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Post by AlleluiaElizabeth on Oct 8, 2017 17:45:04 GMT
Inquisition was the first time I didn't end up romancing one half of an NPC couple on accident. I romanced Fenris in DA2. And Garrus and femshep are so perfect together, imo, that I can't help but always pick him. (I just ship Tali and Kal'Rheegar to make up for it. ) I like that the storylines exist, but I almost never see them. lol
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Post by rowrow on Oct 9, 2017 10:34:50 GMT
Hello Eggthread. What news? To hop in on the topic, I'm ok with the idea of un-romanced characters hooking up on their own. But I reserve the right to side-eye and judge the actual pairings. I was fine with Tali and Garrus. I would've liked seeing Ash and Vega together, had she lived in my playthrough. But Fenris and Isabela? NOPE - good thing I romanced him. I'm also not crazy about Dorian and Bull because I think Dorian can do worlds better (just not my Inquisitor). There I said it, now come at me. Also I don't know if Peebee and Jaal actually hookup if you leave them both alone but let's just say I would throw her out the airlock before I let her lay a blue finger on my Jaal, EVEN if there was a universe in which I didn't romance him, which there ISN'T. Bonus reaction to Zaeed trying to get with Samara: :lmfao:
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Post by shinary on Oct 9, 2017 12:10:26 GMT
I have a question about Solas' intentions. I had a picture in my head of what Solas meant, but I have seen that a lot of people think something different. Now most people (from what I can tell at least) seem to think that Solas means to kill everyone in order to restore the elves.
I always understood it like this: Solas intends to destroy they veil and he assumes/predicts that the world will end from the chaos that follows. I understood it as being from the volume of spirits suddenly in the world and how much the world would be altered. I never thought he intended to kill them directly, but for them to die as a result of his actions (killing them indirectly).
Am I the only one, who understood it this way?
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Post by midnight tea on Oct 9, 2017 12:56:31 GMT
I have a question about Solas' intentions. I had a picture in my head of what Solas meant, but I have seen that a lot of people think something different. Now most people (from what I can tell at least) seem to think that Solas means to kill everyone in order to restore the elves. I always understood it like this: Solas intends to destroy they veil and he assumes/predicts that the world will end from the chaos that follows. I understood it as being from the volume of spirits suddenly in the world and how much the world would be altered. I never thought he intended to kill them directly, but for them to die as a result of his actions (killing them indirectly). Am I the only one, who understood it this way? Well he does state that he intends to restore the 'world of the elves' which means that 'this world MAY die', plus redeeming Inquisitor does state that Solas wouldn't have to destroy the world and will set out o prove it to him - so it'd seem that any potential world destruction would be the side effect of his actions rather than means to an end. On the other hand he does say that 'the return of my people means the end of yours'... though what that means is anybody's guess. 'End' doesn't necessarily means death, though there's also no saying what 'death' means to an immortal being - especially that Solas tells us that he's on din'anshiral, which is the path of death, but at the same time alludes through Cole that he will walk that path alone forever. In other words... until we get more information we may as well speculate our brains away and not come to solid conclusion ~_~''' At this point it'd seem that the whole thing is vague on purpose.
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Post by rowrow on Oct 9, 2017 22:20:38 GMT
I have a question about Solas' intentions. I had a picture in my head of what Solas meant, but I have seen that a lot of people think something different. Now most people (from what I can tell at least) seem to think that Solas means to kill everyone in order to restore the elves. I always understood it like this: Solas intends to destroy they veil and he assumes/predicts that the world will end from the chaos that follows. I understood it as being from the volume of spirits suddenly in the world and how much the world would be altered. I never thought he intended to kill them directly, but for them to die as a result of his actions (killing them indirectly). Am I the only one, who understood it this way? That's more or less my understanding too, but as midnight tea said, we really don't know very much. We do know how Solas seems to feel about it all. And I think that it wouldn't be a true Solas-y dilemma if the stakes were not for realz going to be incredibly high. Why all the guilt and fatalism, otherwise? It seems to be a key aspect to his character that he's is capable of great ruthlessness in the service of his conscience. But so far we've mostly only heard about it. As a plot-agent in DAI, what he did was largely invisible to us. We've glimpsed but have yet to truly see in action the guy that led slave rebellions, that had the incredible audacity to fundamentally alter the way reality works. To put it another way, we've met Solas, but have yet to truly meet Fen'Harel. I expect we will in the next game. The technical details of his plan are less important than what he's willing to sacrifice. I mean it probably won't go according to his plan anyway, but he's told us he's willing to destroy the world the Inquisitor knows. That doesn't seem vague. Or at least that's what he seems to want us to believe.
