Interesting considering the parasites (the Circle, the Templars, the Seekers, Duke Gaspard, the Venatori, the Qunari, the Magisterium...) the Inquisition has to deal with to fix things.
Wow...You're a hater. The guy who fixes every thing is the parasite some how....More then the nobles and the chantry that messed everything up in the first place.
Seriously? A military organization 'able to rival nations' with no oversight or loyalty to anyone but the individual leading them?
An organization occupying strategic points within their sovereign territory without so much as a 'please and thank you'? This includes castles, trade routes, and a freaking gold mine. No sovereign nation would ever be able to overlook something like that.
An individual with vast personal power, both in terms of loyalty and simple raw power, capable of tearing holes in reality like the one the world was just saved from, at whim, and who, in the process of saving the world, pissed in some pretty powerful people's cheerios (hey look, the Qunari took offense. Shocking).
The Qunari situation in the main game alone should have been enough. Either the Inquisitor makes an alliance with the sworn mortal foe of every nation on mainland Thedas, thus rightly angering said nations, or the Inquisitor sets themselves up to be blamed by every possible detractor for angering the sworn mortal foe of every nation on Southern Thedas, potentially hastening the next war. Which would anger said nations.
And I haven't even gone into the whole 'may/not be the Herald of Andraste and a walking blasphemy' angle.
The Inquisition is a sucking parasite in the heart of Southern Thedas, and the Inquisitor, as the trailer rightly points out, is a focal point for ever escalating conflicts. The Inquisition needed to be, at the very least, stripped of its holdings and political/military power, if not outright disbanded. The Inquisitor themselves should have been thanked with a nice banquet, a few medals, and an all expense paid trip as far away from Orlais and Ferelden as possible while bards all over the region started wispering and singing about implied transgressions, treasons, and terribly unpopular character flaws while downplaying their positive accomplishments.
No sovereign and no sovereign nation would ever allow an extranational organization as big as the Inquisition to go unchallenged and without oversight in the heart of their territory. Nor would they allow an individual enough political and military power to challenge them as equals. We're lucky this DLC isn't just called "A Murder of Crows: One of Them Will Eventually Succeed".
I read the article which leaves no flavor of "the Inquisitor is dead" in one's palate. Here's a quote.
"Do you mean it just follows these later beats in the story through, or are you saying that this is effectively the end of the the Inquisition as an organization?
Well, that’s up to you. Ultimately, one of the core goals approaching this experience was that you would decide what the final fate of the Inquisition would be."
Excellent. I hope they follow through with that.