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Post by AlleluiaElizabeth on May 19, 2019 23:12:23 GMT
You all are just giving me more reasons to hate Cole now. lol Welp. *shrugs*
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Post by midnight tea on May 20, 2019 1:15:24 GMT
You all are just giving me more reasons to hate Cole now. lol Welp. *shrugs* Kinda funny isn't it? Instead of other characters and their relationship with Solas contextualizing and elevating him above being the apparent scum of the earth, apparently it works the other way around and taints those characters...
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Post by Elessara on May 20, 2019 1:17:26 GMT
You all are just giving me more reasons to hate Cole now. lol Welp. *shrugs* Yeah, I don't really get it either but I don't care how they feel about Cole enough to continue lol. I only started the discussion because I didn't understand ... and I still don't so, as you say, *shrugs*
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Post by Hanako Ikezawa on May 20, 2019 1:52:54 GMT
Yeah, I don't really get it either but I don't care how they feel about Cole enough to continue lol. I only started the discussion because I didn't understand ... and I still don't so, as you say, *shrugs* It’s quite simple really. He kept things from the Inquisition that needed to be known but instead kept it to himself thus hurting others. Whether that be Rainier not being a Warden and instead just a fugitive murderer or Solas having been the one who armed the people we are trying to stop, things like that were not for him to keep secret or be the sole arbiter of.
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Post by Hanako Ikezawa on May 20, 2019 1:55:13 GMT
Kinda funny isn't it? Instead of other characters and their relationship with Solas contextualizing and elevating him above being the apparent scum of the earth, apparently it works the other way around and taints those characters... Kinda funny isn’t it? Keeping a person’s criminal acts or intentions secret makes someone an accomplice to said crimes.
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Post by xerrai on May 20, 2019 2:36:13 GMT
Kinda funny isn't it? Instead of other characters and their relationship with Solas contextualizing and elevating him above being the apparent scum of the earth, apparently it works the other way around and taints those characters... Kinda funny isn’t it? Keeping a person’s criminal acts or intentions secret makes someone an accomplice to said crimes. Kinda hard to put him on the same level as an accomplice when his understanding of moral obligation is barely on par with that of a child's....no seriously. His dialogue with Cassandra makes it abundantly clear that he has trouble comprehending how his actions could have larger consequences.
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Post by Elessara on May 20, 2019 3:35:39 GMT
Kinda funny isn’t it? Keeping a person’s criminal acts or intentions secret makes someone an accomplice to said crimes. Kinda hard to put him on the same level as an accomplice when his understanding of moral obligation is barely on par with that of a child's....no seriously. His dialogue with Cassandra makes it abundantly clear that he has trouble comprehending how his actions could have larger consequences. And he's a spirit. He doesn't think the same way other people do. Morality just isn't the same for him. Right and wrong don't mean the same things to him that they do to us. Honestly though? Hanako wants to feel the way they want to feel and that's fine. I don't get it but whatever. As I said, I don't care enough about how they feel to try to convince them otherwise so this will be my last comment on the subject.
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Post by midnight tea on May 20, 2019 3:47:33 GMT
Kinda funny isn't it? Instead of other characters and their relationship with Solas contextualizing and elevating him above being the apparent scum of the earth, apparently it works the other way around and taints those characters... Kinda funny isn’t it? Keeping a person’s criminal acts or intentions secret makes someone an accomplice to said crimes. It isn't funny as much as it simply misses the point. I mean... given that I know that you have very high moral standards (I'm not sneering at you btw., you're perfectly within your right to have ones), I'm not sure why you seem to care that Cole keeps Solas's secrets, but not downright murdering people, including killing a person whose death seems to have greatly contributed to devastating mage-templar war. Cole simply doesn't care about criminal acts (especially if he becomes more spirit) , regardless of whatever law you think Solas/Cole should operate by. Nor Cole is Justice - he's Compassion. Cole only really seems to care about intentions or emotions surrounding one's actions and cares especially about caring, compassionate people - if someone is an unrepentant, egoistic a-hole, Cole is very quick to point that out and has little sympathy for such characters. It's been pretty well established. Clearly, it looks like intentions surrounding Solas's actions can't really be that sinister, psychopathic or unencumbered by remorse, guilt or willingness to try and fix past mistakes (including Cory debacle) given that an embodiment of compassion cares about him about as much as he cares about morally pure as snow Inquisitor. That's my point.
