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Gameplay wise, does the Inquisition's growth matter?


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#1
Qun00

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I mean the Inquisition camps requests for materials, weapons, iron surveys and so on.

Is there any point to fulfilling those? 78 hours in and I never bothered because it just seems like a waste of precious crafting materials.

I'm also surprised at how the whole point of the game seems to be gaining more and more allies to expand the Inquisition's power across southern Thedas, and yet when it comes down to it all that makes no difference.

What Pride Had Wrought should be the climax, all your efforts to help the organisation grow finally bearing fruit.

But regardless of what you did in the game, the allies that show up in the cutscene and battling Red Templars during the quest are exactly the same. Nothing like "wow, I've built such a great army".


All that said, DA:I still is a great game and I love it to bits.

#2
ThreeF

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Those are only needed if you want to skip things and get power points fast in order to progress the main quest and even that only in the beginning.



#3
Tinxa

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I stopped doing requisitions after I found out the same ones just repeat over and over and I'll never be able to finish them all.



#4
Heidirs

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I mean the Inquisition camps requests for materials, weapons, iron surveys and so on.

Is there any point to fulfilling those? 78 hours in and I never bothered because it just seems like a waste of precious crafting materials.

 

I stopped doing these after my first playthrough. They don't seem to do anything than take your crafting materials.

 

 

I'm also surprised at how the whole point of the game seems to be gaining more and more allies to expand the Inquisition's power across southern Thedas, and yet when it comes down to it all that makes no difference.

 

I'm not sure if you're talking about "agents," but gaining those do specifically speed up the amount of time it takes for Cullen/Lelianna/Josie to do war table missions.

 

 

What Pride Had Wrought should be the climax, all your efforts to help the organisation grow finally bearing fruit.

But regardless of what you did in the game, the allies that show up in the cutscene and battling Red Templars during the quest are exactly the same. Nothing like "wow, I've built such a great army".

 

It's because your whole army is still at work in the Arbor Wilds. I really never understood that. I agree, the climax of the game should be when you go to face Corypheus, not to investigate an elven temple. I really think that was a poor writing choice there.



#5
Qun00

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No, I just meant that the people who show up in the battlefield should be different depending on what allies you have.
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