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blah the Prussian

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Posts posted by blah the Prussian

  1. Avatar becomes king of Plegia, but his people hate him for destroying Grima, and rebel. Meanwhile, Lonqu leaves his family to hunt down the bandits that killed Keri. Maribelle heads for the Ace Attorney universe through the Outrealm Gate, and is the judge for when Edgeworth finally gets his own courtroom based spinoff. That is all.

  2. My theory is that the Dark World is actually the place where u fight Demise in SS. Ghirahim created it after the sword was abandoned by Link. The trident from lttp is Ghirahim. Ghirahim was using Ganon to bring Princess Zelda to him, where he would revive Demise. Ghirahim should be the chief antagonist of lbtw.

  3. Standing his ground only serves to get his sister and his people killed. The Chon'sin had something of a chance- yes, but all they could do at best was delay the inevitable- and by that, that means "die slowly, but die none the less". Their stand may last a few years but it wouldn't have prevented Walhart's victory in Valm. Judging by the slight differences, Yen'fay was very on the edge with either decision-- and frankly, it's quite obvious that in the original timeline, he made the wrong one (standing his ground against Walhart). This could only end in a brutal slaughter in an extended war against a foe that they could delay, but not stop.

    It hardly matters what the main factor was, when you're faced with the choice between pride and certain death, the wisest course is to surrender. Living to fight another day is not cowardice.

    Objection! In the game, it was never stated that Exellus was threatening his people, only his sister. Had Yenfey betrayed Walhart, only his sister would have died. I am not talking about surrendering to the Valmese. I am talking about serving as a general in Walharts army.

  4. Walhart isn't the sort of person that would order that. That much he declares at the start of Ch19.

    Yes, but Exellus was actually working for Aversa. Seeing as Chrom is one of the only people who can beat Grima, Aversa would have ordered that to happen to Chrom.

  5. After seeing how Excellus can just warp in and out, as it happened in both Chapters 17 and 18, I think Yen'Fay probably thought it didn't mattered that Say'Ri was with Chrom, Excellus could just easily warp nearby and BAM, dead sister.

    OBJECTION! If Exellus could kill Sayri like that, it stands to reason that he could kill Chrom like that too. The fact that Walhart didnt have him do that is proof that Exellus couldnt do this. Yenfey should have realized this. So either you have a major plothole or an idiotic Camus. take your pick.

  6. Standing his ground only serves to get his sister and his people killed. The Chon'sin had something of a chance- yes, but all they could do at best was delay the inevitable- and by that, that means "die slowly, but die none the less". Their stand may last a few years but it wouldn't have prevented Walhart's victory in Valm. Judging by the slight differences, Yen'fay was very on the edge with either decision-- and frankly, it's quite obvious that in the original timeline, he made the wrong one (standing his ground against Walhart). This could only end in a brutal slaughter in an extended war against a foe that they could delay, but not stop.

    It hardly matters what the main factor was, when you're faced with the choice between pride and certain death, the wisest course is to surrender. Living to fight another day is not cowardice.

    Except he joined with Walhart, making Chroms job harder, and his people were still technically conquered, just peacefully.

  7. It is implied that Yenfey was a large reason that Walhart was doing so well. If he hadnt sided with Walhart, Walhart wouldve been left with clods like Cervantes leading his army. Also, yenfey was the only thing keeping the southern dynasts from rebelling. Between that and his tactical prowess, it would seem that the chonsin guys had at least a chance.( just cut off cervantes mustache)

  8. Repeat blah original ideas blah blah but anyway

    We're always fighting for royalty and shit, and just going with the "noble kings/queens/princes/princesses" fantasy schticks, almost never acknowledging that most of the (royal) monarchs with power through history, even those not considered "evil," could be major shitbags, ruling their subjects through intimidation and oppression and whatnot.

    Give me a game in a French Revolution civil war kinda situation, a country falling apart over protests against a royal line with a (recent) history of corruption and repression, and an uprising fueled by rage against the machine and opportunism. And opposition leaders that dream of freedom and representative government, but whose shit is woefully far from being together, and whose own members are in danger of splintering into factions and gangsters. Give me a choice of my protagonist's background, like military family/distant royalty/scholar/yokel, and let me choose whether to try to reinstate the monarchy and the sense of order they bring, to fight for a burgeoning republic, or to go Full Napoleon, and have some commentary on what this person's origins and actions say about them and what legacy they leave for their country.

    Maybe have some nebulous forces of darkness infest the hearts and minds of the people, pulling out one another's thirsts to grotesque lengths as blood begets blood, thus threatening to prolong the conflict long enough to send a once-proud nation spiraling into a Dark Age, or something.

    Just, whatever, take your long-running, multi-million dollar series and do something with it, damn it

    (He yelled, as he shook his fist at a cloud)

    I can see an fe game based on French Revolution. The Michalis could be all Robespierre-ey, and he could be used by the Gharnef to destroy some noble of key importance to the lords cause. All I ask is that IS does not try to make u on the side of the revolutionaries.

  9. i actually have this whole fantasy that the next fe will be about Gangrel 15 years ago, trying to win back Plegia. the Jagen is Mustafa, and Chrom's dad is trying to perform the awakening to use its power to take over the world. Walhart and Yen fey appear as playable characters, with Walhart being corrupted by never wanting war to happen again. Marribelle's dad is the first Camus to turn good, when his king threatens Marribelle. Validar is also present as the prologue bandit attaking Aversas village. so yeah, Gangrels the lord.

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