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Post by midnight tea on May 20, 2019 4:16:06 GMT
If Cole did know that he gave the orb to Cory, and thus was unintentionally responsible for all of the deaths resulting from the breach, Cole may have forgiven him since Solas was willing to help people and likely didn't intend for those people to die at the conclave anyway. That being said I doubt Cole was aware of Solas's master plan to tear down the veil until Trespasser. Or maybe he did and is just holding out hope for Solas because he believes "He isn't that kind of wolf". I think there's a difference between sensing motivations and knowledge how one wants to achieve a goal - it probably wasn't hard for Cole to guess that Solas is planning to do something that he thinks would save/restore the world without realizing how he plans to do it (though Solas has wiped some of spirit's memory specifically so Cole's unique gift may not uncover exactly that). Especially that in Trespasser Cole seems to be surprised (and overjoyed as a spirit) at the revelation that the Veil is 'false, fake, fabricated to forbid' - the knowledge that the Veil didn't exist at some point, or that the Fade and Thedosian Earth were one before seems to be elusive on both sides of the Veil. I have long theorized that this may be at least partially by design - and it's supported by tidbits like Veil being 'fabricated to forbid' and existence of powerful magic that makes even creatures as massive and powerful as Titans to forget how to even wake up. So far I stand by the idea that Solas's finest trick may be that he has somehow convinced the whole world that the Veil is actually a thing I'll go even farther and say that I wouldn't be surprised that this is also how the Veil is largely powered by; it's reinforced by people believing in it - which is probably why either minds need to be broken/changed/eliminated to tear it down OR the process of tearing it down will break or alter minds, thus for Solas's people/world to come back the Inquisitor's ones may need to/will likely end.
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Post by Sifr on May 20, 2019 10:42:35 GMT
The thing is, Solas' plan might very well be destructive, but it would return the world to what it was before and how it's supposed to be. Solas not only broke the world, but he broke the Elves too. Now he seeks to help them by removing what it was that "hurts" them (loss of magic and immortality), not too dissimilar to how Cole goes about removing people's hurt to help them.
Solas tells us that in a world without the Veil, spirits would exist as part of nature. Without the Veil separating the worlds and trapping them in the Fade, you wouldn't have spirits getting twisted into demons by their resentment of mortals and covetous desire to walk in their world.
Why would Cole object to Solas' plan when it would restore the world to it's previous state, in addition to helping the Elves and Spirits?
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Post by xerrai on May 20, 2019 16:49:19 GMT
The thing is, Solas' plan might very well be destructive, but it would return the world to what it was before and how it's supposed to be. Solas not only broke the world, but he broke the Elves too. Now he seeks to help them by removing what it was that "hurts" them (loss of magic and immortality), not too dissimilar to how Cole goes about removing people's hurt to help them. Solas tells us that in a world without the Veil, spirits would exist as part of nature. Without the Veil separating the worlds and trapping them in the Fade, you wouldn't have spirits getting twisted into demons by their resentment of mortals and covetous desire to walk in their world. Why would Cole object to Solas' plan when it would restore the world to it's previous state, in addition to helping the Elves and Spirits? Well I wouldn't say Thedas is supposed to that way. Or any way for that matter. But even if we assume Cole approves of the supposed end result of tearing down the veil (which is up for debate), we know that if there is one thing Cole objects to it is people being hurt and in pain. And Solas implied pretty clearly that there will a lot of that if he tears down the veil. Cole may not be against Solas now, but I am going to have a hard time believing he stays that way when the pain from Solas's plan finally reaches his awareness. Even if we assume the best-case scenario that the pain is temporary for a newer and better world, we know that Cole is more prone to reacting to immediate pains/hurts rather than thinking long-term. Mind you, this is assuming Cole stays reasonably healthy as a spirit and doesn't turn into something more demonic (which very well could happen if the destruction he talked about is anywhere near the level he said). And if becomes more human-like he could very well develop hatred and malice for Solas when his plan starts negatively affecting the mortal plane by killing people and disrupting lives.