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Post by ellawyn on Oct 10, 2017 21:19:26 GMT
Honestly, anyone who thinks that genocide is Solas' end goal didn't pay enough attention to his character or to the end of Trespasser. It's a simplistic interpretation of his motivations that just reduces him (And the story in general) to some Saturday cartoon plot. "Hey, this guy wants to kill everyone because he doesn't like them! And that's bad!"
Solas can be shockingly ruthless but he's not genocidal. He'll absolutely make some questionable sacrifices to achieve what his goal - and that's what makes him a villain - but his goal itself isn't necessarily objectionable. Weekes said it himself when he said Solas is a character who does the wrong thing for the right reasons. Even on low-approval runs where he's so done with the world's bullshit, he hasn't got active hatred for people so much as ho-hum disappointment. Less "I actively hate you and will enjoy watching you all burn" and more "Oops, screwed that batch up, well, scrape it into the trash and try again."
...Which itself makes me think of Solas as something like, Iunno, Shiva. A cosmic destroyer who just cyclically shows up and wrecks shit because the universe is a circle of death and rebirth or some poetic nonsense like that.
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Post by rowrow on Oct 11, 2017 5:33:21 GMT
Honestly, anyone who thinks that genocide is Solas' end goal didn't pay enough attention to his character or to the end of Trespasser. It's a simplistic interpretation of his motivations that just reduces him (And the story in general) to some Saturday cartoon plot. "Hey, this guy wants to kill everyone because he doesn't like them! And that's bad!" Solas can be shockingly ruthless but he's not genocidal. He'll absolutely make some questionable sacrifices to achieve what his goal - and that's what makes him a villain - but his goal itself isn't necessarily objectionable. Weekes said it himself when he said Solas is a character who does the wrong thing for the right reasons. Even on low-approval runs where he's so done with the world's bullshit, he hasn't got active hatred for people so much as ho-hum disappointment. Less "I actively hate you and will enjoy watching you all burn" and more "Oops, screwed that batch up, well, scrape it into the trash and try again." ...Which itself makes me think of Solas as something like, Iunno, Shiva. A cosmic destroyer who just cyclically shows up and wrecks shit because the universe is a circle of death and rebirth or some poetic nonsense like that. I agree with that last, though Solas himself would probably dismiss it as grandiose nonsense worthy only of people like Corypheus, heh. He surely sees his goals as much more grounded and personal. Maybe all trickster figures do, as much as they might appear to others as nihilistic asshats who just want to watch things burn. What's so interesting is that while Fen'Harel is named a trickster, Solas doesn't seem to have the personality we might associate with one. Flemeth fits that type better, and has even played a tricksterish role in events sometimes. (Though even she is ultimately driven by a very personal need for revenge.) The lore-fans in us might get a charge out of encountering characters like Fen'Harel in the flesh - beings who embody such cosmic forces. But when they become real people to us, like Solas, then it's all heartbreak and hell spirals. (See also tragic figures like Loghain and Anders. Agents of catastrophic change don't always know what they're doing. Often they just want to do good! By the Maker, it's like a theme or something.) The question I find interesting right now is this: do we really know Solas? I know we'd prefer to think of Fen'Harel and Solas as separate, like one is just a role played by the other. But I personally don't buy that kind of thing. Why does Batman need a secret identity? To fulfill a need that he can't do so openly. Batman is part of Bruce Wayne. In that way, Fen'Harel is probably a part of Solas. Because it's not enough for Solas to do good in his capacity as Solas. No, he has to FIX THE WORLD, himself. Enter Fen'Harel. Because only gods would presume to take control (or responsibility) for the world on such a scale.
