I had the magical knowledge perk. the moment my inquis figured the thing had a geas it became a strong hard no. How can i properly lead if I have something controlling my mind with no way of restraining it.
This.
I had the magical knowledge perk. the moment my inquis figured the thing had a geas it became a strong hard no. How can i properly lead if I have something controlling my mind with no way of restraining it.
This.
I am curious. What if you don't do the ritual to open the door and you followed Samson. Does that affect the ending? I have always done the rituals or puzzles to open the door and I choose the option that I may need the well of sorrows.
I am curious. What if you don't do the ritual to open the door and you followed Samson. Does that affect the ending? I have always done the rituals or puzzles to open the door and I choose the option that I may need the well of sorrows.
As Sara would say it.
"Witchy -witch shanks old elfy."
As Sara would say it.
"Witchy -witch shanks old elfy."
um what?
um what?
Guest_TrillClinton_*
4/10, prefer vodka
um what?
That's what I and most of bsn said. Most can't understand her.
No way. Seemed like a bad idea once my character - who had arcanae knowledge - pointed out it had a geas. Morrigan was a moron about it though so she learned a hilarious lesson.
Yeah this is pretty much the same deal for me. I always unlock the arcane knowledge, and the Inquisitor has more reason not to take it herself than otherwise, though my Inquisitor was also human so had no interest in obtaining magical elven whatever. But aside from that, I think it makes for a much more poetic turn in the story for Morrigan to suddenly find herself tied to Flemeth after all that went on in Origins.
It's nice to have ONE protagonist that doesn't owe Flemeth something for some reason.
Yeah this is pretty much the same deal for me. I always unlock the arcane knowledge, and the Inquisitor has more reason not to take it herself than otherwise, though my Inquisitor was also human so had no interest in obtaining magical elven whatever. But aside from that, I think it makes for a much more poetic turn in the story for Morrigan to suddenly find herself tied to Flemeth after all that went on in Origins.
Honestly, I squeed when Flemeth/Mythal showed up. I kept thinking "it's real! It's Real! Real elven gods! REAL ELVEN GODS! Stupid ancient elves! Stupid know it all humans! Real elven gods!!!!!"
It's irony done right. I love Morrigan but I laughed for a solid minute at the reveal.
Her tendency to not think things through had to bite her eventually.
I imagine even my Warden would have had a good laugh about it, especially after going on a kill Flemeth errand for a book that ultimately did nothing.
And become some elven god's manservant? **** no
but how did you know on your first playthrough? lol
I think Morrigan kills Abelas. He stands down if you do the ritual.
he lived in my playthrough and Morrigan drank from the well.
but how did you know on your first playthrough? lol
The elven god thing is a total mystery, but it's practically written in veil fire that you're basically tying yourself to some sort of geas, much like Abelas and the rest of the suckers with the tree tats on their faces.
I wonder, if Solas absorbs Flemeth, does that mean inquisitor's/Morrigan's bond to Mythal is broken?
I wonder, if Solas absorbs Flemeth, does that mean inquisitor's/Morrigan's bond to Mythal is broken?
I like to think that it's like when I got a credit card from Washington Mutual, but then WaMu got absorbed by Chase, so now it's a Chase account. So basically, Morrigan got transferred over to Solas Trust.
I liked Sera's reaction, "well of SORROWS" I was like, yeah...no bueno. Not gonna drink out of that!
I felt horrible for Morrigan, but as most have said her arrogance and teenager-like disregard of consequences will come back one way or another. My HoF is going to be pretty sad, but I really think this will be an awesome arc for Morrigan if she manages to pull through. I think she's a very complex and interesting character, I'd love to see her grow and work this out somehow.
No. then yes.
In my first playthrough my Elven mage was thirsty and there was a well right there.
Second playthrough my Qunari Mage let Morrigan have it.
I had my Inquisitor drink from the Well. My Warden may have let Morrigan drink if they were there - but the Inquisitor and the Inquisition has absolutely no reason to trust Morrigan - apart from pointing the way to the Arbor Wilds (and saying regularly that she is doing so to find out what is there/what power is there), there really isn't any reason to think she is doing so for anyone but herself.
When it comes down to it, the Inquisitor will use the well in probably every playthrough I do. Just because I can't RP any reason to let Morrigan use the well with how well the Inquisition knows her.
My own Inquisitor doesn't trust Morrigan, but at the same time, she doesn't trust the mystical wading pool either. So the options are take a swig of elven curse, or let some witch I don't know very well be cursed instead.
I was worried about the consequences of drinking from the well...then I remembered, this is bio ware. Any choice of seemingly major consequence is going to be whitewashed away or trivialized anyway. This was confirmed with what happens just a little later with OGB Kieran.
The moment Flemeth took control of you made it clear that it was not. And Kieran was not white washed, the choice just did not end up being negative.
I imagine even my Warden would have had a good laugh about it, especially after going on a kill Flemeth errand for a book that ultimately did nothing.
My warden would face palm and feel embarrassed about hating Flemeth over it.