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Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age Inquisition, Baldur's Gate
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Post by fairdragon on Aug 12, 2021 7:35:32 GMT
The Avvar had always been described as being rather insular, only venturing out into the lowlands to do the odd bit of trading or raiding. They have never been conquered by anyone so their culture had remained pretty much unchanged from ancient times. Their power structure was different to the lowlanders, as were their customs, such as the climbing wall test of strength and the tradition of the skalds keeping alive their history through an oral singing tradition. Their clothing for the most part was also different from the lowlanders. They are different, but for me as different as every other culture in thedas. I think it is a question of the point of view, but i know what you mean by now.
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Post by fairdragon on Aug 12, 2021 9:39:27 GMT
This is more as i would see antiva clothes for the merchant princes.
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Post by Hanako Ikezawa on Aug 12, 2021 15:53:05 GMT
And you are wrong only the southeast is europe. No, all of Thedas is loosely inspired by Europe, with the basic premise of Europe being flipped over so countries in the north like England are now in the south like Ferelden. The devs have said that, even giving us examples. Tevinter is like the Byzantine Empire, Antiva is Venician Italy, Anderfels has a lot of German inspiration, Rivain mirrors Moor-occupied Spain, and Par Vollen and the Qun mirror the Ottoman Empire.
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Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Baldur's Gate, Neverwinter Nights
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Post by gervaise21 on Aug 12, 2021 19:55:21 GMT
I think dorian wears the modern fashionable variant. As I said above, Dorian is very original in his style and quite different from Alexius and Felix, which is why I thought that perhaps he was being deliberately different from the norm. I wouldn't mind if the fashion generally was along his lines. I like something like this. I know a lot of people seem to like that concept art but I don't think it is different enough from what we have had before. However, the Iron Ring design is totally how I might have imagined a Tevinter Magister or just Altus generally. Yes, there is black but also vibrant red with gold trim The last image from Robe is also amazing, although without the fur because whilst ermine would likely be rare and expensive up north, it would be somewhat impractical in such a warm, humid climate. I also think those hoods are too close to what the Crows wear. Unlike the Orlesians, I imagine the Altus would not be averse to showing their faces; they want people to know who they should fear. This outfit is probably suitable for an adventurer in Tevinter but without that wide belt unless it is actually meant to be protective.
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Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Baldur's Gate, Neverwinter Nights
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Post by gervaise21 on Aug 12, 2021 20:10:09 GMT
Tevinter is like the Byzantine Empire, Which was based in Constantinople and thus, as with modern day Turkey, a bridge between Europe and the Near East. As evidenced by the sort of dress you see in this contemporary mosaic. Their culture generally also looked as much eastwards as west and really reflected the variety of influences on it from around the empire. Qun mirror the Ottoman Empire. Has any Dev actually said as much of is this just a fan theory? The only reason I can see for equating the Qun with the Muslim Ottoman Empire is that their religion is based on a book and they are in conflict with the Andrastrian nations. However, everything else about the Qun philosophy and culture is more a reflection of Communist empires in the modern era, which incidentally also had their foundation in a book and promote atheism, just as the Qun do.
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Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Baldur's Gate, Neverwinter Nights
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Post by gervaise21 on Aug 12, 2021 20:20:28 GMT
This is more as i would see antiva clothes for the merchant princes. Even without labeling Antiva having an association with Venetian Italy, I would see their fashion as being more south European Mediterranean rather than Near Eastern because they have been more influenced in recent years by the Freemarches rather than Tevinter. However, just for good measure, I include some Byzantine fashion for your consideration. Same area as the Ottoman Empire, just an earlier era.
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Buckeldemon
Now stealin' more kidz.