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Post by midnight tea on Oct 11, 2017 8:16:38 GMT
I agree with that last, though Solas himself would probably dismiss it as grandiose nonsense worthy only of people like Corypheus, heh. He surely sees his goals as much more grounded and personal. Maybe all trickster figures do, as much as they might appear to others as nihilistic asshats who just want to watch things burn. What's so interesting is that while Fen'Harel is named a trickster, Solas doesn't seem to have the personality we might associate with one. Flemeth fits that type better, and has even played a tricksterish role in events sometimes. (Though even she is ultimately driven by a very personal need for revenge.) The lore-fans in us might get a charge out of encountering characters like Fen'Harel in the flesh - beings who embody such cosmic forces. But when they become real people to us, like Solas, then it's all heartbreak and hell spirals. (See also tragic figures like Loghain and Anders. Agents of catastrophic change don't always know what they're doing. Often they just want to do good! By the Maker, it's like a theme or something.) The question I find interesting right now is this: do we really know Solas? I know we'd prefer to think of Fen'Harel and Solas as separate, like one is just a role played by the other. But I personally don't buy that kind of thing. Why does Batman need a secret identity? To fulfill a need that he can't do so openly. Batman is part of Bruce Wayne. In that way, Fen'Harel is probably a part of Solas. Because it's not enough for Solas to do good in his capacity as Solas. No, he has to FIX THE WORLD, himself. Enter Fen'Harel. Because only gods would presume to take control (or responsibility) for the world on such a scale. Well, if we're comparing Elvhen gods to superheroes, then Solas would be more like Superman than Batman. Bruce Wayne is a mask for Batman, while Superman is mask for Clark Kent - an alien who is hiding in plain sight (he doesn't even uses glasses for that!), not really bringing attention to himself, but who dons of the mantle of a superhero when he has to do things a mere mortal can't. Where Solas differs from Superman is, naturally, that he's not the big boy scout, but he still tries to desperately hold to at least some of his principles, which make him - in part at least - save the South and warn even disliked Inquisitor of his plans, even if it'd be more logical to let Qunari pass through his domain and fulfill their mission, then just shut the mirrors behind them and let chaos reign. But anyway... I don't really think anybody is arguing for Fen'Harel is not a part of Solas. It is - but it's just a part of him that is now threatening to overwhelm him. Kinda like Leliana with whom he shares an arc - she's a goody two-shoes who has a dark streak, that comes forth the more her faith is broken and the more questionable stuff she has to do; and if we don't help her remember her principles, she becomes what she was afraid to become: which is her mentor, Marjolaine. I believe the devs on some con literally stated that this is what happens to her in case we harden her in DAI. So the risk for Solas is that he'll fully embrace Fen'Harel while forget the real self. Even spirit!Cole tells us in Trespasser that he'll help to 'remember who he is', so it's not that hard to guess that we're sort of fighting for his soul now. As for Solas 'not having personality we might associate with one'... well, tricksters are tricksters because they trick people/gods. Prometheus is a trickster. And Solas is very much inspired by Prometheus. Their MO is using their considerable intelligence to outsmart their opponents.
