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The Great Phantom

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Posts posted by The Great Phantom

  1. Well, if one can suggest that Hoth is bland, then same idea can also be said for desert planet like Tatooine. (Looking aside from having towns on surface like Anchorhead in KotOR or docking bays for crafts like Falcon and EH).

     

    Dagobah is also bland, but relates to darkness theme.

     

    Hoth is bland somehow as whoever turned it into a concept had little imagination in making it into a planet. Which means that other games can build initial idea of Hoth. Planets are hardly dead at all, from time perspective.

     

    Tatooine's not bland, it at least has people that speak fluent gibberish (plus the whole Rakata wasting it to a bunch of dust; that adds a cool factor somewhere, I'm sure).

     

    Dagobah has some sort of ominous dark-side history junk that nobody cares about. Unless Hoth served as the base world of some long-dead Dark Side Butt-Kicking Master (Sith or other related affiliations), then it seems pretty boring to me...

  2. Ok assuming revan did the light side ending and distroyed the sith in kotor 1 how does two sith lord suddenly pop up five years later from nowhere and distroys the jedi again? kotor 1 made it seem the jedi would thrive again after the starforge was distroyed and there would be peace for awhile

     

    Anybody else notice how games/books/movies usually have a triumphant finish, only to have the universe fall apart by the time of the sequel, no matter how victorious they were in the 1st? (The Empire Strikes Back screams out to me at that one...)

     

    It made it seem that way, but like every other sequel after a supreme victory, the goodguys were way weaker than they were humble enough to admit, and they let a lot of the Sith disappear, only to have them come back and destroy the Jedi planets at a time.

  3. They are both the penultimate boss end fight, they both recharge, thats all there is to it. Bastilla is just confused about LS or DS (well when Revan is LS anyway), and Sion is just confused about his purpose in life (as The Great Phantom mentioned). The only other similarity is that they both use red lighsabers and I think they recharge twice or 3 times (cant remember). I think It would have been interesting if you were able to convice Sion to allow himself to be one with the force considering his anger/wounds, kinda like what Revan did with that Sith lord ghost (Ajunta Paul) in Kotor 1. You were able to save Bastilla but not Sion!

     

    You couldn't "save him", but you could get him to doubt himself even more, by asking what kind of life he's had as a fruity mummified lump of atoms (not in that terminology, but I know you all were thinking it :* ).

  4. I never really thought of them as really similar... Bastila only did it via the Star Forge (like Malak), which was supposed to have fueled the Dark Side 'in her'. Sion's whole "deal" was that he could survive insanely severe wounds (some of the stuff on him HAD to have hurt), and was part of his character: so ticked off at everything that he's too stupid to realize that he should have died what looks like a few thousand years ago.

  5. The Star Wars website says how many of the capital ships in the Sith Fleet were actually taken from the Republic, which Carth and several others (Jedi Masters, if you feel like taking them at their word for once :huh: ) said.

     

    That, and the Ravager also a Republic Ship, which nobody can argue with, simply because Mandalore says so (along with Visas, a few Mandalorians, and the Republic Admiral, either Carth or some bald guy).

  6. Sounds about right to me, but I'm pretty sure that it helps that Malachor was more or less created to "create echoes" (Sith Holocrons to Atris about Its teachings, which, for the purpose of it making a bit more sense, I expand to the whole planet, which is also described as having some sort of hunger). So, maybe all the deaths created huge echoes, which Malachor (and the Exile, in theory, via proxy) magnified and carried around with them.

     

    Or something like that.

  7. But, "The Sith capital ships were former Republic vessels taken by their traitorous captains, but the bulk of the invasion force was a seemingly inexhaustible number of these adaptable fighters." (Star Wars website).

     

    So the fleet should be somewhat made of hammerheads...

  8. Look at people like Chingis Khan: He did some horrible things to people that didn't surrender to him, but under the 'empire' of his descendents (who continued to pile up skulls as threats to neighboring cities and whatnot), an almost international trade network was formed, and religious tolerance was granted to anybody from Egypt to Beijing (more or less).

     

    Does that make him good, PER SE?

  9. Not necessarily, but close enough.

     

    A Sith is anybody that is actually a member of the Sith "Order". Dark Jedi can have fleets (Desann, Tavion, and several others), but it takes some sort of Sith Holocron or other teachings of the Sith to make one a Sith, although you can call yourself a Sith (or the Dark Lord of such) for free, until somebody who is actually one of whatever you proclaim yourself to be shows up and kills you, proving that you weren't a Sith in the 1st place.

     

    Wow... did nobody read my post? :o

  10. Not necessarily, but close enough.

     

    A Sith is anybody that is actually a member of the Sith "Order". Dark Jedi can have fleets (Desann, Tavion, and several others), but it takes some sort of Sith Holocron or other teachings of the Sith to make one a Sith, although you can call yourself a Sith (or the Dark Lord of such) for free, until somebody who is actually one of whatever you proclaim yourself to be shows up and kills you, proving that you weren't a Sith in the 1st place.

  11. Because it was hidden under that snow bluff. It's often the simplest of defenses that confound the complex. The only way the orbital camaras could have gotten a clear shot at it was if they were actually looking for it, or if the got it from the ground, which defeats the whole purpose of orbital camaras, don't you think?

     

    Who says that those towers weren't there before? I think that my den looks a whole lot like the Oval Office in Washington, D.C., but that doesn't mean it is, does it?

  12. Eh, kinda, but not really... Anybody ever wasted enough of their time to read those Pendragon books? In the one on Zadaa, I think it is, the guy gets trained at a warrior "boot camp" type thing, and during "dark fighting", he has to close his eyes and "reach out with his feelings", although in a much much much less metaphysical way: he just listens, smells, and feels the movement of air around him, or something like that.

  13. More or less right.

     

    A couple of things, though: The Exile forms bonds with really sensitive Force sensitives. But, since all life is touched by the Force, he does have the ability to bond with just about anything, given enough time or enough of a will to do so.

     

    Kreia: Well, either she lied (Oh, wow, what a surprise!), or perhaps her bonding with the Exile put a big chip in the 'wall' around her, allowing her to tear it down the rest of the way.

     

    Real quickly, little useless fact: Ulic Qel-Droma was still an awesome lightsaber duelist, even after he had the Force blocked off from him.

  14. The Jedi Code is WAY open to interpretation.

     

    "There is no emotion, there is peace."

     

    Okay. But, even the Jedi tell you that you should feel compassion. That single line, out of all other lines in the Jedi Code, really screw the Jedi up. After Exar Kun, they alter it to mean "Love is bad." It's an open-ended line that everybody just happens to take to mean "Emotion is bad", when it's that that separates the Jedi from the people they should protect.

     

    Besides "Reach out with your feelings" could have easily just meant to reach out with his perceptions, like mr insomniac said. Besides, if you've ever been a karate super star, or good at anything, you know that, after a while of doing it, you don't think about it anymore. You just do it. You could probably do it blindfolded, if you practiced enough in the right way. That's 'feeling' your way through it, more or less, isn't it?

     

    Ah, oh well...

     

    :ph34r:

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