Jump to content

DarkestDaemon

Members
  • Posts

    351
  • Joined

Everything posted by DarkestDaemon

  1. Something tells me the Emperor will have made our Warrior immortal as well. Doesn't do to have a Wrath that can be killed.
  2. The Chiss actually do have dealings with the Hutts. In fact, you'll encounter a lot of people across the game who speak Huttese on the various classes. I encountered a noble of Alderaan who spoke it fluently just because it was so little used outside of the Outer Rim and Huttspace.
  3. Only problem I see is why the Jedi had to begin this whole mess in the first place... They also don't accept Dark side concepts. They reject them. Hell, the entire code is basically about rejecting the concepts that lead to the Dark side.
  4. Didn't you hear? The Empire conquered all the fashion designers.
  5. The Empire pretty much breaks the back of the Republic on Taris.
  6. I'd say Grievous is on the list as well... even if he only had a very small number of organic parts left to him, he was pretty excellent at wielding his lightsabers. He did duel... what was it, 4 Jedi at once and triumphed for his unorthodox fighting style?
  7. I think it's been said that humans and twi'lek aren't able to have children with one another. And sith only had children with humans through their Alchemy.
  8. While this is true there is also a problem with that. When you think of a Sith Warrior are you honestly thinking of a person deeply enmeshed in intrigue and Sith politics? Or are you thinking of a frontline powerhouse whose main goal in life is to crush the enemies of the Empire under his heel? And when you think of the Inquisitor, are you honestly thinking about relic hunting and consuming ghosts? While, yes, this could be an aspect of the story, should it compromise almost the entire thing? The Inquisitor should have had so much more subtlety and intrigue, it quite honestly feels like the Warrior storyline originally belonged to the Inquisitor, and then got trashed in favor of the writings of a woman who hasn't finished college. ... and sadly, the last part is true.
  9. Sith Pureblood refers to any creature that exhibits the dominant traits of the sith race. Prior to the current era, the less traits of that ancestry demonstrated was more desirable (meaning if you had sith blood but looked human you were top of the top). In the current era, the darker red your skin, the darker red your eyes, and the more prominent your sith features (facial tentacles, bone ridges, etc.) the better you are. The hierarchy basically goes: Sith Pureblood | Human Sith (optimal to have some SP blood) | Force-sensitive Aliens (Sith who are twi'leks, for example) | Non-Force users | Aliens
  10. ... No offense to JK players what-so-ever with this comment but... here I thought the SW storyline was filled with making you Mary Sue. Not that it's a bad thing but that is just... yeah.
  11. I've seen it said a few times... much less than the Inquisitor, however.
  12. I think most people have a problem with the Inquisitor more than the Consular because, well, let's be serious. The Inquisitor class is essentially based off of Sidious, he's the best example we have of a Sith Sorcerer that all can draw from and the dude is a master at manipulation, deception, etc. He's very powerful, he's able to corrupt Jedi, so on and so forth. The Inquisitor storyline, from the little I've done, has me feeling like Indiana Jones with a lightsaber. Then later on I find out I'm a Ghostbuster with a lightsaber. No matter how awesome it'd be to picture Bill Murray as a Sith/Jedi, I can't reconcile the two ideas. To give examples from my warrior: To top it off the storyline feels steady compared to the Inquisitor. Playing through the Warrior storyline is like reading a story with a set plot. From what I've read of the Inquisitor, it's like playing through a series of short stories that only remain consistent in the main character.
  13. Ah, then my mistake! Just figured you were another person trashing it and all
  14. I like this post and would like to add my own thoughts on the ending bit. It depends on what you think is cool, while there isn't any fanfare and celebration like the Jedi, depending on conversation choices, you can end the Warrior storyline on a high or low note... bah, there's no help for it, gotta do a spoiler! I enjoyed that more, and as some have said it has the feeling that 'this is only the beginning' for the Warrior instead of a definitive end.
  15. I could do this too, but I think this will sum up your entire post: i mad bro
  16. Actually, as Darth Occulus you are 'Darth to trample'. Now if you were Darth Oculus you'd be 'Darth Eye'. Spelling errors in Latin can make a hell of a difference!