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Post by Elessara on Oct 11, 2017 10:21:06 GMT
Honestly, anyone who thinks that genocide is Solas' end goal didn't pay enough attention to his character or to the end of Trespasser. It's a simplistic interpretation of his motivations that just reduces him (And the story in general) to some Saturday cartoon plot. "Hey, this guy wants to kill everyone because he doesn't like them! And that's bad!" Solas can be shockingly ruthless but he's not genocidal. He'll absolutely make some questionable sacrifices to achieve what his goal - and that's what makes him a villain - but his goal itself isn't necessarily objectionable. Weekes said it himself when he said Solas is a character who does the wrong thing for the right reasons. Even on low-approval runs where he's so done with the world's bullshit, he hasn't got active hatred for people so much as ho-hum disappointment. Less "I actively hate you and will enjoy watching you all burn" and more "Oops, screwed that batch up, well, scrape it into the trash and try again." ...Which itself makes me think of Solas as something like, Iunno, Shiva. A cosmic destroyer who just cyclically shows up and wrecks shit because the universe is a circle of death and rebirth or some poetic nonsense like that. I agree with that last, though Solas himself would probably dismiss it as grandiose nonsense worthy only of people like Corypheus, heh. He surely sees his goals as much more grounded and personal. Maybe all trickster figures do, as much as they might appear to others as nihilistic asshats who just want to watch things burn. What's so interesting is that while Fen'Harel is named a trickster, Solas doesn't seem to have the personality we might associate with one. Flemeth fits that type better, and has even played a tricksterish role in events sometimes. (Though even she is ultimately driven by a very personal need for revenge.) The lore-fans in us might get a charge out of encountering characters like Fen'Harel in the flesh - beings who embody such cosmic forces. But when they become real people to us, like Solas, then it's all heartbreak and hell spirals. (See also tragic figures like Loghain and Anders. Agents of catastrophic change don't always know what they're doing. Often they just want to do good! By the Maker, it's like a theme or something.) The question I find interesting right now is this: do we really know Solas? I know we'd prefer to think of Fen'Harel and Solas as separate, like one is just a role played by the other. But I personally don't buy that kind of thing. Why does Batman need a secret identity? To fulfill a need that he can't do so openly. Batman is part of Bruce Wayne. In that way, Fen'Harel is probably a part of Solas. Because it's not enough for Solas to do good in his capacity as Solas. No, he has to FIX THE WORLD, himself. Enter Fen'Harel. Because only gods would presume to take control (or responsibility) for the world on such a scale. He's called a trickster NOW - as in, during the current times of Thedas. However, we find some evidence that this may not have always been the case. A codex entry we pick up in the Temple of Mythal indicates that his name may have meant something else. dragonage.wikia.com/wiki/Codex_entry:_The_Rebel_GodGiven that all codex entries are from an in-game standpoint, this may not be accurate at all but it does make more sense than labeling Fen'Harel a trickster god.
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Post by ladyiolanthe on Oct 11, 2017 13:58:48 GMT
Solas seems pretty tricksy to me. He hung out with the elite of a world for a year, 'helping' them help make his own secret goals more attainable. And a lot of folk stories about tricksters have the trickster's plan backfiring on them in some way - usually though not always a way that is humourous to the audience. Similarly, Solas' plans have definitely not always worked out according to his wishes, though his backfires are usually more terrifying to the audience than humourous. "Whoops, didn't MEAN to completely alter the nature of this world... I was just trying to help. Honest!"
