I second this. The high level of moral ambiguity is one of the best things about the Witcher. The factions don't fall into "good" or "evil" cleanly at all.Merkavar said:play the witcher. te choices are rarely good or evil and you dont get the consequences till like 30 mins later.
maybe cause in dragon age you are fighting a big BAD horde of monster that are evil. where is the morally ambiguous characters/factions in that game. you are the good guys they are the bad guys.Nom NomZ said:Mass effect 1/2
Dragon age. Surprised no one's said it yet.
Absolutely not. Caesar's legion are obviously bad, and NCR are obviously good. Mr. House can't really be considered morally ambiguous because his intentions or goals are never really laid out in full view in front of you, you only get little hints.DuctTapeJedi said:New Vegas sort of gets in to what you're talking about.
ultrachicken said:Absolutely not. Caesar's legion are obviously bad, and NCR are obviously good. Mr. House can't really be considered morally ambiguous because his intentions or goals are never really laid out in full view in front of you, you only get little hints.DuctTapeJedi said:New Vegas sort of gets in to what you're talking about.
Still love the game.
The factions you were ordered to go check out weren't really neutral. The Khans were a bunch of raiders, plain and simple, and you weren't explicitly ordered to kill them anyways. The boomers you were supposed to befriend.DuctTapeJedi said:ultrachicken said:Absolutely not. Caesar's legion are obviously bad, and NCR are obviously good. Mr. House can't really be considered morally ambiguous because his intentions or goals are never really laid out in full view in front of you, you only get little hints.DuctTapeJedi said:New Vegas sort of gets in to what you're talking about.
Still love the game.Mostly I was just thinking about how they said that all of Caesar's territory was well organized and protected from raiders.
Also, the NCR had the whole Bitter Springs kerfuffle, although that was more due to bureaucracy.
But I really just didn't like that one officer towards the end who gave you your quests, the lady who told you to go kill all of the seemingly neutral factions.
Because NEITHER of those are morally ambiguous.Nom NomZ said:Mass effect 1/2
Dragon age. Surprised no one's said it yet.
Meestor Pickle said:Even if you don't like star wars, the KotORs don't overly tie into the canon.LarenzoAOG said:Knights of the Old Republic 2 for the original Xbox, a superb Star Wars RPG, you start an exile Jedi cut off from the force, you then regain your ability to use the force and track down the Jedi Masters that exiled you and have to choose... it occurs to me you may not like Star Wars, but if you do you should check this game out and its predecessor, I believe they both have a fair amount of the moral ambiguity you are looking for.
More so what would, yes benefit yourself OR which would be best for the Mojavekman123 said:mmmm there's no clear wrong or right. It's more...what you think would benefit yourself the best.DuctTapeJedi said:New Vegas sort of gets in to what you're talking about.
ninja'dPseudopod said:Did I play the same Valkyria Chronicles? I felt it did a good job of making you empathize with the Empire leaders and soldiers alike, and it had a good mix of characters on the Gallian side, including some very unlikable people
Really? Huh, the last time I played Modern Warfare 2, I don't remember the villain being particularly anti-American.Brawndo said:2) Another Example: All of the non-WWII games in the Call of Duty series
- The bad guys can be summed up in one phrase: "Grrrr America must die!" There is almost no fleshing out of their rationales, nor some kind of gray area where they were justifiably wronged by the West and are simply overreacting in response