After beating him in one-on-one combat he struck me as being very indignant/bitter about losing to a non-follower/human. I would have figured that with the vaunted teachings of the Qun he would of accepted death gracefully knowing that losing to Hawke meant that he was no longer worthy of being a leader, and that the only repentance would be death.
The Arishok..
#1
Guest_AedanStarfang_*
Posté 01 avril 2014 - 08:33
Guest_AedanStarfang_*
#2
Posté 01 avril 2014 - 03:31
Well, considering he says the same thing if you turn down the duel, and even if you give him what he wants...
... I'd say losing the duel/bitterness has nothing to do with that line. JMO!
#3
Posté 06 avril 2014 - 05:07
After beating him in one-on-one combat he struck me as being very indignant/bitter about losing to a non-follower/human. I would have figured that with the vaunted teachings of the Qun he would of accepted death gracefully knowing that losing to Hawke meant that he was no longer worthy of being a leader, and that the only repentance would be death.
Qunari are not Vulcans, they are not emotionless. He was pissed the entire game that he had to stay somewhere he hated because of a thief.
Why wouldn't he be pissed Hawke killed him?
They are all about order and law, not serenity
#4
Posté 06 avril 2014 - 05:10
I think when he says they would return, he was just stating a fact, not being bitter. The Qunari DO plan to march into war again someday. Sten tells the Warden that he hopes not to meet her or him on the battlefield but that they day they marched was coming. Unless you mean a different line?





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