1,200
July 2019
buckeldemon
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Mass Effect Andromeda
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Post by Buckeldemon on Aug 12, 2021 21:36:52 GMT
Qun mirror the Ottoman Empire. Has any Dev actually said as much of is this just a fan theory? The only reason I can see for equating the Qun with the Muslim Ottoman Empire is that their religion is based on a book and they are in conflict with the Andrastrian nations. However, everything else about the Qun philosophy and culture is more a reflection of Communist empires in the modern era, which incidentally also had their foundation in a book and promote atheism, just as the Qun do. I guess it comes from that Gaider comment about "militant islamic borg". I see nothing specifically "islamic" about the Qun though; "Qun" looking vaguely like "Quran" doesn't count. :lol:Militarily expansionist and forcefully assilmilationist? That's pretty much par course for most religions with a claim to be the only valid worldview, usually shortly after their founding, with all the frenzied new believers wanting to enlighten some infidels. Christianity took a bit longer, as it had to take root among the ruling classes of Rome first. I guess the difference between Qun and certain communists is that... the Qun might not be theistic, but still highly religious. I guess some would call the personal cults around some party leaders to be some kind of theist knockoff, though facists also love that. And that isn't even covering the Kims, being pretty much a dynasty seen as living gods or something.
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Post by Hanako Ikezawa on Aug 12, 2021 22:48:01 GMT
Tevinter is like the Byzantine Empire, Which was based in Constantinople and thus, as with modern day Turkey, a bridge between Europe and the Near East. As evidenced by the sort of dress you see in this contemporary mosaic. Their culture generally also looked as much eastwards as west and really reflected the variety of influences on it from around the empire. Qun mirror the Ottoman Empire. Has any Dev actually said as much of is this just a fan theory? The only reason I can see for equating the Qun with the Muslim Ottoman Empire is that their religion is based on a book and they are in conflict with the Andrastrian nations. However, everything else about the Qun philosophy and culture is more a reflection of Communist empires in the modern era, which incidentally also had their foundation in a book and promote atheism, just as the Qun do. I was more thinking of other hints. Been at war with Tevinter/Byzantines for centuries, rest of Thedas/Europe helping resist them, the Rivain/Spain occupation, more advanced technologically and scientifically, etc.
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Post by fairdragon on Aug 13, 2021 6:13:51 GMT
And you are wrong only the southeast is europe. No, all of Thedas is loosely inspired by Europe, with the basic premise of Europe being flipped over so countries in the north like England are now in the south like Ferelden. The devs have said that, even giving us examples. Tevinter is like the Byzantine Empire, Antiva is Venician Italy, Anderfels has a lot of German inspiration, Rivain mirrors Moor-occupied Spain, and Par Vollen and the Qun mirror the Ottoman Empire. fair enough. So I see things that the devs have not really planned. Interesting.
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Post by fairdragon on Aug 13, 2021 6:32:49 GMT
This is more as i would see antiva clothes for the merchant princes. Even without labeling Antiva having an association with Venetian Italy, I would see their fashion as being more south European Mediterranean rather than Near Eastern because they have been more influenced in recent years by the Freemarches rather than Tevinter. However, just for good measure, I include some Byzantine fashion for your consideration. Same area as the Ottoman Empire, just an earlier era. I know that the devs said that, but from my point of view: is Orlais = Venice Italy and antiva is more arabia at the time of the crusades 13th century. Crow = assassin and the merchant princes = the silk road trade .
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Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age Inquisition, Baldur's Gate
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Post by fairdragon on Aug 13, 2021 6:41:13 GMT
Has any Dev actually said as much of is this just a fan theory? The only reason I can see for equating the Qun with the Muslim Ottoman Empire is that their religion is based on a book and they are in conflict with the Andrastrian nations. However, everything else about the Qun philosophy and culture is more a reflection of Communist empires in the modern era, which incidentally also had their foundation in a book and promote atheism, just as the Qun do. I guess it comes from that Gaider comment about "militant islamic borg". I see nothing specifically "islamic" about the Qun though; "Qun" looking vaguely like "Quran" doesn't count. :lol:Militarily expansionist and forcefully assilmilationist? That's pretty much par course for most religions with a claim to be the only valid worldview, usually shortly after their founding, with all the frenzied new believers wanting to enlighten some infidels. Christianity took a bit longer, as it had to take root among the ruling classes of Rome first. I guess the difference between Qun and certain communists is that... the Qun might not be theistic, but still highly religious. I guess some would call the personal cults around some party leaders to be some kind of theist knockoff, though facists also love that. And that isn't even covering the Kims, being pretty much a dynasty seen as living gods or something. I see the qun more like the crusader. That would fit if you see antiva as Arabia.