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Post by midnight tea on May 20, 2019 20:31:15 GMT
The thing is, Solas' plan might very well be destructive, but it would return the world to what it was before and how it's supposed to be. Solas not only broke the world, but he broke the Elves too. Now he seeks to help them by removing what it was that "hurts" them (loss of magic and immortality), not too dissimilar to how Cole goes about removing people's hurt to help them. Solas tells us that in a world without the Veil, spirits would exist as part of nature. Without the Veil separating the worlds and trapping them in the Fade, you wouldn't have spirits getting twisted into demons by their resentment of mortals and covetous desire to walk in their world. Why would Cole object to Solas' plan when it would restore the world to it's previous state, in addition to helping the Elves and Spirits? Well I wouldn't say Thedas is supposed to that way. Or any way for that matter. But even if we assume Cole approves of the supposed end result of tearing down the veil (which is up for debate), we know that if there is one thing Cole objects to it is people being hurt and in pain. And Solas implied pretty clearly that there will a lot of that if he tears down the veil. Cole may not be against Solas now, but I am going to have a hard time believing he stays that way when the pain from Solas's plan finally reaches his awareness. Even if we assume the best-case scenario that the pain is temporary for a newer and better world, we know that Cole is more prone to reacting to immediate pains/hurts rather than thinking long-term. Mind you, this is assuming Cole stays reasonably healthy as a spirit and doesn't turn into something more demonic (which very well could happen if the destruction he talked about is anywhere near the level he said). And if becomes more human-like he could very well develop hatred and malice for Solas when his plan starts negatively affecting the mortal plane by killing people and disrupting lives. Oh, Cole seems perfectly aware - or at least spirit!Cole: Trespasser: "When this is done, I will slip back safely, a Spirit. Someone is hurting. He needs me to remember who he is." I'm fairly sure we know who he's talking about. Also, from Trespasser epilogue: "Cole returned to the Fade, saying that there was more pain coming, and that he knew where compassion was most needed. He promised that his friends in the Inquisition would remember him... and that where the hurt was greatest, he would help." So Cole not only seems aware, he seems pretty certain that he will play a role in Solas's redemption. The redemption angle may not be certain itself, but so far spirit!Cole seems to believe things will resolve in some sort of positive way.
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Post by xerrai on May 21, 2019 14:00:56 GMT
Well I wouldn't say Thedas is supposed to that way. Or any way for that matter. [...] Oh, Cole seems perfectly aware - or at least spirit!Cole: Trespasser: "When this is done, I will slip back safely, a Spirit. Someone is hurting. He needs me to remember who he is." I'm fairly sure we know who he's talking about. Also, from Trespasser epilogue: "Cole returned to the Fade, saying that there was more pain coming, and that he knew where compassion was most needed. He promised that his friends in the Inquisition would remember him... and that where the hurt was greatest, he would help." So Cole not only seems aware, he seems pretty certain that he will play a role in Solas's redemption. The redemption angle may not be certain itself, but so far spirit!Cole seems to believe things will resolve in some sort of positive way. Huh. Well would you look at that. So he does know. Guess I have to rescind my previous point. But now that I think about it, it does kinda match up with a bit dialogue in the same DLC when he is at the tavern. It implied that the spirits were traveling to other parts of the fade because they were afraid of the veil tearing again. Cole: The spirits have fled. Flying, fluttering. Fast to the farthest fade. They are afraid of the veil tearing again. I originally thought it was because the Inquisitor's mark becoming unstable, now...huh.
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Post by Iddy on May 21, 2019 16:13:21 GMT
Now, I'm not saying every bald elf is Solas... but you can't prove he isn't.
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Post by midnight tea on May 21, 2019 19:29:28 GMT
I see someone here has decided to consult the Word Of God That's good, 'cause we got some answers: I think over the years Weekes has made enough suggestions to make some things about Solas's character fairly apparent, but this is probably the first I see him being this straightforward about 'yea, guys, Solas is prooooooobably (*wink, wink*) not acting out of malice'... which, btw. gels really well with the argument that Cole is a decent barometer on such things.
