That was very close to what I was thinking while I was playingOn the side note -- I was replaying Torment for the last week or so and it struck me that Nameless One in fact had commited as bad atrocities and JI in his past... and yet we commiserate with him while JI is compared with Hitler etc etc... I think the reason is the view that these 2 different games force us to take as players.
PC suffers JI crimes 'directly'. It is near impossible to forgive someone who torture YOU 'precious' personally (and your little sister).
Nameless One is your alter ego... and you are put into his shoes and forced to relieve HIS life... therefore you are forced to believe he can change and be redeemed.
BG2 for the very first time. In the first act the PC is in turmoil, not really understanding what is going on, somebody just tortured her, and, as it is not enough, the next few hours she sees nothing but people in glass, tortured corpses
and clones, and everybody around would not stop shouting how evil the person is.
It really felt as *too much* evil. So the spirit of contradiction got the best of me and I thought: What's going on ?? Somebody's doing these things, and just everybody I see encourages me to kill him on sight, and I get NO explanation ??
What about listening to his position, not mentioning trying to walk in his shoes ?
At the end of the game I got the feeling the writers wanted PC to explode with blind rage at Irenicus and not to come to the decision that it is elves who issued the judgement: "anger the criminal, make him unable to feel, and let go". Sounds
*extremely* logical.
It was frustrating when PC was standing at the Tree of Life and got no choice.
The mod does offer some reassurance.
BTW, I probably agree with the idea that Jon Irenicus should have been killed outright instead of THAT... Maybe there's a place for an option in the mod: get Irenicus from hell and end his misery ? (I probably wouldn't have done it, though: every sentinent being should have a chance to redeem itself and reconsider, in case of Jon it is suffering in Abyss in both ways: physically and mentally. Can't say evil is suffering, there're too many definitions of evil, but hurting other beings deliberatly and remembering it is indeed suffering to the tormentor as well as the victim)
Edited by Kulyok, 10 September 2004 - 03:38 AM.