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Post by ellawyn on Oct 11, 2017 15:43:29 GMT
Honestly, anyone who thinks that genocide is Solas' end goal didn't pay enough attention to his character or to the end of Trespasser. It's a simplistic interpretation of his motivations that just reduces him (And the story in general) to some Saturday cartoon plot. "Hey, this guy wants to kill everyone because he doesn't like them! And that's bad!" Solas can be shockingly ruthless but he's not genocidal. He'll absolutely make some questionable sacrifices to achieve what his goal - and that's what makes him a villain - but his goal itself isn't necessarily objectionable. Weekes said it himself when he said Solas is a character who does the wrong thing for the right reasons. Even on low-approval runs where he's so done with the world's bullshit, he hasn't got active hatred for people so much as ho-hum disappointment. Less "I actively hate you and will enjoy watching you all burn" and more "Oops, screwed that batch up, well, scrape it into the trash and try again." ...Which itself makes me think of Solas as something like, Iunno, Shiva. A cosmic destroyer who just cyclically shows up and wrecks shit because the universe is a circle of death and rebirth or some poetic nonsense like that. I agree with that last, though Solas himself would probably dismiss it as grandiose nonsense worthy only of people like Corypheus, heh. He surely sees his goals as much more grounded and personal. Maybe all trickster figures do, as much as they might appear to others as nihilistic asshats who just want to watch things burn. What's so interesting is that while Fen'Harel is named a trickster, Solas doesn't seem to have the personality we might associate with one. Flemeth fits that type better, and has even played a tricksterish role in events sometimes. (Though even she is ultimately driven by a very personal need for revenge.) The lore-fans in us might get a charge out of encountering characters like Fen'Harel in the flesh - beings who embody such cosmic forces. But when they become real people to us, like Solas, then it's all heartbreak and hell spirals. (See also tragic figures like Loghain and Anders. Agents of catastrophic change don't always know what they're doing. Often they just want to do good! By the Maker, it's like a theme or something.) The question I find interesting right now is this: do we really know Solas? I know we'd prefer to think of Fen'Harel and Solas as separate, like one is just a role played by the other. But I personally don't buy that kind of thing. Why does Batman need a secret identity? To fulfill a need that he can't do so openly. Batman is part of Bruce Wayne. In that way, Fen'Harel is probably a part of Solas. Because it's not enough for Solas to do good in his capacity as Solas. No, he has to FIX THE WORLD, himself. Enter Fen'Harel. Because only gods would presume to take control (or responsibility) for the world on such a scale. (Adding to the quote train ah yeah) I can agree that Solas doesn't perfectly fit the image that people commonly think of with the word "trickster." He's not particularly coy, he's not in it for shits and giggles, he's got goals and ideals beyond his own personal amusement. But I'd argue that the rebel and the trickster are archetypes that have a lot of overlap. Both exist to disrupt the status quo, to question what's right or socially acceptable, and maybe to over turn power structures (Even if they only do so briefly before everything goes back to normal.) Both are more chaotic and destructive than not. But anyway! I think your last question would depend on who you think "Solas" to be. If it's the polite and inquisitive persona he usually seems to effect, then I can see why you'd want to define Fen'Harel as a separate entity. But we've seen flashes of him where he doesn't fit that mold - do we count those as Solas too? Solas is a bit of a polite mask, but he's also coldly pragmatic, stubbornly ideological, and sometimes plain manipulative. I suppose those are all part of Fen'Harel, too, but - I guess I didn't think of them as separate, really. I, personally, don't think that anything we've seen of Solas thus far has been fake (Except maybe his demeanor in the very beginning of the game). I think he's always been honestly himself, he just wasn't entirely himself, if that makes sense. His more villainous aspects weren't front and center, but he also wasn't really trying to hide them. His companion banter (Especially with Vivienne, and that revolution talk with Sera) show a few flashes of it. And I mean, I say that partially because I think it's pointless to make us spend a whole game with this character, only to reveal him as basically non-existent. But also because I think we've seen plenty of the Fen'Harel parts of Solas already.
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Post by legbamel on Oct 11, 2017 17:47:55 GMT
I'm breaking the quote train because I'm a rebel like that...and I'm on my phone.
It's interesting that the trickster is usually portrayed as getting enjoyment from the act of fooling people, which doesn't seem to fit Solas until you consider his dialogue in WEWH. He misses intrigue and political gamesmanship. While the actions he took to create the Veil may not fit with the traditional view of a trickster good I wonder if hos behavior prior to that did.
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Post by midnight tea on Oct 11, 2017 17:56:52 GMT
I'm breaking the quote train because I'm a rebel like that...and I'm on my phone. It's interesting that the trickster is usually portrayed as getting enjoyment from the act of fooling people, which doesn't seem to fit Solas until you consider his dialogue in WEWH. He misses intrigue and political gamesmanship. While the actions he took to create the Veil may not fit with the traditional view of a trickster good I wonder if hos behavior prior to that did. This guy, who stole fire for humanity and tricked Zeus a couple of times, wants to talk with you about tricksters and the fact that he's in fact one of the most, if not THE the most popular, tricksters and mythological characters for entire Western culture.
