Yes, I like to think in ME3 my Shepard is suffering from PTSD or something like that.
Does your Shepard change throughout the series?
Débuté par
EpicBoot2daFace
, mai 11 2013 08:08
#26
Posté 11 mai 2013 - 11:50
#27
Posté 11 mai 2013 - 11:53
My Shepard is a Spacer Sole Survivor Soldier.
He was raised to hold up the ideals of the Alliance and humanity but has real world experience with sacrificing for that cause. He's a fierce warrior and has a nasty temper (I like to view Adrenaline Rush in the second two games as kind of his rage meter going off the rails), and generally likes to take the renegade path when speaking to people.
However, he's also an idealist deep down, and despite his rough exterior, generally goes out of his way to preserve life where he can and to fight for unity. That doesn't mean he believes that everyone should be treated the same per se, or that humanity should bow down to the Council, but rather that each species should stand strong on their own merits, but also stand united with the other races. This coupled with what happened on Akuze makes him very resentful of Cerberus and their ideology.
Over the course of the games, my Shepard became increasingly paragon, though he was always pretty even between paragon and renegade with a fair paragon tilt. As the series goes on and Akuze is put farther and farther behind him, he vows to do better for the people under his care, his new squad, and for the galaxy at large. His idealist nature comes out more and more, and he fights not only for the cause of the Alliance, but for the cause of every race, and especially for his friends and family, eventually destroying the Reapers to free them from their grasp forever.
He was raised to hold up the ideals of the Alliance and humanity but has real world experience with sacrificing for that cause. He's a fierce warrior and has a nasty temper (I like to view Adrenaline Rush in the second two games as kind of his rage meter going off the rails), and generally likes to take the renegade path when speaking to people.
However, he's also an idealist deep down, and despite his rough exterior, generally goes out of his way to preserve life where he can and to fight for unity. That doesn't mean he believes that everyone should be treated the same per se, or that humanity should bow down to the Council, but rather that each species should stand strong on their own merits, but also stand united with the other races. This coupled with what happened on Akuze makes him very resentful of Cerberus and their ideology.
Over the course of the games, my Shepard became increasingly paragon, though he was always pretty even between paragon and renegade with a fair paragon tilt. As the series goes on and Akuze is put farther and farther behind him, he vows to do better for the people under his care, his new squad, and for the galaxy at large. His idealist nature comes out more and more, and he fights not only for the cause of the Alliance, but for the cause of every race, and especially for his friends and family, eventually destroying the Reapers to free them from their grasp forever.
#28
Posté 12 mai 2013 - 12:07
My FemShep is a Paragade, but i have much more Renegade Points than Para Points. I just dont like it, when my Shep makes always full Renegade or Paragon Choices. Don't fitting my Playstyle.
#29
Posté 12 mai 2013 - 12:16
If I could compare my Shepard to anyone in film, it would probably be Harvey Dent in The Dark Knight. He starts out as a good guy who is considered a hero by his peers and those around him.
But certain events and influences make him see things differently. Ashley tries to convince Shepard that the Council will betray him and the Alliance. He doesn't believe it until it happens. When it does happen, he refuses to let idealism and heroics blind him in the future. But even though he left those things behind, he is still betrayed by Cerberus, which only adds fuel to the fire.
He starts to lose it in ME3 and begins hallucinating and having nightmares. With all the pressure applied by the Reapers and Cerberus, and having to be the one to save the galaxy (again), he basically becomes everything he fought against early in his Alliance career.
But certain events and influences make him see things differently. Ashley tries to convince Shepard that the Council will betray him and the Alliance. He doesn't believe it until it happens. When it does happen, he refuses to let idealism and heroics blind him in the future. But even though he left those things behind, he is still betrayed by Cerberus, which only adds fuel to the fire.
He starts to lose it in ME3 and begins hallucinating and having nightmares. With all the pressure applied by the Reapers and Cerberus, and having to be the one to save the galaxy (again), he basically becomes everything he fought against early in his Alliance career.
Modifié par EpicBoot2daFace, 12 mai 2013 - 12:18 .





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