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Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age Inquisition, Baldur's Gate
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Post by fairdragon on Aug 13, 2021 7:10:35 GMT
Anderfels has a lot of German inspiration Are you sure? I don't see there any connection. The only connection with Germany i see in Free Marches.
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Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Baldur's Gate, Neverwinter Nights
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Post by gervaise21 on Aug 13, 2021 7:25:26 GMT
I guess the difference between Qun and certain communists is that... the Qun might not be theistic, but still highly religious. I guess some would call the personal cults around some party leaders to be some kind of theist knockoff, though facists also love that. Actually all those military dictatorships had their origins in socialism. Much of Hitler's rhetoric and ideas reflected socialist thinking and in fact he called his organisation the "National Socialist Party". As with Russian and Chinese communism, the state becomes "god" and if you did not conform to their way of thinking you are either eliminated or banished to the gulag/concentration camp. Whilst the Russians denounced Stalin after his death, they continued to venerate Lenin. When I visited Moscow back in the 1980s the queue of people to visit Lenin's tomb suggested more than mere curiosity but a form of religious veneration. There were multiple statues to him across the Soviet Union, which were some of the first things to be pulled down when communism failed. Military expansionism and forceful assimilation were all features of these socialist states too, which is why there was so much conflict in the 20th century where locals were essentially backed by the opposing superpowers USA vs Russian or China (who also were against one another). China is still run along previous lines politically but has embraced capitalism, largely because of regaining possession of Hong Kong, as a different way of dominating the world, by economic rather than military conquest. Anyway, David Gaider's comments about the Qun make no sense to me because, as you say, whilst Islam is known for military expansionism, it only focuses on religion, not how a country should be run economically provided it does not conflict with Islam and promotes the traditional family unit. The reason I equate the Qun with Communist states of the 20th century is that the State controls every aspect of life, how the economy is set up, who does what job in the community, including have a breeding program, with the children raised by the state, never knowing their birth parents. Although our real world states never went that far, the Nazi ideas on racial purity and youth movement were moving that way and of course there was the Chinese control on the number of children you were permitted to have. The Borg part presumably relates to the hive mind mentality, although I would suggest reading 1984 and Animal Farm as a better comparison with how the Qun operate.
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Post by Hanako Ikezawa on Aug 13, 2021 7:37:56 GMT
When I said the Qun, I meant Qunandar the nation not Qun the religion. I see the qun more like the crusader. That would fit if you see antiva as Arabia. That’s one of the parallels I referenced before. Centuries ago Thedas/Europe launch Exalted Marches/Crusades to aid Tevinter/Byzantine. Later, they went back to focusing on their own problems while the one was left to deal with the other. Antiva is not Arabia. Anderfels has a lot of German inspiration Are you sure? I don't see there any connection. The only connection with Germany i see in Free Marches. German names for example. From the wiki: The name Anderfels is of German origin, roughly meaning other rock (anders = other/different; Fels = rock). Similarly, other Ander names such as Weisshaupt and Kassel are actual German surnames and city names, respectively
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Post by Hanako Ikezawa on Aug 13, 2021 7:48:09 GMT
I would like them to explore the other continents and the cultures on them. Especially since they’re the origins of the Qunari and Humanity.
It would allow them to explore other cultures and races as well. For example I know Gaider said that’d be the only way Asians would be in Dragon Age (this was before Dorian).
