owlmoose: (da - seeker)
KJ ([personal profile] owlmoose) wrote2015-01-29 05:12 pm
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DAI Replay: templar mission.

I've gotten my DA:I replay through Skyhold, which of course means that I've now played Champions of the Just. And so the Dragon Age writers continue their trend of setting up a world where odds are most people will sympathize with mages, but actually providing a better-written and more satisfying experience when you choose to work with templars. Spoilers beyond.


Kendra actually went to Redcliffe first -- despite her general mistrust of mages, she wanted to pay Fiona the courtesy of hearing her out. Then the alliance with the Venatori confirmed all her worst opinions, and she noped right out to Therinfal Redoubt. Where she met Ser Barras, who is, in fact, just as delightful a character as everyone says. Fortunately, he survived, and I'm looking forward to having him around in Skyhold (please tell me he sticks around in Skyhold). I also really enjoyed the trip through the Envy demon's prison, and the role that Cole played in helping Kendra escape. I also liked the nightmare future in Redcliffe Castle, but something about this glimpse of a crapsack future (the one in which Envy takes control of the Inquisition) spoke to me more than the other. Also, I feel like this will ground Cole more firmly in the Inquisition -- he proved his value to Kendra immediately, and she's going to feel much more of a connection to him than Malika ever did.

It's too bad, really, that the two plot missions I found the best written and well-conceived all around are mutually exclusive of one another. But I still feel like Champions gets the nod over Whispers.

Anyway, then I ground out a couple of levels before closing the breach, and, as I expected, Dorian appeared at the gates. In a recent entry, [personal profile] imadra_blue commented that Dorian works much better than Cole as the harbinger of doom, and I have to say I agree. It suits the character well and makes for a nice dramatic introduction (although Kendra had already met him, briefly), and his conversation with Cullen in the Chantry is excellent. "You think like a blood mage" -- ouch. (Also, no wonder people 'ship them.) I also found his interactions with Roderick oddly touching. Fiona becoming the boss abomination that you have to kill to defend the trebuchet at the end of the battle: also ouch. :\ I wasn't surprised, exactly, but it still got to me. (Although as it happened, I never ended up fighting her -- I had to play that battle twice, and the first time I died as she was on her way up the hill, and the second time I got the trebuchet aimed before she even appeared.)

Now I am beelining for Crestwood. Three guesses why. (Hint: I'm playing Elissa Cousland/Marissa Hawke's canon. Oh yeah.)

[personal profile] imadra_blue 2015-01-30 02:31 am (UTC)(link)
I really hope Ser Barris sticks around, too. Great character. I also think Dorian's interactions with Roderick and Cullen enrich him. You're lucky you didn't have to kill Fiona. That was ouchie.
fleurdeliser: (Default)

[personal profile] fleurdeliser 2015-01-31 06:15 pm (UTC)(link)
One of the things I love most about these games is that people can have such different takes on how things play out, because I feel the opposite. I love every single element of Champions of the Just that you list, but on the whole, In Hushed Whispers works better for me and feels better integrated into the larger story.

I have a pt I'm doing on hard difficulty and...Fiona was nearly impossible. It was awful on so many levels.
sarasa_cat: Corpo V (Default)

[personal profile] sarasa_cat 2015-02-03 03:34 am (UTC)(link)
I haven't yet played the templars side but look forward to it. You aren't the first to say that you liked the storyline of the templars quest a little better than the storyline mages quest. I would have played it by now if not for the fact that I went the mage route twice for metagame reasons. Very curious about how this cements Cole into the story. He feels a bit random (but not in a bad way) in my mage-quest games.

I didn't think about it until now but, yes, I can imagine Dorian as a very effective harbinger of doom.