Ahh Morrigan... ![]()
I almost want to play as the Warden again for her.
Guest_TheDarkKnightReturns_*
Ahh Morrigan... ![]()
I almost want to play as the Warden again for her.
Here, thought I'd give a music vid, and what a coincidence... It's called Morrigan.

This is great fan art. There are more like this with other Dragon Age characters here: http://dakkun39.tumblr.com/

This warden was a (partially failed) attempt at having a bit of consistency with Leandra and Marian/Carver defaults looks. But I ended up liking him. He will be my second import.
I dare say your warden's mustache is thinner and looks better trimmed
Spoiler
That was exactly the reason for why I made him look the way he does, the signature blue Amell eyes that Leandra/Carver/Gamlen and FemHawke have. I also went for dark hair, because I figured that while Leandra and Gamlen are grey and so we don't know their original colour, it's mentioned that her portrait looks like Bethany and Charade has brown hair, so darker hair seemed the way to go for that family?
As for the well-trimmed beard and moustache, well... there's little in the Tower to do except read, so I headcanoned that he kept his appearance neat because it at least was something to do to pass the time? And because as much as he respects Irving as a mentor, he thinks his beard is in danger of eating his face!
I tend to go along those lines when creating each race's Wardens, a City Elf is a redhead like their cousins Soris and Shianni, a human noble is a brunette and if male, has a goatee like their father and brother, the Dwarf Commoner is a green-eyed redhead like Rica, Aeducans are blonde and pale blue eyed like Bhelen, Trian and their father (although he's gone grey). The Dalish and Elf Mage are the only two that give you the option for whatever, since we never meet their families? Sure, some people don't like that approach because of roleyplaying limitations, but as long as I can define the personality, that's what really counts with me?
But you are completely right that;
N/M
@Sifr:
I wonder if it will be possible to actually kill her this time.
Probably would be easier on the series in the future if her fate were to be decided in game.
Oh my a tautology... ![]()
really hate magi dont cha lol * playful shoulder nudge* but you make some sense.. we've covered the south best to wrap things up for the north ya?I wonder if it will be possible to actually kill her this time.
Probably would be easier on the series in the future if her fate were to be decided in game.
Oh my a tautology...
It isn't redundant.
It goes off of a known bioware practice.
You keep telling yourself that. lol
Also!
Yes! I do in fact KNOW what that word means!
Also! You keep telling yourself that. lol
You keep telling yourself that. lol
Don't really need to.
Redundancy is just that.
My second sentence only interacted with the first on topic.
A tautology is a proposition that is true by necessity, and therefore not worth mentioning as no new
knowledge is gained. 'This video game charcter's story will be solved in the video game.' Whoop-de-doo.
First definition huh?A tautology is a proposition that is true by necessity
First definition huh?
That's working off the basis the character arc is actually resolved, which is I mused on.
So what you would infer as that is proposition, not tautology.
So either way.
It doesn't apply.
No, it works off the notion that Morrigan is a video game character whose 'fate' by necessity will have to be solved in the video game story that she is a part of.
"So what you would infer as that is proposition, not tautology." That makes no sense, a tautology is a statement (proposition) that is true by logical necessity.
The application of the word "tautology" as far as I can tell.
Doesn't the OGB qualify as an Eldritch Abomination? Has that ever ended well?
No...no, not in this case, I think. He is, ultimately, a human with a very powerful soul. What that entails, we don't exactly know at this moment in time.
"So what you would infer as that is proposition, not tautology." That makes no sense, a tautology is a statement (proposition) that is true by logical necessity.