Your forced to have them accessible, but you are not forced to actually use them, or engage in their character specific plot stuff. I never play with all of the characters they provide me, partly because it takes multiple play throughs (which can be tedious if I didn't find the game that engaging). I might not like the specific characters' personalities, and don't care to engage/support them. Or I just simply don't like their abilities when it comes to the combat. So they are forever a benchwarmer in my games. Or it could be that I just absolutely LOVE some characters (like the Dwarf in DA 2), and pretty much always have him in my party, because his dialogue is just so damn funny. But I have the choice of which ones to build my party from, which I'm fine with. This lets the player decide what type of group they want. I usually just disregard the extra characters as not being part of the events, since I'm not including them.endtherapture said:I just find the Dragon Age option too easy. Sure you can miss out on Sten and Leliana in Origins but in 2 all of the characters are basically forced to join your cause. It just takes away an aspect of choice and consequence in RPGs for me and even puts an arbitrary restriction on gameplay.
Because you're travelling as a small group and not as an army? And only have enough provisions for those 3/4 people? And if you had more it would be slow going? I mean, in DA and DA 2, you're barely making ends meet for the most part. Your characters are fleeing the Darkspawn plague, and end up as refugees in a strange lang, having to barely survive as they progress. So, yeah being broke and unable to fund/support a large force makes sense there too.endtherapture said:The 6 man party of Baldur's Gate makes sense because you're travelling as a small group and not as an army, only have enough provision for those 6 people and if you had more it'd be slow going, so there's a reason for the game mechanic. Meanwhile in Mass Effect/Dragon Age why can't I take all of my 12 party members travelling with me into battle? Why can I only have 4 or 3?
In Mass Effect...*thinks*...eh, there's less of a reason, I'll admit. It is a military ship, and the crew are military personnel for the most part. I guess you could say that they have tasks on the ship that have to be manned, and if you took all of them at once, it would put the Normandy in a staff critical situation? *shrugs* I'm stretching there a bit, but that's what I got.