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Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Baldur's Gate, Neverwinter Nights
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Post by gervaise21 on Aug 13, 2021 8:27:12 GMT
I would like them to explore the other continents and the cultures on them. Especially since they’re the origins of the Qunari and Humanity. This is something that I really want to explore. As you say, to do this would presumably mean going beyond Thedas because even if we were to delve into the archives of Tevinter or Par Vollen that would only contain their version of history. For example, the Qun claim their ancestors were brutal and savage, needing the strictures of the Qun to control them. They then point to the savagery of the Tal Vashoth to reinforce this view, ignoring the fact that this might be due to the kick back against the life they have just escaped from rather than an innate aspect of their race, plus the difficulty the Tal Vashoth having in living in a world that is prejudiced against them because their race is equated with the Qun. Where did the Kossith originate? Are there still any of the original race left in the world? Why did the Qun feel the need to migrate to Thedas? As for humanity, their existence is even more mysterious. According to the Dalish, the elves first became aware of them when they arrived on Par Vollen from across the sea. What we know about the Neromenians as a sea faring culture would seem to confirm this. However, what about the other humans across Thedas? Did they all start with the Neromenians? Where did the Neromenians come from? Why did they leave? Are there still other humans civilisations somewhere across the sea? There is plenty of scope there for a game of exploration; may be even more than one. Antiva would also be a good jumping off point for such a game because of their sea faring history, including previous abortive attempts to answer some of the questions above by embarking on exploration of the ocean to the east.
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Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age Inquisition, Baldur's Gate
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Post by fairdragon on Aug 13, 2021 8:39:56 GMT
Tevinter is like the Byzantine Empire, Which was based in Constantinople and thus, as with modern day Turkey, a bridge between Europe and the Near East. As evidenced by the sort of dress you see in this contemporary mosaic. Their culture generally also looked as much eastwards as west and really reflected the variety of influences on it from around the empire. Thank you, too both of you. I didn't know where to put tevinter exactly, but that fits.
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Post by fairdragon on Aug 13, 2021 8:42:46 GMT
Are you sure? I don't see there any connection. The only connection with Germany i see in Free Marches. German names for example. From the wiki: The name Anderfels is of German origin, roughly meaning other rock (anders = other/different; Fels = rock). Similarly, other Ander names such as Weisshaupt and Kassel are actual German surnames and city names, respectively I know. But i look for culture not for language.
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Post by fairdragon on Aug 13, 2021 8:54:20 GMT
let's agree to disagree. Antiva family.
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Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Baldur's Gate, Neverwinter Nights
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Post by gervaise21 on Aug 13, 2021 10:00:12 GMT
This is not necessarily a true reflection of what the rural population of Antiva look like. Josephine comes from a merchant family and their ancestry may well have been influenced by marriage to members of other ethnic groups. Just look at Queen Asha Campana who is credited with advancing the interests of Antiva more than anyone else. By birth she was Rivaini, a member of a wealthy merchant family, and her marriage to the Crown Prince of Antiva was a political match arranged by the matriarchy of Rivain. Queen Asha probably looked a lot like Josephine and it may be imagined that such marriages between the merchant families of the two nations were commonplace, thus explaining why the ruling class may look slightly more Oriental than you would expect for a nation based on Venetian Italy. Nevertheless, this mosaic from an Etruscan ruin, who were the rulers of Italy before the rise of the Romans, would suggest the native population were olive/darker skinned as well, unlike the much fairer skinned Europeans to the north.
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Post by fairdragon on Aug 13, 2021 10:43:37 GMT
That’s one of the parallels I referenced before. Centuries ago Thedas/Europe launch Exalted Marches/Crusades to aid Tevinter/Byzantine. I am Sorry If I annoy you with this, but I just can't help it. Qun/latin church + Arishok/Pope launch Qunari invasion/Crusades to aid Tevinter/Byzantine, antiva and Rivian. DA4 = 13th Century then Qunandar/Holy Roman Empire. I don't know what Quandar is like, but what i know so far: The fact that the individual Qunari organizations have different opinons to get the goal fits perfectly with the crusades in the 13th century.
