Merrill was protected by a thick layer of Plot Armour; I don't think that there is a possible way to make her succumb to blood-magic, just like Ander won't succumb/get rid of Justice/Vengeance. How the rest of the mages acted was exactly how I thought they would given all the exposition about demons: one small crack in your mental armour, and the demons will smash it open and take control (and turning to blood magic in fear and anger was exactly that). Even Orsino, the best among them, wasn't able to stop it, and that's what makes mages so dangerous.Bara_no_Hime said:Yeah, that pissed me off. I was a mage. I had a blood mage in my party. I'd sided with Mages on everything for the entire game. I'd protected them, and I was still protecting them by holding off the Templars.Fat_Hippo said:Ah man, I hated the ending of DA2 so much for that reason. I pretty much thought the templars were a bunch of pricks throughout, but that ending totally proves them right! Every mage is just a tantrum away from turning to blood magic.
AND then all the people I was protecting turn into fricken monsters and attack me. Seriously guys? Not a single one of you can cast a single blood magic spell without becoming demon-infested? If you were gonna try, could you not have, I dunno, TALKED to the blood mage IN MY PARTY for a FAQ on how to do it properly? I just spent all day saving your worthless butts, so you repay my efforts by committing suicide on my staff?
**sigh**
For the record - DA2's ending pissed me off WAY more than ME3's ending. I'd rather have colored lights that make some small difference rather than having to personally murder the allies I'd just saved so that the game can end the same way no matter what.
I don't think they should have railroaded us into having to fight both the Mages and the Templars, but it really seems like the only way to set up the sequel properly. If they did things more realistically (i.e. allow you and your party to prevent Orsino and his Circle from using blood magic, either with words or a judicious use of force), they would have told a kind of boring tale of "Oppression Bad, Free Will Good" rather than the nuanced "Oppression Bad, But Sometimes Necessary To Stop Gribbly Things Beyond Mortal Ken From Eating Your Grandmother."