the leader of the largest surviving army, refused help and tried to kill the 2 people who could help again the large darkspawn horde he saw with his own 2 eyes.

Writters dropped the ball on Loghain and then tried a Hail Mary saving pass. Didn't save it for me


Yea, no they didn't.

Let's look at if from his perspective, as opposed to the "OMG He's so EVUL!!!" one he's unfortunately painted with all too often.

Eamon was a threat to the nation's well-being after Loghain was forced to make a judgement call at Ostagar. We know that Eamon was poisoned after Ostagar, as Loghain has been with the King at the fortress for the entire time -- something Duncan states in the HN and Mage Origins.

Eamon would've been clouded by his relationship to Cailan and more then likely would've failed to see the actual necessity of the withdrawal. He would've instigated a civil war I'm willing to bet. Loghain didn't want this to happen. So he tasked Jowan -- whom he met in Denerim, as Jowan states -- to go to Redcliffe to teach Connor about magic and administer the poison to Eamon, but this poison was only supposed to render Eamon comatose.

Nothing more. If Eamon's condition worsened to the point of death, Berwick would've reported to someone in Loghain's cadre saying such, and Loghain would send the antidote.

Now, of course, Connor went to the Desire Demon pleading for Eamon to be saved. He didn't know Eamon wouldn't have died -- or that it was an unlikely scenario, anyway -- and so that's why he did so. And the demon did keep Eamon alive. She just kept his state of being from worsening.

Also, I very much doubt Eamon is the leader of the largest surviving army. That'd technically fall to either Loghain himself -- commanding the Teyrnir of Gwaren, as opposed to Eamon's Arling -- or Rendon Howe -- who by the time of the Battle at Ostagar, has claimed Highever and Denerim along with his already claimed Arling of Amaranthine.

As for the Wardens? Again, let's look at it from his perspective.

Here is a man who, for all his time at Ostagar, has not been told just how the Wardens know it's a Blight, other then vague comments where they say they "can feel it". While we the players know for a fact the Wardens are necessary, let's not forget that Loghain doesn't. We know the intricacies of the Joining. He doesn't. Not during Ostagar, anyway.

Duncan failed to tell Cailan or Loghain about these Warden secrets, which may have convinced Loghain that they're truly necessary. Had he known that they were linked to the Darkspawn hive-mind and could actually sense the Archdemon -- specifically, not those vague comments Alistair says Duncan told them -- then he would've realized "These guys are necessary."

All he had to go on were vague notions that they're necessary and tales about their prowess in battle. For all he knew, they were no different then the regular soldier, with only one thing distinguishing the Wardens from a soldier: they just fight Darkspawn all the time.

That could've been the extent of it as far as he knew.

Now, I'll say for the record that I personally find the army to bear the weight of the blame, but the Wardens aren't without blame either. I give the army 60% of the blame, at most. If not 60%, I often split it evenly, as Duncan's actions prior to Ostagar show that he should've been pressed by the army as to the validity of the claims to the nature of the Blight -- his reason for going to Orzammar is to find evidence of the Archdemon.

But then again, the Wardens are supposed to do whatever it takes to defeat the Blights. One would think this would include lying about finding evidence on the Archdemon to make people believe it's a Blight and telling the heads of state and generals about Warden secrets.

But let's also examine Cailan. Here is a child trapped in a man's body who is fascinated with war so much he wants glory for himself. He finds strategy sessions boring, wants to be the one to kill the Archdemon with his father's blade, and goes on and on about glory.

During the battle, he ruins the plan Loghain put forth -- the Hammer&Anvil strategy -- during the session. Instead of having the men in the back -- maybe a couple of rows -- firing constant volleys of arrows into the Darkspawn ranks, he has them fire only one volley. 

Instead of keeping the Mabari hounds alongside his soldiers, he sends them out as little more then fodder troops where they kill, at most, 1-2 Darkspawn each before dying.

Instead of having the majority of his forces holding the line with the walls of Ostagar protecting their left and right flanks, he orders all of his troops to charge out into the open, where they're then besieged by the Darkspawn on all sides.

While it's extremely unlikely that Ostagar could've been won using what forces they had there, Cailan's idiocy doomed them from the start.