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13,051
August 2016
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Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Baldur's Gate, Neverwinter Nights
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Post by gervaise21 on Aug 13, 2021 12:29:07 GMT
That’s one of the parallels I referenced before. Centuries ago Thedas/Europe launch Exalted Marches/Crusades to aid Tevinter/Byzantine. Later, they went back to focusing on their own problems while the one was left to deal with the other. This parallel doesn't work really. In our world, the Muslims conquered Jerusalem and the eastern Mediterranean, which was originally part of the Byzantine Empire and started to progress northwards along the coast towards Constantinople. At this point the Emperor, feeling under threat, called on the Pope and western nations for assistance. When they turned up with rather more forces than he was comfortable with, he suggested they continue over the Bophorus to confront the hostile army head on in what is now eastern Turkey/Syria and the crusades went from there. The following Crusades largely by-passed Byzantium entirely and sailed directly to the eastern Mediterranean, so far from returning to their own problems, those were their problems. Finally, a Crusade that was intended to retake Egypt instead re-routed to sack Constantinople, leaving it badly weakened so it was subsequently easily conquered by the Muslim forces from the east. Now in Thedas, in 6:32 Steel the Qun simultaneously launched an offensive on both Seheron (which was Tevinter territory) and Rivain, which was considered an independent nation loosely aligned with the south because the monarchs in Diarsmund were Andrastrian. From 6:42 the Qun spread westwards into Tevinter proper and southwards into Antiva, after which they continued on into the northern Freemarches. All this was allowed to happen without any intervention from the southern Chantry. Tevinter was conducting the resistance in the eastern Imperium without any outside assistance, whilst the southern Chantry aligned nations were largely on their own as well but would seem to be holding the line. Finally, in 7:25 Storm, over 90 years after that initial assault on the mainland, the southern Chantry finally decided to call an Exalted March to free Antiva and Rivain. Simultaneously, the Imperial Chantry launched an Exalted March to retake Seheron. So, whilst fighting on two fronts probably halted the Qun advance, the fact is that the southern Chantry never called the Exalted Marches against the Qun (3 in total) to aid Tevinter. All the presence of the Qunari did was stop any further Exalted Marches against Tevinter by the south. A further indication that there was little co-operation between the southern and Imperial Chantry was that in 7:84 when a truce was called and the southern nations met with the Qun to negotiate a peace treaty, Tevinter declined to attend. Then the southern nations effectively stabbed Tevinter in the back because they ceded the islands of the Boeric Ocean to the Qun, even though they were not theirs to give, and whilst the Qun withdrew from Seheron in 7:84 either as a prelude or result of the Llomerryn Accord, clearly they did not consider that Tevinter, either the island or mainland were off limits because, of course, Tevinter was not a signatory. Hence they relaunched an offensive against Seheron in 8:55, successfully retaking the island and have been at war with Tevinter ever since, both on the island and also periodically on the mainland. I struggle to see how the Exalted Marches against the Qun in any way reflect the Crusades in our world with respect to the relationship between the western Catholic church and the eastern Orthodox Byzantine empire. Yes, they reflected a similar schism in the faith (though never serious enough to warrant a crusade against them as happened in Thedas) but the Chantry never ordered an Exalted March directly to aid Tevinter.
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1,639
Buckeldemon
Now stealin' more kidz.
1,200
July 2019
buckeldemon
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Mass Effect Andromeda
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Post by Buckeldemon on Aug 13, 2021 15:37:42 GMT
I guess the difference between Qun and certain communists is that... the Qun might not be theistic, but still highly religious. I guess some would call the personal cults around some party leaders to be some kind of theist knockoff, though facists also love that. Actually all those military dictatorships had their origins in socialism. Much of Hitler's rhetoric and ideas reflected socialist thinking and in fact he called his organisation the "National Socialist Party". As with Russian and Chinese communism, the state becomes "god" and if you did not conform to their way of thinking you are either eliminated or banished to the gulag/concentration camp. Whilst the Russians denounced Stalin after his death, they continued to venerate Lenin. When I visited Moscow back in the 1980s the queue of people to visit Lenin's tomb suggested more than mere curiosity but a form of religious veneration. There were multiple statues to him across the Soviet Union, which were some of the first things to be pulled down when communism failed. Military expansionism and forceful assimilation were all features of these socialist states too, which is why there was so much conflict in the 20th century where locals were essentially backed by the opposing superpowers USA vs Russian or China (who also were