  17. Occulus - Light side. Imperius - Empire-aligned. Nox - Dark side. Basically, means. If you make choices that don't benefit the Empire but are overall good, you become Occulus. If you make decisions based on furthering the Empire, you become Imperius. If you make decisions that further yourself, you become Nox. The latter two have good meaning behind them, after all. Nox is Latin for dark/night. Imperius is Latin for sovereignty, realm, command, power to command, authority, rule, control. Occulus, oddly enough, is Latin for 'to trample'. Which is fitting if you only do inherently good things, you're essentially trampling on the beliefs of the Sith and the views of the Empire. AHA! I found out the reason for my confusion! There are two words in Latin spelled almost exactly the same and sounding exactly the same. Occulus and Oculus. The former meaning to trample and the latter, of course, meaning 'eye'.
  18. Ah, yeah. I think you're on... ... Nar Shadda at that point? Yeah, for the SW it takes a bit to pick up! But to each their own and etc.
  19. What level did you switch from your SW? Just curious, is all.
  20. Let's consider something about the power of the Emperor compared to that of a Jedi... Being in the mere presence of the Emperor is enough to corrupt a person to the Dark side. That, to me, means any Jedi who suddenly comes into the same room as the Emperor would suddenly become a new Sith or a Dark Jedi. I doubt the JK character is strong enough to resist -that-. Not to mention, as others have said, he has power greater than any living Sith or Jedi, because he is immortal. I doubt a being who can devour the life force of an entire planet, and all the other things the Emperor has done, is going to be done in by a single Jedi. No matter how powerful. Taken from wookiepedia: The Sith Emperor was a frighteningly powerful and proficient practitioner of the dark side of the Force. Even at a young age, Tenebrae proved to have immense potential in the use of the Force. When he was just a child of six, he was able to use the Force to kill his father by telekinetically breaking his neck, and torture his mother to death over a prolonged period. Also, when he was only ten years old, he was able to strip the Sith Lord Dramath of his power and mind. The Emperor possessed a great knowledge of Sith Magic. His usage of Sith Sorcery was overwhelmingly destructive, evidenced when he used his power to drain the life and Force from his home planet, granting him immortality. Another one of the Emperor's talents was being able to dominate the minds of other beings. His mind control powers were enough to completely overpower the wills of both Revan and Malak. The Sith Lord's power in Sith Magic also allowed him access to the Illusion spell, such as when he created duplicates of himself against a lone Jedi sent to kill him. The Sith Emperor was also skilled in the use of telekinesis, able to unleash overpowering waves of Force energy without the use of a hand gesture like most Force-users. The strength of his telekinesis was enough to send Revan flying across his throne room and effortlessly disintegrate T3-M4. The Sith Emperor was also able to create a shield of Force energy around himself, such as when he defended himself from T3-M4's flamethrower. The Dark Lord of the Sith was extremely skilled in the use of Force Lightning, utilizing it in the form of a single bolt or a devastating Force Storm. The voltage of his Force Lightning was enough to severely wound a Jedi of Revan's caliber. When enraged, his normally black eyes would flash red, demonstrating his deep immersion in the dark side. The Sith Emperor could also drain knowledge out of his victims, such as when he attempted to learn Republic secrets from Revan while the Jedi was in stasis. The Dark Lord also had an affinity with the use of telepathy, such as when he formed a mental link with his apprentice Exal Kressh.
  21. Since I forgot about that part, I'll concede that Quinn wasn't as smart as he needed to be . Still gonna be damn hard to find a replacement for him... but when I do, like I said, gonna let Pierce have his fun with soldier-boy. The main reason behind it is simple, really. On a general basis, humanity cares about life. The life of living things, etc. The Sith operate on a different mentality, but one that is in itself an immutable law of nature: survival of the fittest. At it's crudest level, the Sith Code is basically saying 'the strong survive and the weak die off'. Of course people will misinterpret this into believing the philosophy is fundamentally evil or something. Not to mention many Sith aren't quite content in letting the weak just die off naturally... they want to hurry the process! But those Sith aren't the ones in ultimate power... and the Dark Council from the few times you encounter them seems to be rather... conservative. Basically they aren't killing every person for the tiniest error!
  22. I'm sorry mate, but canonically, the Emperor lives on. If you played through the Warrior quest line you'd know that the servants of the Emperor wouldn't concoct such a plan. They... they kind of lack the ability to do so, which you realize just from talking to them. Not to mention Vitiate is a Force ghost, pretty much. He's pretty much impossible to kill.
×
×
  • Create New...