Everyone should make a permanent save just before it.
I've reloaded several times.It's probably one of those things determined long before the scene itself.
Everyone should make a permanent save just before it.
I've reloaded several times.It's probably one of those things determined long before the scene itself.
Are you talking about the "lets spend time together scene"?
No. Im not sure if they're also part of her normal story, but there are other romantic interactions with her.
*snip*
I've heard Blackwall mention it, other than that, not many outside of banter.
Are you talking about the "lets spend time together scene"?
After the conclusion to the Winter's Palace mission, you can dance with Cassandra. Likewise, there's a later conversation that takes place on the battlements of Skyhold (I want to say it's triggered after the Well of Sorrows quest, that's when I got it) where Cassandra mentions that the Inquisitor is a good man, and that she is lucky to be with him. I think there's also an option to kiss her at that point as well.
Nice.
I can't speak for the other romances, but Cassandra's seems well intergrated into the main story.
Ha! It would be one of those case of "Die a Hero or live long enough to see yourself turn into a villain" scenarios.
Would be fun if we saw how twisted everything we fought for would turn with the next Inquisitors down the line.
Bioware could take the Inquisition and turn it into a secular republic (a political body completly diffrent than the old feudal order,and kept seprate from the chantry). The Inquisition could become the hub for a kind of renaissance era. That of course only happens if Bioware decides to move Dragon Age beyond the tired old medieval fantasy setting, and into the onset of a more modern one.
Lulz, it's not a nation. It can't do those things. It's also not "separate" from the Chantry, as the new Divine will use it to force her new policies.
Just finished the game. Was fully expecting to see Cassandra as the new divine then BAMB, Vivienne outta no where! So I got the "Happy" conclusion to the Romance (I think) Although now I am curious as to how it turns out if you picked all the "As long as we are together" options and then get the Divine ending.
I gotta say though that I found her Romance arch adorable (When it got going after all the awkward flirting) & it was a pleasure to play through. Probably tied with Morrigan as my favourite of the series.
I hope that regardless of Cassandra being Divine or not the relationship is developed upon in future DLC. Be it happy or sad the intrigue seems too good to pass up!
Oh, & be sure to Check out DanaDuchy on youtube. He is uploading videos of the Companions party banter & he has one where Cassandra is being teased by Varic in their banter video! He uploads regularly so he will have the rest up soon!
Question. Does Varric comes talk to you about you're relationship with Cassandra? Or anyone else for that matter? Like he did in DA2?
Question. Does Varric comes talk to you about you're relationship with Cassandra? Or anyone else for that matter? Like he did in DA2?
In banter, mostly to needle Cassandra.
Oh,Varric....
Lulz, it's not a nation. It can't do those things. It's also not "separate" from the Chantry, as the new Divine will use it to force her new policies.
What I said was hypothetical, and predicated on where Bioware wants to take the series. However, in game, inquisition can be as separate from the chantry as you want it to be, you can say that its purpose is to restore order, not to follow the quirks of some sort of truant celestial dictator. The chantry in fact is opposed to the Inquisition. The Inquisitor has a powerful military (one that rivals Orlais) and a strong political economy (that is if you did not somehow “lulz” it into the ground) and people who feel a connection with the Inquisitor (he or she garners a lot of prestige).
Not only that, the Inquisitor influences who the next divine is. At one point in real history (during the papacy’s state of decline in the 14th century), France (due to its affluence) influenced the ascension of the popes in the Catholic Church. It was in fact the King of France who used his puppet pope to have the Knight Templar order declared heretics and killed-so he could gain the affluence that the order had accumulated over the years. It is a possibility, that the Inquisitor could have a great influence over the destabilized chantry of Thedas.
The Inquisition could declare its own constitution and thus sovereignty; and it could be used (story wise) as the vehicle of progression in Thedas (where else will progression come from? Antvia? Alistair’s Ferelden?). Again, this is me speculating, it’s a bit of a thought experiment. Maybe Bioware will milk the medieval fantasy setting in Dragon Age? They can most certainly do that by making Thedas stay within a perpetual chaotic frenzy, of demons, civil wars, theocracy and silly Tevinter magisteres.
Question. Does Varric comes talk to you about you're relationship with Cassandra? Or anyone else for that matter? Like he did in DA2?
Inquisitor: What do you think about the people we work with?
Vivienne: If you want to talk about Cassandra dear just say so. Its obvious that you dote on her, and you two look like such a happy couple...or you would if Cassandra ever smiled.
Inquisitor: What do you think about our friends?
Blackwall: You and Cassandra are an adorable couple. That's not a word I ever thought I'd use to describe Cassandra.
Inquisitor: What do you think of Cassandra?
Sera: Oh I know what you think of her...(laughs) Thought your way up in there huh?
To people who say you need to complete "Here lies the abyss" to romance Cassandra, I found out that's not entirely true:
I managed to get her quest after I first met the magister in that fort in the desert. I haven't attacked Adamant yet but I already slept with Cass and am in a romance with her. Will eventually post to see if she has any romance specific dialogue after she goes with me to Adamant. Anybody else manage to do this?
So Cass' romance is worth playing a guy for? She was without a doubt my closest friend during the first game and I totally would have romanced her had she been an option, Anything I should know before romancing her? I have a qunari maage in mind who I'll be RP-ing and hoping Cass ends up Divine, regardless of what that means for romance.
No one has ever said you need to complete that, so... As far as I can tell anyway, we said you had to meet Lucius.
To people who say you need to complete "Here lies the abyss" to romance Cassandra, I found out that's not entirely true:
I managed to get her quest after I first met the magister in that fort in the desert. I haven't attacked Adamant yet but I already slept with Cass and am in a romance with her. Will eventually post to see if she has any romance specific dialogue after she goes with me to Adamant. Anybody else manage to do this?
My last playthrough her romance came up before Adamant, yes. I didn't notice any specific dialogue changes though. I think it depends on approval rating more than anything. I managed to kill 4/5 of her targets around that point.
I have a question about the ending;
Spoiler
So I told you I would let you know when I finished it, I just had the ending where Cass doesn't become the divine, and does not rebuild the seekers. No mention of her leaving the inquisition or you at all, as opposed to the seeker/divine endings. So this seems to be the happiest one, or at least one in which they do not separate. All I had to do was select the "Forget the seekers" dialogue option when she brings them up after her quest. Hope this helps.
How is Cassandra becoming Lady Seeker an unhappy ending? It's not like she leaves you to reform them. She doesn't need to live with you all the time.
So I told you I would let you know when I finished it, I just had the ending where Cass doesn't become the divine, and does not rebuild the seekers. No mention of her leaving the inquisition or you at all, as opposed to the seeker/divine endings. So this seems to be the happiest one, or at least one in which they do not separate. All I had to do was select the "Forget the seekers" dialogue option when she brings them up after her quest. Hope this helps.
Wait, she leaves you if she rebuilds the Seekers?
No, she just doesn't stay in Skyhold all the time.
Freaking hilarious!
If she reforms the seekers, she mentions she will stay "for now". Some people do not interpret this as a happy ending. The one in which she doesn't become divine, and doesn't reform seekers has her staying with the inquisition. I was simply responding to a user who asked for the "happiest" ending, and this one seemed to fit that bill. I wasn't saying the romance ended if she reformed the seekers or anything. Ultimately it is up to the players preference.