daggerpen:

yesthatnagia:

daggerpen:

Honestly I could literally replace the cutscene of the Chantry blowing up with Anders killing Elthina directly and it would change literally one line in the entire end game. One. An optional line that you Hawke can say. Oh, and I guess one loading screen that mentions that it killed “Everyone in the Chantry” with zero mention of any other collateral damage (which, granted, is actually about what I would predict in modeling the explosion, I suppose)

Like I have so many complaints about how the finale of The Last Straw was done. It was thoroughly incoherent, lacking in appropriate context, and full of a confusing mess of narrative assumptions that was clearly written in a huge rush with basically no critical thought put into making it internally consistent and we wind up with this emotionally disconnected nonsensical physics defying explosion of a barely populated building with wildly inconsistently expressed collateral damage wherein the entire plot needs Anders to have been pushed to the point by extreme circumstances in order for his narrative arc to make sense while at the same time holding the idea of slaughtering en masse a group of imprisoned people who have less connection to the guy who blew up the Chantry than you do because – and I’ve text mined the hell out of this dialogue and plot summaries and this is literally the only consistent rationale they give internally – “the people would riot and kill the mages anyway, so we have to do it so none of them get hurt doing that.”

And all because an apostate killed the Grand Cleric, mind you, not because of literally any other mentioned potential collateral damage. But I guess in DAI they’re just going to mention rubble patterns so absurd that I’m pretty sure the Chantry would have had to be a few square miles large? Like I was there for it and rubble doesn’t work like that but okay.

Like honestly at this point I’m over here concluding that literally the only reason they went with an explosion – particularly over something way more symbolically satisfying, like the Chantry burning down in flames – was to trigger a knee-jerk ‘explosion=terrorism=bad’ reaction and then panicked when some pro-mage people went ‘uh he kinda has a point though’ and retcon in a bunch of inconsistent fallout, because they only want fans taking complex moral stances about hard choices and morally grey ‘do the ends justify the means?’ situations when they’re the ones they’ve pre-programmed into the game.

Like I love this game but it’s such a fucking mess, so yeah, my official opinion on the Chantry Boom isn’t even “Anders was right” or “Anders had the right motivation but there was too much collateral damage” – it’s “I honestly don’t find the scene coherent enough to judge on an ethical level?”

I don’t really want to start an argument, but the big rocks circling in the sky? Those have to come down eventually, and they’re going to come down on streets and houses, and they’re each going to leave multiple craters. Because when things that big strike the ground with force, they tend to break apart (with force, which will destroy buildings and kill people who happen to be in the way), and the parts that don’t shatter will skip (leaving more craters! And also probably hitting more buildings/people). Destroying a building at the TOP of the city is going to leave rubble ALL OVER IT. I have absolutely zero difficulties believing that Anders inadvertently killed a couple hundred people not present at the scene of his magical explosion – I’m more confused that Kirkwall wasn’t basically levelled and has apparently continued to exist in the meantime.

Right or wrong – and I have a love/hate relationship with that entire argument, which boils down to, “I find his reasoning sympathetic but I really,really hate his methods” – I have no doubt that he is a murderer a couple hundred times over. Nor would it be inaccurate to call him a terrorist, no matter how much we hate that word and the people it applies to in this post-9/11 world. If he can live with that, so be it. It does put rather a damper on my enthusiasm for the dude.

So here’s a funny story – instead of using that Physics BA of mine for, uh, anything career related, I’ve been trying for FOREVER to model this explosion and figure out an actual probable damage toll for it. In the process, I have found:

  1. Modeling explosions is unbelievably fucking hard and I really cannot seem to find any good papers on it, oddly enough
  2. I am nonetheless 95% sure that this explosion is bullshit.

Like, okay, look. I came into DA2 really fucking spoiled. I had a friend who was super into the games not long after DA2 came out, and while I wouldn’t play it for years, I knew about the Anders thing. I’d read the wiki for quotes, knew the Chantry went boom, etc. So I had that image in my mind – a decent-sized building in some corner of Kirkwall goes boom, maybe like 12 people die, Meredith tries to kill the people in some other corner of Kirkwall, the game gives the Obvious Evil Option of siding with the Templars and the Obvious Good Option of siding with the mages, with some moral conflict over Anders’ actions themselves. Cool.

