box wrote:Conflicts of interest are nonexistent in TESO. If you're in a competing group, and you want to join the other side, it should be difficult, or at least a different experience than walking in 'clean slate.' You could be made man of all the New Reno families, but only one at a time. That makes sense.
Sure does. It was a brilliant piece of
Last Man Standing antics. You could do a bit of pitting them against each other, or just grab as much as possible from each of the families to make a buck. And it feels like you could get in some heavy shit playing that game too far, doesn't it? They
are gangsters afterall.
box wrote:Toxic, how about renouncing your affiliations? Hell, an ex-slaver might endear himself to the Rangers maybe more than some guy with no past at all could. An ex-slaver might have to take a test, like run an infiltration mission a la Vortis in NCR, but it could be done. Maybe you could rise up in two groups simultaneously, but you'd have to be careful. And some factions, unscurpulous types like Hubologists, might just string you along, in hopes of subverting the other group which you lead.
What, you're asking me? I mean, the slavers are quite special -- they're likely the result of former kkk members merging their love fluids with some Holnists from another dimension -- and as such they're generally considered pretty gosh darn rotten ( aldoh I'd say being a citizen of Vault City would be a much worse reputation twister ). Renouncing your slaver status should be an option, but as such it'd be better if you had to renounce it every time someone goes "Gurgh slaver.", and not like slipping a note to the proper authorities about your current clan status, setting the record straight once and for all. And just because you no longer have anything to do with the slavers guild, shouldn't mean everyone's ok with it -- you're still hated, right, only some will be more accepting of it. So better would be just to buy a hat to cover the tatoo and never really mention what you've been up to.
Rising up in two groups simultaniously, totally a good idea. Not every group is unfriendly to eachother, and not every group has the resources to find out what you're up to once you leave their territory -- but as you said, danger follows and in the end you'll have to choose between them ( if they're rival groups ) or, ofcourse, choose yourself.
box wrote:I love being the Arena champion in TESO and not even the goddamned policy mule fucking wig selling elf fucker at the front gate recongizes me as such. Huh? Who the fuck have you been taking bets on for the last month you fucking midget? Far cry from walking into a New Reno bar and getting free drinks as 'champ.' And that's only 10% of it.
Unrewarding gameworld, sure. Hell, even the quests were completely pointless, as far as I noticed. Just a bit of money//a magical penis ring and two lines of praise, and then you and everyone else forgets about it forever.
box wrote:Conflicts of interest mean even a modicum of linearity, and definite causality. Sometimes I think that Oblvion is actually more 'non-linear' than FallOut. Of course, 'linearity' is subjective, and there is no causality whatsoever in ES games, so just what difference does teh freedum make when you have teh freedum to tumble rats off a cliff?
There's limitation and then there's retarded limitation, like invisible walls and unbreakable doors and absence of unhappy thoughts and immortal npc's and lack of moral choice etc etc. That's pretty gosh darn linear -- the game is basicly telling me what not to do. It's in no way a question of linearity when you're choosing a at the cost of b or vice versa, it's a question of realism. It's like wanting to wield and use every gun in the game at the same time, because they have different up and downsides. As far as I know, no fan has ever asked a company for that yet, because, while it is the same gosh darn thing as joining 4 competing factions without any trouble at all, it's so far considered too unrealistic ( and dumb ) to implent. Perhaps in a few years, I don't know.
box wrote:The other month...
We have a local guy around as well -- Antimeasure. He's like 54 or something, and yet an avid Operation : Flashpoint fan.