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dws90

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  1. IIRC, their was no Sadow body seen in the tomb in the first game. Only a couple of statues, a Star Map, and a jar with a funky lightsaber. So the memorial thing is correct.
  2. I believe that Kreia was trying to get revenge, and was using those she was exacting her revenge on to exact that revenge. She is the Lord of Betrayal, after all. The list already mentioned was: Sion, Nihilus, the Jedi Council, and the Force. My guess is that, sometime after the battle between Nihilus, Sion and Kreia, she returns to the Academy and makes amends with them, even though she actually hates them. She coordinates the attack on the Ebon Hawk by Sion with the known location of the Harbinger, and sets the plan into motion. Her encounter with Sion on the Harbinger was merely verebly fun between two (fake) friends. He cut off her hand to show the Exile the bond and to make the Exile respect that she sacrificed herself for him. She then uses the Exile to draw out the Jedi, deals with them, then signais Nihilus to attack Telos, allowing the Exile to board and destroy his ship. Two targets down, two remain. She then uses the Exile to kill Sion on Melachor V. Then her deal with the Force plan is a bit sketchy. Justification for this? She says, while inabount to Telos, "Many paths lead to Telos" The only path she could have known of at the time was the Exile's, but with this theory, she was leading Nihilus there also. Since this thread also seems to be complaining about the game, I'll put in my 2 cents: My primary problem was the lack of a visible villian. In KotoR 1, I knew from the very beginning who the primary bad guy was: Malak. Thus, I grew to hate him. In this game, however, we weren't told what was going on villian-wise until halfway through the game. We didn't know Sion's name until Korriban, and Nihilus's name isn't even mentioned in the game's dialog! It appears in the journal on the Ravanger, and floating above his head. That's it. And the main bad guy of the game, Kreia, is the first person you see outside the prologue, yet you don't know of her villainness until about an hour before the final battle. I like having a general goal from the beginning in RPG's, in KotoR's one case, defeat Malak. In KotoR II's case, it was to stop two nameless things that appeared on the cover. And it wasn't really, either. Oh well. The Basilisk insertion scene makes everything alright . My main question: The Ravanger was the same model ship as Saul Karath's. They weren't of Star Forge creation, as the Ravanger was used during the Mandalorian Wars, before Revan uncovered the Star Maps. They also aren't like any Republic ships we've seen. It is also unlikely that they are ships of the original Sith Empire, as they were fighting for the Republic during the Mandalorian Wars, and the Republic wouldn't like it if their primary commander ran off into Sith space and returned with a fleet of Sith ships during a fight for survival. So, what are they?
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