Then, years later, after finals burnout in my first semester of my senior year of college, I actually saw the explosion in the game. I’m sure some people were shocked. Some people were horrified. Some people were totally on board. Me, though, I had just one thought-

What the actual fuck kind of explosion is that?

Are there – crossbars? What? Multiple charges? Why are they going into a line? What the fuck? Is this supposed to be magic? Wasn’t the point of that Justice quest that he wasn’t using magic to do this, aside from annoying ominous foreshadowing? I thought that was-

Wait, is it swirling? What is-

What?

Like Meredith’s over here going on about how the Grand Cleric is dead and I’m just sitting over here going “How does this make even the slightest  bit of sense? Why would everything rise into a column like that? Even if Anders magicked it that way why would he do that? That takes way more energy, why wouldn’t he just drop it back into place? Wait, okay, look, you can see the buildings around it are unharmed, maybe he’s trying to throw the rubble clear of the city? Wait, what’s she saying? Is she just talking about Elthina? Weren’t there other people in that Chantry? IDK, I guess it looked pretty empty – oh, right, yeah, whatever, let’s go kill Meredith and then I’ll yell a bit and we’ll run off together, Anders”

And then the game continues on to only talk about the Grand Cleric, so I’m like “Well, that seems weird, but I guess it’s not like that rubble would have hit much so whatever”, because no, I’m being dead serious here, outside of the immediate blast zone that’s how explosions work, right? Just the explosion pattern itself was confusing me.

So basically the nonsensicality this explosion has been pissing me off on a personal level from the moment I saw it 

But then – then – I’m reading around and I see a reference in an interview to “rubble rained down over half the city” and I’m just like “Wait, what? I know it was a big chantry but that seems like a gross overestimation? How big is Kirkwall? I mean a lot of it’s not going that far away from the blast radius anyway – wait, it had that weird explosive pattern that made no sense, was that supposed to increase the amount of rubble over the city? Are we sure that wasn’t Varric making it up? Oh my god this historical explosion with a similar sized building literally only even hit like three people in a more densely populated area, there’s no way this adds, up, I’m going to start googling”

Like, literally, I start combing through papers trying to find models of explosive patterns, historical data on city size and population density from places similar to Kirkwall, the rubble size we’re looking at here, the rubble size at varying velocities it’d take to kill a person, etc.

Mostly, I’ve found that it’s really fucking hard to model. Like, super hard, holy shit. But from the rough numbers I have managed to run, I’ve found a few good rules of thumb:

  1. For a city-state like Kirkwall, we’re looking at about 10,000 people in a square mile.
  2. As far as injury to fatality rate, we’re looking at between 10 and 30 injuries for every 1 death.
  3. This explosion makes no fucking sense

Look. From my back of the envelope “try and get an upper limit on the maximum plausible casualties” calculation, the chance of a significant number of people being hit directly by the shrapnel chunks is miniscule. Like, using that rule of thumb above, we’re looking at about 1000 people being hit, conservatively, in order to kill 100 people. The entire estimated 10k people living above ground in Kirkwall – since Darktown wasn’t getting shrapneled for obvious reasons – make up about, uh… .03% of the surface area of Kirkwall, give or take? So like, people getting hit directly is out. We’re mostly looking at incidental deaths from caved in buildings, of which there were probably more b/c buildings are a way bigger chunk of the landscape, but then we’re also factoring in the fact that building roof integrity is going to be a lot tougher so that’s either a lot of deflected brick-sized chunks or a lot less Chantry to go around here and seriously how big was that Chantry again? This doesn’t add up?

Okay, hang on, okay, I can make sense of this, right? The weird visuals are Varric exaggeration, and the damage to Kirkwall only started with the Chantry incident – the mages and templars fighting would have caused some damage (which I suppose explains why the weird fireless cold explosion would somehow cause fires), and there are lines referencing looting (which, again, explains the fires), so if we say that the total casualties from the fighting, including the templars, mages and anyone caught in the fire, was somewhere in the low hundreds, that makes a lot more se-

Did Trespasser just fucking say that the explosion left enough rubble in the harbor to change tide patterns??????

