audrbox

joined 1 year ago
[–] audrbox@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 2 months ago (2 children)

You may be right. I just think that's a weird characterization for some of the themes the game seems to be going for, or at least I feel like they could have done more to cement that characterization and tie it to those themes. Like so much of the game asks questions about freedom, survival, and the way reciprocal trust interacts with those things- see the stories of Shadowheart, Lae'zel, Astarion, etc. This scene could have been an affirmation of how those other stories answer those questions (by convincing The Emperor to trust you despite everything), or it could have been a brutal rebuttal of that answer (e.g. maybe it betrays you after you trust it with the stones). Instead, it kind of just shrugs off the questions. Like it doesn't really feel meaningful for The Emperor to act the way it did, even if it's within its character, if that makes any sense.

[–] audrbox@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 2 months ago

!It's actually my third playthrough, just my first where I progressed Lae'zel's story to the point where she rejects Vlaakith and wants Orpheus freed lol. And I may be in the minority here, but even after seeing all of The Emperor's shitty dialog, I see it as more complex than that. It's self serving and manipulative for sure, but I do think it believes it is being honest and acting in your best interest. Its dialog about illusion being a part of Illithid nature strikes me as it being quite candid and an indication that while its sense of morality is maybe alien to non-Illithids, it does at least somewhat trust you. That's the mentality I had in coming up with these dialog options. You're never going to convince The Emperor to act against its own survival and interests (hence it still refusing to leave the astral prism), but it doesn't seem out of the realm of possibilities that you could convince it to trust you with its life in return for you trusting it with yours. I feel like that would be a more interesting thematic capstone to the whole Emperor story.!<

 

Major spoilers for ending of BG3:

!This is my first playthrough where Lae'zel wants to free Orpheus (and not just to immediately kill him) so the choice of whether or not to do so is harder than just "do I trust the Emperor or not?". I'm definitely not the first to feel weird about the options you're given here and how they play out in terms of The Emperor's actions, but I thought it'd be fun to write out my headcanon for the direction I wish I could have taken the conversation (a direction I believe would stay true to what Larian intended with this scene). !<

  • !After your character indicates they want to free Orpheus and The Emperor gives its speech about trust, your character can say "I trust you, but we can't let Orpheus be killed. We need to find another way."!<

  • !The Emperor responds "There is no other way. An Illithid is needed to dominate the Netherbrain, and I cannot exist outside of the astral prism without absorbing the protection provided by Orpheus."!<

  • !You can respond "What if Orpheus is willing to protect you? He could be freed and we could still be shielded from the Netherbrain."!<

  • !The Emperor: "I told you: to Orpheus, you are Illithid. If you free him, he will kill you. Right after he kills me."!<

  • !You can then make a persuasion check with a DC influenced by how much you've shown The Emperor trust thus far: "He will see reason. And if he doesn't, I will subdue him again. I won't let him hurt us."!<

  • !If unsuccessful, The Emperor doesn't believe you, and you're brought back to the original dialogue options.!<

  • !If successful, The Emperor will guardedly agree to let you free Orpheus. However, it doesn't trust that Orpheus will protect it if it leaves the astral prism, so it will refuse to go with you.!<

  • !When Orpheus is freed, he will initially be hostile toward The Emperor and threaten to kill it for imprisoning him. You can pass a high persuation or intimidation check to convince him to see reason and work together for the common cause. Otherwise, you can side with him against The Emperor and help him kill it, or you can fight Orpheus. If the latter, you must knock him out; if you kill him, you get a Game Over.!<

  • !If you convince Orpheus to stand down, you are then presented with the same choice as you would if you'd freed Orpheus without convincing The Emperor to stay. However, The Emperor becomes a powerful callable ally in the ensuing battle. It continues communicating with your party, and it has a tense but nonviolent interaction with Orpheus after the Netherbrain is defeated.!<

  • !If you subdue Orpheus, Lae'zel is angry, but she will reluctantly agree in light of Orpheus's hostility that The Emperor consuming him is the only option.!<

  • !If you help Orpheus kill The Emperor, the scene will proceed as if The Emperor abandoned you.!<

!What do y'all think? Does this seem realistic, or am I off with any of the characters? What's your headcanon for this scene? !<

[–] audrbox@lemmy.blahaj.zone 30 points 1 year ago

Homer framing Marge for a DUI was pretty disgusting.

[–] audrbox@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 1 year ago

I agree to an extent, but also as an Oklahoman it's getting harder and harder to argue with this label :/

[–] audrbox@lemmy.blahaj.zone 13 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The framing plot here was imo definitely a self-aware parody of past episodes where Leela just totally forgets/ignores she and Fry are dating, and through that lens I found it hilarious. The science spell reveal at the end is the perfect absurd capper to it and also makes it clear it wasn't meant to be taken seriously

[–] audrbox@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I think in this context it's important to be specific about the type of self-doubt you're experiencing. Are you unsure about something specific you're stating? A decision you're making? A belief you have? A pattern of behavior you exhibit? Yourself/your life in general (literally, "unsure of yourself")? These are all separate things imo and warrant different levels of healthy doubt. Like, be open to being wrong about a fact, and be mindful of your behavior / willing to change it if it's hurting others, but no need to spend energy constantly doubting who you are or how you're living your life. Whenever I experience self-doubt, I try to first ask myself which of these categories it belongs to, and based on that I decide how I want to respond to it.

I hope this makes sense, it got rambly lol

[–] audrbox@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 1 year ago

I was also going to say Celeste! I feel like it also improved my attitude towards games in general- taught me to be persistent but forgiving of myself when I'd fail

 

Can be from any genre. Mine is when an acoustic guitar comes in towards the end of a song and totally changes or reframes the mood/energy (see "Money" by Widowspeak)

[–] audrbox@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

My city is opening its first "BRT" line soon! Quotes because it doesn't even have dedicated lanes, but honestly I'm just excited to have public transportation that comes more than every half hour lol