And during the strategy session, the Wardens failed to speak up about their necessity or offering any real insight into how the battle could play out.

Now, let's jump to what happens in the Tower of Ishal.

We the players are tasked with the duty of lighting the signal fire so that Loghain's men will know when to charge. The opportune moment for such a thing was when all the Darkspawn were in the valley, so that Loghain's men could corral the Darkspawn and begin to take them down. I refer you to KnightofPhoenix's blog images on the subject of Ostagar.

Image IPB

Now, we the players -- as well as Alistair, the Warden, the Mabari, a Mage, and a Soldier in the Tower -- know that the signal was delayed due to the Darkspawn invading the Tower. I'll tackle how this is Bioware's fault on being contradictory in their writing later.

As Alistair himself notes, the signal was surely delayed too much due to the Darkspawn.

Loghain however, did not know the Darkspawn had delayed the signal fire. Because of how late it comes -- and how fractured the army is now -- he believes that the Wardens deliberately delayed the signal fire so as to weaken Ferelden's national stability -- what with the King dying, and in his mind them hoping he'd lead his men to death too.

Had he charged, this is what would've happened.

Image IPB

Because if that happened, Ferelden would've had no choice but to rely on Orlesian assistance during the Blight, which would be a repeat of what they've done in Blights past.

In his mind, the Wardens are helping the Orlesians, as they've done in the past. In Blights past, the Orlesians used the Blights as a reason for "aiding" nations too weakened by the Darkspawn to stand on their own, and then after the Blight was ended they made it a point to never leave.

For more insight on that, see the history of Nevarra, the Free Marches, and IIRC the Anderfels.

As such, he truly believed the delay of the signal fire was done on purpose by the Wardens to weaken Ferelden and give Orlais the moment to "aid" the nation. Orlais itself has used the Wardens and the Blights to their advantage by helping further their expansionist policies, of which Empress Celene I was reputed to be an expansionist herself in Origins -- changed to being a peaceloving monarch in DAII.

So let's recap, shall we?

1) He knows little about why the Order is necessary.
2) Cailan believed that the presence of the Wardens was enough to win the battle. In truth, it wasn't, and Ostagar using Loghain's strategy -- or even what forces they did have there -- was unwinnable. This isn't to say Ostagar couldn't have been won had more forces been present and the place better fortified. I'm certain Ostagar could've been won, had things been different.
3) The Wardens did not speak up on anything that could help fight the Darkspawn.
4) Cailan ruined the battle plan.
5) The signal fire was delayed to the point of being too late -- and not accurate, as Darkspawn were still pouring out of the Wilds. For what reason, Loghain didn't know. But based on history, he had strong inclinations as to why it was so. He was wrong, but he didn't know the real reason.
6) Orlais has a history of using the Wardens and the Blights as grounds to further their expansionist policies, something Loghain brings up at the first Landsmeet.

From all of this alone, his opinions of the Wardens is not very high. He can only view them as Orlesian tools, because that's all the evidence has shown itself to be for him. He didn't have all the facts, but from what he did know it was not painted very well in the Wardens' favor.

Let's not forget the rebellion that happened in centuries past by Sophia Dryden -- a justified rebellion, but the truth was never publicly known. Let's also not forget that what happens in The Calling further adds fuel to the fires of why Loghain didn't trust the Wardens.

===========================================================================

Now, I said I'd tackle the whole Tower of Ishal failure on Bioware's part. This stems from them failing to properly keep their own character -- Loghain -- consistent with how he's portrayed.

He became Teyrn of Gwaren in 9:11 Dragon, so he's been the ruling lord of that area for 19 years. His own codex states that he's a man who wishes to know where his borders end and how best to defend them.

And yet Bioware made it a point to have Loghain completely in the dark about Ostagar's structure. This is a blatant failure of their writing, as David Gaider -- the man who wrote Loghain, IIRC -- failed to keep Loghain consistent.

Then, when we find out about the Tower's lower levels, we find that Loghain's first action was to... explore them? On the eve of a major battle? This is a failure from a military strategy point of view as well as writing, because while you should know the layout of a fortress Loghain should've already known all of this in the 19 years he was Teyrn of Gwaren and general of Ferelden, the man whose strategies kicked the Orlesians out of the nation.

