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Urn Quest apperaction/Also Praise Bioware moment


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#1
Joshd21

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OP note: This is one of the quests which I love. In the quest for the urn, you have to solve riddles and puzzles. One of the most emotional ones are when the spirt asks you

If you are a Mage

Do you think you made the right choice helping/ Betraying him

If you are a noble

You are asked about your family when they were killed

Then a spirt in the appeare of Jowan or your family. Tells you for example if you had regret for betraying him. Spirt says that they were both wrong and to let go. That was very clevar of Bioware.

The reflections, where you fight reflections of yourself. I thought was a nice touch. Interesting to see the battle that went on.

Then the spirts/ghosts, "Of what do I speak"

Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth the debt of blood must be repaid in full. Of what do I speak?

Given the choice of several answers. It's very entertaining and makes you think. If answered correctly the spirt tells you their story, then vanishes. If answered incorrectly then the spirt turns into a monster which you have to slay.

Also I thought it was a neat trick at thend where you walk through the fire naked. I have ended my warcraft account which I been playing for over 7 years for Bioware. I'm simply addicted in a good way in their games. Untill Bioware came along I did not apperciate detail for grpahics and storylines..

Even Fable 3 and Aplaha Procall, seem pale in compassion to what Bioware has done. They have raised what fans expect from games. Thank you Bioware

#2
Bhatair

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I remember being extremely surprised on my first playthrough (mage) when the guardian asked me if I regretted betraying Jowan. Because I had, in fact I had been stewing over it the entire game up to that point and had been using it as a major point of his personality.

I think I had to scoop my jaw up off the floor before I answered him.

#3
Guest_Maviarab_*

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Good post, and nice to see someone else leave WoW for a real game (never played it anyway, hated it aduring the demo)...



And Bioware may have just 'come along' for you my friend, they have been with many of us for years and years hehe...



Welcome to the club :)

#4
Scotsman284

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That was one of my favorite quests to do, strictly because of the Spirit Guardian's lines. As a Dalish elf, he asks do you feel guilty at leaving Tamlen to the Taint and those lines along with that of Tamlen's spirit thing after were really powerful to me.

#5
Zafireria

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One of my favorite quests, I simply love riddles and mystic about a important person from the past. Also the whole idea of showing yourself worthy. If you go through the fire with gear on, the guarding will say you are not worthy and you'll have to fight him. Nice touch, spite I figure that you had to go through in your undies. I went through in undies and saw the other outcome on the PS3.

Modifié par Zafireria, 08 janvier 2010 - 05:48 .


#6
Sylvius the Mad

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I found it a bit odd that the mirror images of my party had significantly different abilities from my actual party. Maybe most people don't notice it as much because they do the quest earlier (I get the impression that most people go to Redcliffe either first or second), but I was level 19 by the time I was doing the Urn quest.

#7
TyDurden13

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Yes, this quest is my favorite part of the game. Very Grail Questy. Very atmospheric.

#8
TagImIt

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The first time I did that quest, I hated it with a passion, and kept cursing at the enormous amount of cultists and then little dragons coming out of nowhere. Then I got to the actual temple and Korgrim, and the Guardian, and that entire sequence, and it quickly became my favorite part of the game. I love real temples with riddles and not merely hack your way through. Plus, the temple and bridge sequence reminded me of The Last Crusade which makes me actually giddy. Especially since I named the dog Indiana.

Yes, definitely my favorite quest.

Off topic, someone said something about Fable 3? Is there such a thing?

#9
Bhatair

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TagImIt wrote...

The first time I did that quest, I hated it with a passion, and kept cursing at the enormous amount of cultists and then little dragons coming out of nowhere. Then I got to the actual temple and Korgrim, and the Guardian, and that entire sequence, and it quickly became my favorite part of the game. I love real temples with riddles and not merely hack your way through. Plus, the temple and bridge sequence reminded me of The Last Crusade which makes me actually giddy. Especially since I named the dog Indiana.
Yes, definitely my favorite quest.
Off topic, someone said something about Fable 3? Is there such a thing?


Wasn't there also a display of goblets in the temple eerily similar to the on from Last Crusade?

#10
TagImIt

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You know, I don't remember, but I will definitely look for it in my next playthrough.

#11
Joshd21

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I also forgot to add the side quests in the Urn.

If you don't kill the dragon, then in the ending if people find out about the Urn, the dragon will keep them back stopping them for using it, untill the temple crumbles and he leaves.

Pouring Dragon Blood. If you accept his offer but refuse to pour the blood. He will confront you outside. There is only two of them, and another two towards the ruins. Easier then fighting them all at once.