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Post by Hanako Ikezawa on May 21, 2019 20:35:40 GMT
I see someone here has decided to consult the Word Of God That's good, 'cause we got some answers: I think over the years Weekes has made enough suggestions to make some things about Solas's character fairly apparent, but this is probably the first I see him being this straightforward about 'yea, guys, Solas is prooooooobably (*wink, wink*) not acting out of malice'... which, btw. gels really well with the argument that Cole is a decent barometer on such things. Thanos, Vader, etc didn’t act out of malice either.
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Post by AlleluiaElizabeth on May 21, 2019 23:25:04 GMT
I see someone here has decided to consult the Word Of God That's good, 'cause we got some answers: I think over the years Weekes has made enough suggestions to make some things about Solas's character fairly apparent, but this is probably the first I see him being this straightforward about 'yea, guys, Solas is prooooooobably (*wink, wink*) not acting out of malice'... which, btw. gels really well with the argument that Cole is a decent barometer on such things. Thanos, Vader, etc didn’t act out of malice either. Well, Vader kind of did. But still. True. Doesn't make Cole wrong for supporting redemption anymore than Luke was, though. And he turned out to be right.
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Post by Deleted on May 22, 2019 0:25:47 GMT
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Post by midnight tea on May 22, 2019 0:43:43 GMT
I see someone here has decided to consult the Word Of God That's good, 'cause we got some answers: I think over the years Weekes has made enough suggestions to make some things about Solas's character fairly apparent, but this is probably the first I see him being this straightforward about 'yea, guys, Solas is prooooooobably (*wink, wink*) not acting out of malice'... which, btw. gels really well with the argument that Cole is a decent barometer on such things. Thanos, Vader, etc didn’t act out of malice either. Vader is debatable and yet he's still the hero of one of the most well-known redemption story arcs in popular culture...
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Post by wildenight on May 22, 2019 0:53:53 GMT
Some new pretties from Nipuni: I... I love this.
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Post by Hanako Ikezawa on May 22, 2019 3:31:24 GMT
Thanos, Vader, etc didn’t act out of malice either. Well, Vader kind of did. But still. True. Doesn't make Cole wrong for supporting redemption anymore than Luke was, though. And he turned out to be right. <iframe width="23.960000000000036" height="4.599999999999994" style="position: absolute; width: 23.960000000000036px; height: 4.599999999999994px; z-index: -9999; border-style: none;left: 15px; top: -5px;" id="MoatPxIOPT0_2139244" scrolling="no"></iframe> <iframe width="23.960000000000036" height="4.599999999999994" style="position: absolute; width: 23.96px; height: 4.6px; z-index: -9999; border-style: none; left: 1138px; top: -5px;" id="MoatPxIOPT0_63365552" scrolling="no"></iframe> <iframe width="23.960000000000036" height="4.599999999999994" style="position: absolute; width: 23.96px; height: 4.6px; z-index: -9999; border-style: none; left: 15px; top: 169px;" id="MoatPxIOPT0_14914542" scrolling="no"></iframe> <iframe width="23.960000000000036" height="4.599999999999994" style="position: absolute; width: 23.96px; height: 4.6px; z-index: -9999; border-style: none; left: 1138px; top: 169px;" id="MoatPxIOPT0_51962959" scrolling="no"></iframe> Not really. He was ruthless absolutely, but there was never any malice behind his actions. In fact it was quite the opposite, since he, Palpatine, and the Empire saw themselves as bringing peace and order to the galaxy. As for the comparison between Cole and Luke, not really comparable. Cole would have been someone who knew what Anakin was going to do but kept it hush hush because he feels bad about doing it.