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Post by gervaise21 on Oct 11, 2017 18:53:56 GMT
Solas may not seem to fit the trickster image to us but we should not forget that he managed to persuade/trick/outsmart 7 Evanuris and catch them in his trap. Naturally their followers would think he must have used underhanded trickery to achieve this when it is possible he just out-manoeuvred them (he is after all very good at chess).
Even before he did so they were warning their followers against him by suggesting a form of trickery by using his "many forms" and his "humble guises" which he uses when "offering advice that seems fair but turns slowly to poison". It was all propaganda by his opponents to suggest that people should not trust him.
This is why the idea of the university scholars that his name really means "rebel wolf" is not strong enough a condemnation. The Evanuris called him the Dread Wolf for a reason, they wanted people to think him untrustworthy and likely to do you harm. That is why the Dalish remember him as a trickster.
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Post by Elessara on Oct 11, 2017 21:29:11 GMT
Usually, when I think "trickster" I think of ... Loki (not particularly the Marvel version) or Puck. So that's probably where my disconnect is coming from. I've never particularly though of Prometheus as trickster but more as a rebel - but then I haven't read all of the mythology surrounding Prometheus so my knowledge is limited.
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Post by ellawyn on Oct 11, 2017 21:40:57 GMT
Usually, when I think "trickster" I think of ... Loki (not particularly the Marvel version) or Puck. So that's probably where my disconnect is coming from. I've never particularly though of Prometheus as trickster but more as a rebel - but then I haven't read all of the mythology surrounding Prometheus so my knowledge is limited. Prometheus definitely employs trickery in his legends. He steals fire by hiding it in a plant (Fennel, I think?) and literally just walking out with it. He tricks Zeus into accepting only bones and other non-edibles for sacrifice (Whereas the meat and such went to mankind.) His name, if I recall correctly, essentially translates to "forethinker." (And he's got a brother named Epimetheus whose, well, afterthinker.) But I agree. I hear the word "trickster," and I think either Loki or, like, Coyote. Someone grinning and coy who's in it for their own amusement. But Prometheus fits the mold well enough. The biggest criteria is mostly "Uses trickery to do things."
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Post by midnight tea on Oct 11, 2017 21:57:15 GMT
Usually, when I think "trickster" I think of ... Loki (not particularly the Marvel version) or Puck. So that's probably where my disconnect is coming from. I've never particularly though of Prometheus as trickster but more as a rebel - but then I haven't read all of the mythology surrounding Prometheus so my knowledge is limited. He is recognized in literature as a trickster, since that's what he does - he tricks or outmaneuvers his opponents. And Western literature adores him, because of his status as a tragic trickster, who uses trickery ultimately to help people, but through it also dooms himself. Also, lemme find some summaries for Prometheus, especially one from ancient play "Prometheus Bound". ...Sounds familiar?
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Post by gervaise21 on Oct 12, 2017 10:03:42 GMT
I don't deny that PW may have referenced Prometheus archetype in developing the character of Solas but that is not why he is called a trickster within the setting. It is the image of him that his enemies wished to promote in order to undermine his rebellion. So Fen'Harel is portrayed as a trickster and untrustworthy. This image then continued to be promoted among the surviving priesthood of the Evanuris who would seem to have been the leaders of the elven communities that were later enslaved by Tevinter. Which is why this is the image the Dalish have of him.
His supporters seem to have dropped off the radar, although apparently not altogether in view of the elven folktale of the "trickster warrior who fought against tyrants". How that survived and not the identity of the "trickster warrior" when you actually have a "trickster god" beats me. Still, even there, the rebel is described as a "trickster".
This is why I say the codex referring to the root of his name being the word for rebel was really a heavy handed means of introducing the idea that Fen'Harel might not have been the malicious trickster portrayed by the Dalish. His name was given him by his enemies and then he adopted it as his own. In his eyes and those of his followers it meant "rebel" but not in the eyes of those who originally gave him the name. They meant for him to be viewed as more than simply a rebel but a harmful, untrustworthy deceiver. Harel = Trickster.