That- but-

But it’s-

IT’S A FUCKING PORT CITY?

LITERALLY HALF OF IT IS SURROUNDED BY WATER?

THAT MEANS THAT HALF OF IT WOULD HAVE GONE INTO THE WATER IN THE FIRST FUCKING PLACE?????

SHIPS SINK THERE CONSTANTLY AND IT DOESN’T CHANGE THE TIDE PATTERNS BUT HALF OF A CHANTRY SPREAD OUT OVER THE ENTIRE PORT DOES?

AND LOOK AT THAT MAP

IF IT’S THAT FAR OUT THEN THE SHRAPNEL IS INCREDIBLY SCATTERED?

THIS EXPLOSION MAKES NO SENSE I HATE THIS EXPLOSION

*breathes*

Look. Here’s the thing. The Chantry Boom killed innocent people. It did. I gained my early reputation in the Dragon Age fandom as the Chantry-Boom-critical Anders defense squad member, who thought it was probably over the line but still understood the desperation driving Anders’ actions and forgave it like she did basically every other Companion’s Designated Shitty Stunt in the games. But you know, I was willing to hear arguments, and to consider things. It wasn’t like Bioware really gave us much context into the situation, as to how pressing the time crunch was, as to how the political situation was and what potential alternates there were and what plans had already been tried and had failed, etc. It was an interesting, complicated situation where someone I cared very much about was driven to a terrible thing that worked exactly like it was supposed to, for a cause I believed in. Like, you wanna talk about some great fucking grey morality there? Yes please!

Buuuuut then the additional canon lines started filtering in and I started trying to make more sense of the situation and eventually realized that, yes, this was never a situation meant to be made sense of. Because, yes, at some point in my research into medieval population densities I did, in fact, understand that I was, as with most of my fannish endeavors, putting entirely more thought into this than Bioware did.

But here’s the thing. If you can’t figure out what sort of fallout to this sort of thing would be realistic, then…. maybe… don’t?

Or if you were planning to introduce the potential rubble damage as a component, maybe mention it… in the game… where it happens… in the immediate aftermath… instead of scattering it into side conversations and codices throughout the sequel game?

Except lbr, they didn’t fucking think about this until they realized that there were people who saw the Chantry Boom and didn’t immediately have that kneejerk “omg terrorism” reaction.

Because let’s not kid ourselves that we were ever supposed to think about this explosion in any way, shape or form. That’s why they chose its form – a shitty gutpunch trick meant to evoke deliberate associations, a cheap shortcut to put a “Wrong” label on this and then never think about it again, aside from as one of those “see some mages do bad things, so the templars are just as valid a choice and it’s a completely acceptable reaction to go on a churchstate-sanctioned killing spree!” We were never meant to think about the complexities of bringing down an institution like the Circle because the writers wouldn’t even commit to it being an institution that needed brought down in the first place. Chantry goes boom, we go “ooh, bad,” we fall nicely into that dialogue tree they’ve already got programmed in, the story continues, right?

Which brings me to the word terrorism and how utterly little in the way of fucks I could give about that word at this point

Like, oh my god, I really cannot emphasize enough how little I care about the definition of terrorism as it relates to Anders’ actions at this point. Who cares? I sure don’t! Does it change anything about the situation? Does it change the number of people who died? Does it change Anders’ motivations? Does it change the end results? Does it change anything about the actual reality of the situation? No!

But you know what it does? It does the same thing that the writers’ choice of narrative device discussed extensively above does – it shuts down the conversation. Red light, conversational trump card, “Either you get bogged down in a meaningless semantics debate or you’re defending terrorism!” It’s a punch on the emotional “recent wound” shortcut button and it is a shitty, shitty fucking tactic and you are very, very right in that Anders fucking deserved better.

And I am so, so tired of it.