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Post by gervaise21 on May 23, 2019 18:58:20 GMT
Patrick Weekes @patrickweekesPossibly! But a) Cole feels the hurt, so someone acting from genuine grief would ping differently from someone acting from malice -- Solas might not feel to him like you'd think, and B.) Solas is good at stopping spirits (without killing them). I never thought that Solas was acting from malice where the modern world was concerned. Nevertheless his actions are still going to cause a lot of grief and pain in other people and for that reason you would think Cole would want to stop him. As it is Cole seems awfully selective about whom he considers worthy of his compassion. He has lots for Solas but apparently less for the millions of other souls that his actions will harm. Doesn't make Cole wrong for supporting redemption anymore than Luke was, though. And he turned out to be right. I was also never entirely sure that Cole was favouring redemption because that would mean he saw Solas as in the wrong for what he was doing. When he was arguing against killing Solas it seemed to be on the basis he wasn't a "bad" wolf at that moment in time. Actually in being willing to destroy an entire state of existence because he doesn't like it as much as the one he wants to replace it with seems to me to be a very bad wolf, particularly as Solas doesn't seem to regard his actions as morally wrong (because essentially he doesn't believe in black and white notions of good and evil). Does a spirit even have notions of redemption in the same way that we think of it?
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Post by Julilla on May 23, 2019 22:01:12 GMT
I think Solas looks best in silk brocade. Fite me right now.
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Post by midnight tea on May 23, 2019 22:52:09 GMT
Patrick Weekes @patrickweekesPossibly! But a) Cole feels the hurt, so someone acting from genuine grief would ping differently from someone acting from malice -- Solas might not feel to him like you'd think, and B.) Solas is good at stopping spirits (without killing them). I never thought that Solas was acting from malice where the modern world was concerned. Nevertheless his actions are still going to cause a lot of grief and pain in other people and for that reason you would think Cole would want to stop him. As it is Cole seems awfully selective about whom he considers worthy of his compassion. He has lots for Solas but apparently less for the millions of other souls that his actions will harm. Does he though? What if he knows a bit more about Solas's plans and intentions and the choice isn't as simple as either Solas or 'millions of other souls that his actions will harm'? I mean, I think it's clear that Solas doesn't really want to hurt millions of people - but maybe the choice is between harm coming to people either way, especially if nothing is done? Maybe it's something of a trolley problem? Plus, we know the Fade part of the world is hurting. That magical beings are hurting, that spirits are hurting - and that's without us knowing who and how many there are of those who 'sleep, masked in a mirror, hiding and hurting'... Nnnnnot really? The means to reach the goal may be wrong, not necessarily the goal itself. I mean... it's not like our PCs don't have choices like this all across Dragon Age story, even if smaller in scope - we can choose meaner or more consequential means to reach the some goals after all, regardless of how necessary/morally right it was to reach that goal from the in-world perspective. And let's not forget that friendly Inquisitor can tell Solas that they will prove him that he doesn't have to destroy this world - quite apparently in a sense that there may be another solution to the problem that Solas doesn't see for some reason and seems to have kept Inky alive for them to find it. He does tell them that he's looking forward to it after all. Er... I definitely didn't interpret it that way. There was no indicator there that Solas isn't a 'bad' wolf 'at that moment in time'. "He isn't that kind of wolf" is hard to interpret in many other ways than 'there are bad wolves out there and Solas isn't one of them'. Precisely. Which is why Cole's friendship and evaluation of Solas perhaps suggests that there's more to Solas's plan and motivation than "willing to destroy an entire state of existence because he doesn't like it as much as the one he wants to replace it with", eh? Also - where did the "Solas doesn't seem to regard his actions as morally wrong" come from ? Then why does he think he should be punished for what he does for the whole of eternity and wants to protect beloved Inquisitor from his own fate? The issue doesn't seem to be that Solas views his actions as not morally wrong or too gray to see the difference - he seems to think he has virtually no other choice but the worst ones. Heck, he literally tells us that.
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Post by Iddy on May 24, 2019 14:44:23 GMT
Also - where did the "Solas doesn't seem to regard his actions as morally wrong" come from ? Then why does he think he should be punished for what he does for the whole of eternity and wants to protect beloved Inquisitor from his own fate? The issue doesn't seem to be that Solas views his actions as not morally wrong or too gray to see the difference - he seems to think he has virtually no other choice but the worst ones. Heck, he literally tells us that. Yeah. I can't remember the precise words or which dialogue option gets that response, but I remember you can tell Solas his plan isn't a good idea and he flat out says "No, it's not. But there is no other way." Although... one might argue that it still is reprehensible that he is willing at all.
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