But because he didn't know, we're supposed to be able to believe that the more sensible course of action when Darkspawn are at your heels in the Wilds is to explore these lower caverns? Seriously? NO. It's to immediately seal them up, preferably in such a way that they're unusable by the Darkspawn as it's pretty evident that these caverns will lead to the Wilds -- indeed, they lead into the very valley Cailan was in.

And before anyone goes "So doesn't this mean he deliberately left the Tower open to invasion and used the Darkspawn to justify leaving Cailan", no it doesn't. Gaider has said that Loghain didn't know about the Tower being invaded by Darkspawn nor did he plan such a thing. It was an unexpected thing.

The failure here being that the people that wrote the Ostagar scenario -- not the Cailan moment, but the Tower of Ishal thing and Loghain's ignorance on the entire fortress -- is a critical failure in military warfare knowledge and consistent writing of Loghain Mac Tir.

As such, the blame falls on Bioware.
 

Modifié par The Ethereal Writer Redux, 27 octobre 2012 - 09:42 .


#274
Persephone

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plnero wrote...

Persephone wrote...

plnero wrote...

Persephone wrote...

The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...

plnero wrote...

Logain never intended to help in that battle.


Wrong. He intended to charge into the battle if it looked like the plan would work. But Darkspawn kept pouring out of the Wilds, the Tower's beacon was lit late as Alistair tells us, and Cailan's group was cracking under pressure.

Had Loghain charged, the army of Ferelden would've been sandwiched between the Darkspawn.

Cailan's idiocy at the start of the battle is what doomed it to oblivion. It may not have succeeded had he not been giving idiotic orders, but he didn't help things by ruining Loghain's battle plan.

Loghain wanted Cailan to stay in the valley with the walls of Ostagar protecting Cailan's group's left and right flanks, yet Cailan ordered his men to charge out into the open. Thus their front and side flanks were exposed.


Precisely.




I'm pretty sure you're wrong there. The game makes it look like Logains were at the tower before the battle to dig that giant hole, you know the one that in no way is natural? Also, right after the meeting about the beacon Logain Says something like "Yes, it will be a great victory for us all" the way he says it you can tell he was up to no good.

Logain wanted Cailan dead because he didn't think he had what it took to be a king. Logain is clearly the type of person who is willing to sacrifice anything to keep Ferelden safe.


So you think Loghain had his men HELP THE DARKSPAWN? He, who wants TO SAVE FERELDEN, no matter the cost? No, really, NO.

He never wanted him dead. Had he wanted him dead, he'd have supported his idiotic desire to fight on the front lines.



No, he wanted the wardens dead so the beacon wouldn't be lit and he would have a good reason to pull out his men. It's because of those idiotic decision that Logain wanted him dead. He who wants to save Ferelden was willing to let someone he thought of a son die because he thought Cailan was acting like a child instead of a King.

He didn't want him dead; however ever under the circumstances he saw it as necessary. Please go play through that whole part again and tell me if you think Logain intended to swoop in. If you do then you're ignoring the obvious.

Logain knew how the battle was going to go. He didn't leave because the battle didn't go as planned; he pulled out because it was his intention from the start.


Again: No

It's already been explained why your assumptions are wrong.

#275
Scott Sion

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The Ethereal Writer Redux wrote...


The game makes it look like Logains were at the tower before the battle to dig that giant hole, you know the one that in no way is natural?


Oh you mean the one that the friggin' Darkspawn created because they had an Ogre assisting them?

Fact: David Gaider has said Loghain wasn't helping the Darkspawn.


Logain wanted Cailan dead because he didn't think he had what it took to be a king.


Also wrong as word of god, in-game dialogue, and the toolset notes prove your statement to be a complete fabrication


Of course he wasn't helping the Darkspawn, he was helping himself by giving himself a good reason to pull out. Where does it say a Darkspawn made that hole?

Let me see Dialogue and toolset that proves I'm wrong. I doubt it exists, but you're welcome to try and make it appear.