|
Post by lieden on May 6, 2012 17:39:27 GMT 1
I'm pretty sure they didn't put much thought into it! I have the suspicion that Garrus sleeps curled up next to the Mako in ME1, and behind a crate in the Main Battery in ME2.
|
|
|
Post by Hodster on May 6, 2012 18:21:34 GMT 1
I'm pretty sure they didn't put much thought into it! I have the suspicion that Garrus sleeps curled up next to the Mako in ME1, and behind a crate in the Main Battery in ME2. I think you're right! Along with the occasional night that he spends with Shepard.
|
|
|
Post by lieden on May 6, 2012 19:28:01 GMT 1
I'm pretty sure they didn't put much thought into it! I have the suspicion that Garrus sleeps curled up next to the Mako in ME1, and behind a crate in the Main Battery in ME2. I think you're right! Along with the occasional night that he spends with Shepard. And apparently he had enough of this bed in ME2, because in ME3 he lets Shepard sleep on it on her own and he's lounging about with his feet up on her coffee table. :}
|
|
|
Post by Hodster on May 9, 2012 19:51:50 GMT 1
Turians don't need beds!
|
|
|
Post by Mr. Glow on May 13, 2012 5:31:56 GMT 1
In the Destroy ending, why does the Crucible's energy field destroy Reapers and Geth (do we even see the Geth blow up?) but not normal technology like computers and spaceships and guns?
Do AIs have some sort of soul or life energy the damn thing can target?
|
|
|
Post by jklinders on May 13, 2012 11:59:19 GMT 1
In the Destroy ending, why does the Crucible's energy field destroy Reapers and Geth (do we even see the Geth blow up?) but not normal technology like computers and spaceships and guns? Do AIs have some sort of soul or life energy the damn thing can target? I've not seen it for myself, but I heard that if you use EDI enough as a squaddie then she steps out of the Normandy in the end cutscene of the destroy ending. This is seen as either confirmation that Starbrat is lying about destroy in the hopes that you pick the more favorable to him Control or Synch ( I feel that one is really code for the Reapers saying mission accomplished-it is what they have been doing all along afterall) endings,ala some elements of Indoctrination Theory or confirmation that Bioware is incompetent
|
|
|
Post by Tillian Panthesis on May 15, 2012 9:01:52 GMT 1
I really hate doing this:
Let's just say that the citadel's destruction is canon. And the citadel arms are intact. You've noticed that the station is dangerously close to Earth's orbit, So I wondering if the debris will hit Earth's surface. If so, how catatrosphic will it be? Is is bad enough that it humanity might as well move out into a new homeworld and let Earth rot itself, due to the colluion of the debris will be damaging?
|
|
|
Post by Mr. Glow on May 15, 2012 10:50:48 GMT 1
Good catch. I don't think I've heard any one mention that one before.
I don't think anyone left alive on Earth is gonna have a good time when something bigger than that asteroid from Bring Down the Sky hits the planet.
|
|
|
Post by jklinders on May 15, 2012 12:14:00 GMT 1
I'm gonna be a good boy and just write that off as the CG artists not taking enough notes like in the battle scene of ME 1 where the fifth fleet had like 20 dreadnaughts and sovereign was ripping them apart. Both specifically lore breaking.
Even without that, we did not see the debris fall out of orbit and even if it did, it is unlikely to hit a planet killing speed before crashing to the surface.
|
|
|
Post by Tillian Panthesis on May 15, 2012 17:58:02 GMT 1
Hmm... those are good points. Gives me another excuse to have the human faction lose their dominant stance due to the aftermath.
Since the comic I'm writing is a deconstruction, I'll just be a bad girl and write in the consenqunces of the citadel being blown up spatacular.
How about this: While the debris didn't hit the planet in killing speed, the destruction was devestating enough that most of the population moved out and resettled in the surviving human colonies and the Alliance governing seat is moved onto one of new colonies, renaming one of them called, "New Earth".
Realistically, I don't think "old" Earth habitable for a while. Even if it's fixable, they still have to move out due to planet 'matenance' and from the looks of it, fixing the planet might take a while depending on the technology.
|
|
|
Post by Mr. Glow on May 30, 2012 21:09:53 GMT 1
I always hated how nearly every object Shepard owned had N7 printed on it. I know it's supposed to be iconic, but come on!
I was waiting for them to wake from one of those nightmares and take a refreshing can of Tupari out of their N7 lunchbox the whole third game.
|
|
|
Post by Warhammer Gorvar on May 30, 2012 21:29:09 GMT 1
Make a toast with his N7 toaster.
|
|
|
Post by Mister Buch on Jun 1, 2012 1:11:43 GMT 1
You know how Saren had a flat-out hoverboard in the first Mass Effect? Well that suddenly struck me as wi... wei.... strange just now.
How come we never see anyone else on hoverboards for the entire rest of the trilogy? I can think of lots of occasions when Shepard or one of her enemies having a hoverboard would have been extremely useful.
|
|
|
Post by Mr. Glow on Jun 1, 2012 1:42:09 GMT 1
You know how Saren had a flat-out hoverboard in the first Mass Effect? Well that suddenly struck me as wi... wei.... strange just now. How come we never see anyone else on hoverboards for the entire rest of the trilogy? I can think of lots of occasions when Shepard or one of her enemies having a hoverboard would have been extremely useful. Probably the only thing I can say against them is that they probably don't fold up into a tiny, easy to carry disc when not being used, Jak and Daxter style. (Then again, all the guns in the Mass Effect setting do actually do that.) Imagine how hilariously anti-climactic that bit at the end of the suicide mission in Mass Effect 2, where Shepard has to run and jump back onto the Normandy, would be if you could buy a dozen hoverboards on the Citadel before the mission, though.
|
|
|
Post by Mister Buch on Jun 1, 2012 1:58:17 GMT 1
Or - think how cool it would be if that same thing happened but the Back to the Future theme kicked in as Joker tossed Shepard her hoverboard.
|
|