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Post by midnight tea on Oct 12, 2017 14:03:28 GMT
I don't deny that PW may have referenced Prometheus archetype in developing the character of Solas but that is not why he is called a trickster within the setting. It is the image of him that his enemies wished to promote in order to undermine his rebellion. So Fen'Harel is portrayed as a trickster and untrustworthy. This image then continued to be promoted among the surviving priesthood of the Evanuris who would seem to have been the leaders of the elven communities that were later enslaved by Tevinter. Which is why this is the image the Dalish have of him. His supporters seem to have dropped off the radar, although apparently not altogether in view of the elven folktale of the "trickster warrior who fought against tyrants". How that survived and not the identity of the "trickster warrior" when you actually have a "trickster god" beats me. Still, even there, the rebel is described as a "trickster". Being called a trickster within the setting is a different matter from what we're discussing, which is Solas being a trickster type on meta level. Still, I'd like to point out that Solas did embrace the mantle, just like he embraced the moniker and turned it from insult to a badge of pride. That doesn't mean that he thought of himself as a chaotic trickster from later legends - but he definitely wanted to be seen as one who can defeat the gods with the strength of his wits alone. This is why, when we find his auto-portrait in Trespasser the subsequent puzzle, it follows this text: "One sees the hunter, one flees from it, one hunts it in turn, one outwits them all.” and we end up on a wolf being the one who 'outwits them all'. The Elvhen language is highly contextual and it has been pointed out many times that one word can have multiple meanings. But I don't see how it was 'heavy handed' that someone has figured out that the word had either different meaning or the meaning of the word changed over time, opening to us a new area of how we view Fen'Harel and that there's more to him than what was presented in Dalish legends. Besides - I'd like to point out that the text in ToM doesn't state that Harel is translated by the Dalish to mean 'trickster', but 'traitor to one's kin'. That is a very different thing from trickster.
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Post by gervaise21 on Oct 12, 2017 14:57:34 GMT
Ah well to the Evanuris may be he was "a traitor to one's kin" but that simply means that the "scholars" have come up with a 3rd interpretation of the word. How they did so without reference to any elves beats me and if they asked the Dalish, who are the only ones who have bothered with trying to understand old elven, why are they coming up with the "traitor" meaning when they already have "trickster" or simply "dread"? It is all very well saying that the elvhen language has multiple meanings but why are these human scholars claiming greater knowledge than the only ones who have even been bothered with keeping the language alive? Without a Thedas equivalent of the Rosetta stone what are they basing their ideas on?
PW did say that originally Solas was intended to be more obviously a trickster type in his dealings with you but then it was decided to make him a more sympathetic character. The romance also had a lot to do with that later image. So the original concept of Fen'Harel was more in keeping with Dalish tradition. That is not to say he wasn't justified in what he did but he was different from the Solas that PW finally wrote. So in a way he was always Fen'Harel and Solas is the new development, in contrast to what is now presented in game. This makes it more difficult to state emphatically what Solas is on a meta-level since his character has undergone change from his original world concept.
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Post by phoray on Oct 12, 2017 17:58:25 GMT
LOL Salos You guys. I like you guys. Here's a mildly amusing Dorian Solas comic strip Potato
Edit add: This is cute too
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Post by midnight tea on Oct 15, 2017 0:31:13 GMT
Does this mean we will have goth Solas?
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Post by shinary on Oct 15, 2017 2:26:21 GMT
Does this mean we will have goth Solas? Could be that they are giving him another make over? Or maybe its Falon'din? Now I want it to be Falon'din!
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Post by phoray on Oct 15, 2017 2:37:02 GMT
I honestly thought Kal Sharok Dwarves or Tevinter people always wearing black.
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Post by Solas on Oct 15, 2017 3:32:44 GMT
Salos? Is that a reference to that (ahem) [snip]? I think Salos is a pretty cool guy. Eh kills shelmen and doesnt afraid of anything.
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