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EclairForce

Ah lovely even the resistance arent wholly good. I love realism in my rpg

Jose Antonio Martinez Garcia

Like Aiden, there's something that doesn't add up for me. In a city of vagabonds and suspicious people, anyone could be a traitor. It's easier to get a knife in your back than a helping hand, unless you're willing to give money, and lots of it, but even then that method is inefficient because they'll always ask for more. People who live only on handouts never want to work, especially in an oppressive social environment. They've lost their will to fight against the monsters that the tyrant has, which is understandable, but that makes them more desperate. On the other hand, you have the supposed rebellion that acts more like a mafia or criminal gang with a clearly hostile attitude. There are no greetings, no metaphorical comments about fighting against the tyrant, just a demand for power, as if it were a drug and they were drug addicts, if the idea was to fight together. So why didn't the developers raise their level above 400? Aiden and Veyra arrived by unconventional means, but the rest of the guilds are not going to send the weakest; on the contrary, it will be the most powerful who will speak first. They would easily defeat them when they arrive in a month or two. So from my point of view, this was not a conversation but absolute domination from the start. The last option is to take the long way around, take the hit, lose the fragments, and try again later from a different angle, perhaps after weeks of research and negotiation. Not a viable path for a group of only two people. So we fight! TFTC

bcdp

They are not really a crimial gang. People don't seem to consider them as such. So I guess it's a "us vs them" thing. There are two strangers. And Phantoms believe they need all shards on a single person. It's better if it's one of us, Phantoms, who we trust, than one those strangers, who holds all. By not cooperating, they are not with us, so they are against us. Keeping the shards for them is damning our people to suffer the tyranny longer. The probing questions how large the shards were, were probably about finding out if the shards are worth the trouble. And it seems they took the lack of answer as an answer in itself. There wouldn't have been any reason to insist on the shards' size if they intended to kill them anyhow from the beginning. Well, except if it was the author's way to show that something is not right :) Or, well, Chisa is simply a power hungry gangster and doesn't care about the city at all. But in a way, even that is a us vs. them.