against one another). China is still run along previous lines politically but has embraced capitalism, largely because of regaining possession of Hong Kong, as a different way of dominating the world, by economic rather than military conquest. Anyway, David Gaider's comments about the Qun make no sense to me because, as you say, whilst Islam is known for military expansionism, it only focuses on religion, not how a country should be run economically provided it does not conflict with Islam and promotes the traditional family unit. The reason I equate the Qun with Communist states of the 20th century is that the State controls every aspect of life, how the economy is set up, who does what job in the community, including have a breeding program, with the children raised by the state, never knowing their birth parents. Although our real world states never went that far, the Nazi ideas on racial purity and youth movement were moving that way and of course there was the Chinese control on the number of children you were permitted to have. The Borg part presumably relates to the hive mind mentality, although I would suggest reading 1984 and Animal Farm as a better comparison with how the Qun operate. Its official name "Nationalsozialistische deutsche Arbeiterpartei" (National socialist german worker party) might suggest "even more communism". But honestly, that is just a smokescreen of a name, even though it gets variously used as an attempt to prove that the Nazis were socialists/communists or "left-wing" by what is usually anglo-american right-wing thinkers and certain western supremacists, and sometimes even german (neo-)Nazis attempt to do such a thing, as hilarous as it is. Yeah, for some reason, while turning around on Stalin, the Stalin-mandated Lenin worship somehow stuck around. Or was made to stick around. I could see it as a sort of replacement for the old Church-mandated habits, even though it was not acknowledged as such. Heck, it remembers me of how some Nazis hyped up the Führer's supposed protection by "providence" (Vorsehung) after he barely escaped Georg Elser's bomb as well as another attempt. They couldn't invoke God or something because german facists usually did not get along with the Churches (unlike, say, their spanish and italian counterparts). As far as I remember reading, eugenics was quite a popular topic in academic circles in the late 19th/early 20th century, but when it was put in practice, it was apparently more aimed at exterminating undesireable racial or cultural groups. Besides most things Nazi, we have Blood Quantum (racial) and Residential Schools and equiavalent institutions (cultural) in the Americas as far as "the west" is concerned. For the PRC, I guess an equivalent to that would be forced sterilisation of minorities. While the one-child-policy is/was more of a reaction to population growth that was deemed as unsustainable. The Qun with its attempts to breed "useful" people is kinda somewhere in between I guess. Who determines if someone is "useful"? (I wonder... I guess the Qun doesn't allow Saarebas to procreate. At least I hope so, in a sense. Using them as attack dogs despite all the "irredeemable if out of oversight for 0.3 seconds" talk is sufficiently hypocritical already.)
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Nov 14, 2024 14:36:10 GMT
2,952
Gwydden
1,332
November 2016
gwydden
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Baldur's Gate, Neverwinter Nights, Jade Empire
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Post by Gwydden on Aug 13, 2021 16:19:49 GMT
If the Nazis were communists because of their party's name, then North Korea, a.k.a. the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, is obviously a democracy. Fascists hated communists and in fact used fearmongering about the supposed communist threat to come to power, not just in Germany but also in Italy, Japan, Spain, Chile... Everywhere, really. Which is why, despite having been raised in an allegedly communist country, I have no patience for Red Scare hysterics. One could just as easily draw parallels between the Qun and fascism, Plato's Republic, or Confucianism. At times it seems to reflect American stereotypes about communist regimes more than the real thing, e.g. the idea that commies wished to abolish the family, which I've never heard of any state of whatever political persuasion attempting to implement or even expressing as an ideal, but a striking feature of the Qun. I think it's more appropriate to think of the Qun as an amalgalm of collectivist ideologies or even a hyperbolic expression of collectivism, which works for a fantasy culture. There's certainly no particular similarities to Islam except perhaps in a geopolitical sense: the rest of Thedas' relationship with and views of the Qun are roughly analogous to the late medieval and early modern European attitudes toward the Ottomans. I would not read too much into the historical basis for Thedas, however, since it is slight at best. DA owes far more to the Standard Fantasy Setting than to history.
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Post by Hanako Ikezawa on Aug 13, 2021 16:45:26 GMT
let's agree to disagree. Antiva family. No, I won’t agree to disagree. You’re wrong. Josephine has an Italian accent played by a VA who has Italian ancestry and both her, her writer, and the other devs explicitly state Antiva is based off Venician Italy. There are a lot of PoC in Italy. So much so back in the day they were discriminated against for not being white.
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