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colorbrandon

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colorbrandon

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Still too expensive. Really should be 5 for chunks, 30 for Rocks.

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colorbrandon

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colorbrandon

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#3  Edited By colorbrandon

@zeik: If you choose Triss, you get a similar ending with Geralt settling in a house in Kovir with her. I forgot which character it is who said this within the last 1/4th of the game, but it was to the extent of "How could you even considering settling down? You were born to walk the path." That line to me is what has me questioning the Yennefer canon/ending. I'm not convinced that a few puns here and there equals a genuine relationship, especially when you make similar jokes about looking for rat shit during the first encounter/quest with Triss.

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colorbrandon

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@zeik: The biggest change lies in the end cards where the narrator describes the outcome of each notable character.

Mind citing a few places where you think the game supports their love? To me, enough characters in the story shine a negative light on their relationship to prove otherwise. It's like the couple you know in real life where their friends are constantly telling them to break-up with each other (http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/DestructiveRomance).

Examples of characters in-game ridiculing Geralt's relationship with Yennefer:

Keira Metz at the tower of mice, "... when Yennefer will stop treating you like a dog."

Eskel's dialogue during the drunken party at Kaer Morhen.

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colorbrandon

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#5  Edited By colorbrandon

@zeik: He actually had 0 feelings for Essi.

"I don't feel anything, he noticed with horror, nothing, not the smallest emotion. That fact that I will embrace her is a deliberate, measured response, not a spontaneous one. I'll hug her, for I feel as though I out to, not because I want to. I feel nothing."

Her advances left him questioning whether those feelings for Yennefer are because of the magic or because of love.

"Because perhaps Yennefer feels what I'm feeling now, feels a profound certainty that I ought to fulfill what is impossible for fulfill"

In the end, the two get intimate only because Dandelion tells them to. I think lovers can earn tenure, but really shouldn't.

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#6  Edited By colorbrandon

I've been replaying the Witcher 3 with a "canonical" Geralt, making choices that I think he would've made, according to the character painted by the fiction. I've only read the first two books, but they give major insight into each character's motivations. Here are 2 ways that I've changed how I navigate the big decisions in the story. Massive spoilers below. As I read more of the books, maybe I will revisit the games once more.

"The Lesser Evil"

Geralt is often called the butcher of Blaviken. He found himself in Blaviken whilst a feud was going on between the local mage, Stregobor, and a renounced princesses Renfri. Stregobor claims that Renfri is a monster and must be killed, claims that were based on superstition around the date and time of her birth. Because of this, she was cast out by her family, raped and beaten by the local peasantry. She sought revenge and had set out to Blaviken where Stregobor was residing. Geralt was offered a sum by the sorcerer to make her disappear and he rejects this. Renfri makes a similar proposition, and again, Geralt chooses to remain a bystander. Turns out, amongst Renfri's group of thugs was someone responsible for the Tridam Ultimatum, an event where a large mass of innocent bystanders were taken hostage over some demands. Geralt kills the bandits and Renfri who were about to take over the market square in exchange for Stregobor, who was holed up in his tower. The Alderman demands that Geralt leave and never return.

This changed the way I handled a lot of situations. I was no longer afraid to take a side. Geralt is a lot more calculating in my game, more so than he's ever been. He's a lot more idealistic and makes a difficult choice at the end of the game. He does not stop Ciri from challenging the white frost. He bids her farewell and with a "good luck," knowing that one, he doesn't have the right to tell her what to do, and that two, her sacrifice will save more worlds than just theirs.

Love, Yennefer, & "The Last Wish"

The complex relationship between Yennefer and Geralt is explained in the first book. The Witcher 3 takes place about 10 years after Geralt and Ciri meet and about 15 years after Geralt and Yennefer meet. Geralt and Yennefer become magically bound to each other after Geralt unbottles a D'jinn while fishing with Dandelion. He uses his last wish to be with Yennefer forever in an attempt to save her from death by the D'jinn's powerful magic. Yennefer was bent on capturing the D'jinn to cure her of her sterility, which all sorceresses suffer from. She bounces between Geralt and other former lovers throughout the books, and at times Geralt is remorseful that his wish had turned into a curse for her: a love she never wanted, but is obligated to live out.

After meeting Yennefer in Skellige (Quest: The Last Wish), Geralt and Yennefer search for another D'jinn in hopes to break the decades long spell that has bound the two of them together. "Now they had a chance to see if, once the spell was no longer in effect, the magic between them would still persist..." I used Geralt's meeting with Essi Daven, a bard for whom Geralt had to reject her genuine romantic advances, as the motivation to break the curse and end the romance. The Geralt in my story pushes Yennefer aside and tells her that he no longer feels for her the same way. To him its not a white lie, but a grey one. I don't know how the books tackle this scene, but for me it was the canonical one. The years of guilt masked perhaps a once true and naive love. Geralt had spent years being selfish and I thought that this choice was the "lesser of two evils." It makes sense to me because no matter what drove apart him and Yennefer, he would always come back to her. The characters in the story reprimand him for putting up with her callous treatment, and he finally he'd had enough.

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colorbrandon

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I've spent minutes deliberating dialogue options. I haven't seen all the ending permutations (and I don't think I want to), but it seems like the end state of the world is vastly affected by choices in game.

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colorbrandon

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There are times when you beat a boss and the cutscene gives you a choice between sticking around and instancing to another area. If you choose to stay, you can often loot the boss room for stuff. Example: When you go to Bald Mountain and defeat Imlerith, you can loot a Magic Acorn from his body. When consumed, gives you +2 ability points.

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colorbrandon

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OH my god. I just got the the drinking scene with the other witchers. This is gold.

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colorbrandon

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I've replayed the Triss scenes from the masquerade party multiple times. They are so great. The game engine's ability to deliver on micro expressions is phenomenal.