SMOOTH AS EGGS, Y'ALL
What would you change about Thane Krios
#76
Posté 27 mars 2010 - 12:57
SMOOTH AS EGGS, Y'ALL
#77
Posté 27 mars 2010 - 01:29
Modifié par davidshooter, 27 mars 2010 - 01:31 .
#78
Posté 27 mars 2010 - 02:07
Drop the shredder ammo for toxic ammo (thinking about the polonium rounds where it also stops enemies from regenerating health).
As for his flashbacks and philosophy, I say leave it as it is - it makes him unique as a character. After all, if everyone was the same - you might as well go to a recruiting station and grab a squad of automatons. (hmm, hey that could be another idea for ME3).
Modifié par et2cetera, 27 mars 2010 - 02:08 .
#79
Posté 27 mars 2010 - 02:17
Kronner wrote...
I'd cure his illness.
this and nothing else. no wait... a better ammo power maybe
#80
Posté 27 mars 2010 - 03:25
#81
Posté 27 mars 2010 - 09:42
enormousmoonboots wrote...
I like Thane just fine, but this drives me nuts. I can't decide if he actually considers his soul seperate from his body and is totally okay with that, or is just lying to himself to feel better about being a murderer for most of his life. When you try to call him out on it, he's just like 'eh'.davidshooter wrote...
I would make him take a logic class to straighten out his conflicting personal philosophies.
"We must take responsibility for our actions Shepherd, otherwise who will?"
"An assassin is weapon, a weapon doesn't choose to kill - the one who wields it does"
Wasn't his philosophy vs. actions supposed to show us that dilemma to begin with though? He says he feels no guilt, can not be blamed for his body's actions yet he clearly feels guilt (even during combat "more blood on my hands") and talks about "atoning for the evil he'd done". So yes, he's lying to himself in the face of death and is just too proud to ever admit it. That's how I interpreted anyway.
#82
Posté 27 mars 2010 - 03:00
Baris wrote...
enormousmoonboots wrote...
I like Thane just fine, but this drives me nuts. I can't decide if he actually considers his soul seperate from his body and is totally okay with that, or is just lying to himself to feel better about being a murderer for most of his life. When you try to call him out on it, he's just like 'eh'.davidshooter wrote...
I would make him take a logic class to straighten out his conflicting personal philosophies.
"We must take responsibility for our actions Shepherd, otherwise who will?"
"An assassin is weapon, a weapon doesn't choose to kill - the one who wields it does"
Wasn't his philosophy vs. actions supposed to show us that dilemma to begin with though? He says he feels no guilt, can not be blamed for his body's actions yet he clearly feels guilt (even during combat "more blood on my hands") and talks about "atoning for the evil he'd done". So yes, he's lying to himself in the face of death and is just too proud to ever admit it. That's how I interpreted anyway.
I agree, he's tried so long to justify what he's done, and meeting Shepard (male or female, romance or not) and joining the suicide mission makes him come to terms with the fact that he's not as okay with it as he thought - it's just all he knows.
I would cure his illness, too. As for things that are more realistic, I'm make him actually snipe from a far distance and not use the rifle an inch from the enemy's face. Even telling him where to go just doesn't get the job done.




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