Catch up time!
Considering that we don't really know how we can kill him, or if people on redemption route may not be forced to kill him if they make a wrong choices along the way (that's a possibility too, isn't it?), or whether even redemption route will just mean we end with us killing him a different way
... I don't know if this is just about something as simple as death.
...Still, death itself may as well be a consequence, given that we don't yet know how much we may need Solas - or his knowledge, or power, or whatever he can do - to face whatever comes after him. We don't know if that is what will happen, but the possibility is there.
I suspect in order to kill a god perhaps one must be a "god." Either Mythal/Morrigan will have to be enlisted to kill Solas or the player character will have to become a "god" as Cory had intended. This would be an awesome choice to have to make considering the convo with Cory before the end game fight. Plenty of players wouldn't want to make their character a "god," as that sounds most likely to be a renegade/darkside sort of choice. It also goes along with the Inquisition theme concerning the ambiguity of "godhood" (Andraste/the Maker/the Herald/the Evanuris).
Don't watch after season two.
Spoiler
Definitely skip season 4. I've only gotten through half of that travesty. It's missing everything that made Torchwood awesome. However, I don't see what's wrong with season 3. The production values are much better than the prior 2 seasons, and Ianto gets a lot more screen time. To each his or her own...
I was going to write a direct rebuttal to something Master Warder Z posted recently, but I don't really have the will. I'll just do a little soapboxing. Some people can't really think outside the box on Solas or "villains" generally in fiction or reality. Some people see things in black and white and take everything at face value. They see a "villain" in the media and never stop to think about their side of things or about how a peaceful resolution might be reached. They just want to drop bombs or swing the executioner's axe utterly convinced of the righteousness of their actions. The roles hero and villain in the end are completely subjective. A hero who seeks no alternative path and kills Solas at the cost of the ancient elves is no less or more a villain than Solas is himself. [end scene]





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