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Estriga

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  1. Attempting to use a boring cliche like "your Force is nothing but particles in your blood!" is plenty reason to lose faith in Lucas. He established the Force as one thing in the original trilogy, and then tried to be "deep" by doing the midichlorian thing. Everyone I knew who saw The Phantom Menace was simply irate at him doing something so blatantly unoriginal (because it falls under the disprove religion trope) while totally spitting in the face of what the original trilogy established. There's plenty of terrible examples, like the whole "there is no father" bit for Anakin and Padme's thing about being elected queen (poor attempt at a parallel with what we consider modern government). Someone once said that the reason Star Wars was incredible back in 1977 was because Lucas knew he was making a movie about spaceships, robots and laser swords. In two decades his view of himself changed into some attempted "genius" producer/director and it shows in the prequel trilogy, when in reality it should have still been treated as a movie about spaceships, robots and laser swords.
  2. My troll-o-meter is blinking between orange and red right now, but I'll bite with one word: midichlorians
  3. "Have you seen what the Sith are wearing? It's almost as if every fashion designer in the galaxy went to the dark side..."
  4. Indeed, but the OP is talking about strictly martial skills. Sparring can only take you so far, because the rest is dependent on combat experience, where theory doesn't always apply. True enough. I can agree with this, but we really lack a frame of reference. I mean sure, Mace Windu was one of the best duelists of his time, but how would he stand against a staple of the Old Republic era like Darth Malgus (himself very skilled with a lightsaber) or the Hero of Tython?
  5. You have to admit that Obsidian being involved begs the question "will it actually be complete and not have removed content this time?".
  6. On my Jedi Knight, Watcher One. I liked the fact he was someone who clearly was focused on his mission without any of the strange attachment to slaughter that some expect from the Sith empire. I could have used someone like him around in place of Doc or Rusk. Would have been weird to have three former imperials in my crew, but I could have overlooked that.
  7. Except most of his moves for the prequels made absolutely no sense, and trying to chalk it up to artistic license doesn't make it any less nonsensical. The fact that he attempted to destroy the mysticism of the force with the midichlorian bit should be enough of a warning sign. I agree with this. As long as he's giving orders from a command chair and has very limited (if any) action scenes, I think it'll be fine.
  8. They really should have taken the Zevran approach with Quinn. Basically, the quinncident happens if you did not have him at a certain level of affection by a certain point in the story, but it doesn't happen if you got a certain level of affection by a certain point in the story. Maybe have him tell you the plans of those who wanted to act against you, but him saying that he trusts you more and that is why he wants to help you stop them or something. This would also play well into the fact that some people have started relationships with Quinn only to get the incident. Kinda tears that story apart.
  9. Not to mention that with a suitable replacement it wouldn't create an issue. If you lost quinn but got random generic imperial medic or a med droid to replace him, at least you still have full companions. On Skadge, though... BW's issue in characters like Skadge is they wanted to add the character that doesn't play well with others, kinda like what Lord Scourge is to the JK story. it just kinda went over the top.
  10. Hopefully this gives Bioware an idea of what to do for april fool's day this year.
  11. They really should have written some sort of scuffle or given the player an option for the BH and Skadge to actually fist fight, with the BH winning and Skadge grudgingly agreeing to follow the BH. Kinda like a more amusing version of
  12. Agreed. JK is basically a star wars movie that never happened. Personally, the point of the BH story is to show that while allied with the empire, you still do your own thing. They did make a point to show that you're no one's lapdog.
  13. I'll support this. Very nice idea, OP.
  14. This makes me very sad. While abridged, Master Gnost Dural's holorecords were a great way to introduce people to the lore behind TOR.
  15. At least in the case of Kaliyo, she could work but introduced later in the story rather than being your first companion. I think that's what rubs people the wrong way. If you had been given time to establish your IA and then meet Kaliyo and have her join you, it would have made a little more sense. The type of thing she does is something that usually happens to people who have been in the information business for a long time. You do the same thing over and over and then realize you could make something extra on the side. You don't usually just jump into that sort of thing after getting your feet wet. Not if you don't want to get caught, anyways. I'm starting to think one of the universal constants of TOR is that everyone has a female bounty hunter.
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