So please, understand from all of the above, that when I say that this explosion makes no sense whatsoever and the writers will not even provide the prerequisites for me to begin to judge it on an ethical level

I mean that I am d o n e with this fucking explosion. So done. There is no and never was going to be an option on the dialogue wheel here for me, so I’m just gonna go ahead and pick that shiny one that lets me ride off into the sunset with my revolutionary apostate boyfriend and tear down corrupt institutions

FUCKING TOODLES, KIRKWALL

andhumanslovedstories:

You ever think that the Dragon Age franchise feels bad that nothing they do will ever be funnier than Oghren telling you that the Joining chalice full of darkspawn blood made with mouth tingle, and if you tell him “no one asked you to chug the whole thing” he disapproves one point. Just a lil minus one. He’s not saying you’re wrong, but you didn’t have to fucking bring it up. You hand him a chalice, he’s gonna chug that chalice, it’s kind of your fault for not stopping him. The funniest and most realistic thing in Dragon Age is the idea of a character disapproving of you just one goddang approval point. The singular unit of approval. The equivalent of the third set of silver bracers that you gave them because you gotta clean out the inventory. Minus one approval is the concept of someone not closing the door behind them when they leave your room. If you’ve got a good relationship, this isn’t going to destroy it, and if you’ve got a bad relationship, it’s just one more fucking thing, but either way I would like a small shiny stone looted from a random canvas sack to make up for it

mistresstrevelyan:

feynites:

kvrnsteins:

flmeth:

She was the best of them. She cared for her people. She protected them.

#I am ABSOLUTELY convinced that the reason that she isn’t as derogatory about the dalish  #as the other two  #is that she lived the intervening centuries  #she saw how much was stolen from them  #how much the loss of their culture and their magic–however flawed it was–damaged them  #and how far they climbed back  #with nothing but their will and their hands and their stories to do it with  #she didn’t wake to a degraded people  #she saw a living people not only surviving but striving for more (via)

She watched it happen.

However badly the elves have it now, it must have been an incredible nightmare immediately after the Veil went up. Cities fell. Literally; they were in the sky and they fell. Whole communities got wiped out. Elves got stuck with their consciousness in one place and their body in another. People who had spent their entire lives doing stuff with magic, suddenly couldn’t use it. Or only some of them could, but inconsistently. They were cut off from spirits. Nothing worked anymore. They went from the magical equivalent of our level of technology, to the stone age, in a bloody and relatively unexpected cataclysm.

Solas… I don’t think he saw that. I think he knew, intellectually, that it would be a disaster. But I don’t think, since Trespasser, that he actually saw it. I think he slept through most of that period, when the mortality first set in, and elves were starving, and living in the ruins of their empire, and having to figure out how to light a fire without magic. And then invaders came, and enslaved them. All that fighting to ‘free’ them, and what did it amount to? Some years of exceedingly harsh survival, followed by enslavement. Again.

And then centuries of that enslavement. Of having their new ‘masters’ pick their own culture clean for the bits they liked, and denying it from them. Magisters examining elven techniques and lore while passing laws that prohibit their elven slaves from reading. Using their blood in rituals. Walking on their backs to try and reach those same lofty heights that the evanuris had reached for.

But the elves survived.

Hit after hit, and any of them could have wiped them out. They could have died after the Veil went up. They could have faded away beneath the crushing weight of Tevinter. Mythal watched them take punch after punch after punch, and stay standing. Arlathan. The Veil. Tevinter. Orlais. She has definitely seen these people spend centuries living just one step away from complete genocide, and yet, they’re still here. They’ve fought. They’ve bent their knees when they needed to, bowed their heads, sent their loved ones running while they accepted death to buy them time. They’ve smuggled the gemstones of their culture in secret, in songs and whispers and totems tucked beneath their rags, and they’ve pieced together new maps of faith and resilience that are their own.

The elves of Thedas have been on the brink of annihilation since before humans even came to their continent.

But they aren’t gone yet.

And I think, after seeing all of that, it would be impossible for Mythal to mistake them for weak. Whatever plans she does or does not have, she’s seen her people survive what must surely have seemed like surefire extinction time, and time, and time again. It takes a certain kind of fool to witness that sort of resilience and discount it, and Mythal’s not that fool.

@knightofphoenix