That Orc who only fights people with the same weapons that they have, in Glenumbra he fights the harpies barehand
I reckon that depends a lot on the eye of the beholder... (No, not THAT beholder, that's a different universe!)tinythinker wrote: »Who is the best written character in ESO?
Gotta have to agree there, those were some good stuff, writing-wise.VaranisArano wrote: »I really enjoyed Ritemaster Iachesis, Valsirenn, and Leythen.
VaranisArano wrote: »I really enjoyed Ritemaster Iachesis, Valsirenn, and Leythen.
Major Spoilers for SummersetIachesis
We've seen wise mage types before, and we've met former Psijics Vanus Galerion and Mannimarco. The writers took Iachesis in a different direction.
I really appreciated the subversion of the wise mentor character. Iachesis really was wise and well-intentioned, but so much of his life and persona was based on a past event that turned out to be a false memory implanted by the Sload he thought he'd defeated.
His struggle with who he thought he was and figuring out what he needed to do now that the truth was becoming clear really made his tragic end rather poignant. Too often the mentor dies just so that the hero has to be the one to finish the quest, but Iachesis' arc of discovering his own failure made him more engaging for me. It was wrenching when he died, not because "Oh, no, mentor guy died", but because I knew he wasn't ever going to see us fix his mistakes. The thought of dying while leaving a massively important task undone, leaving behind the people relying on you, and of dying without getting to rectify your biggest mistake is pretty weighty.
Valsirenn & Leythen
This couple broken up by work, dedication to differing ideologies, and the death of their daughter really broke my heart. They both had clear ideals which drove them, sometimes frustrating me with their blind adherence to those ideals. The writers painted a really realistic vision of them as people with both good and bad sides, which made it all the more wrenching the more I progressed in the questline and watched what happened to them. In the end, Valsirenn gets left alone to pick up the pieces of a Psijic Order that's had its confidence in its own infallibility shattered - its not a neat, happy ending for a couple that never was neat and happy, but certainly felt very real.
One of the things I most appreciated about the writing of these three characters is that I saw some of the twists coming...and I still cared.
Like Leythen - I had him pegged from the moment he showed up as just another "ESO guy who went evil because his kid died" a la Tanval Indoril, Magistrix Vox, etc. But when it actually came time to learn about Leythen and Valsirenn's daughter dying, darn it, they still hurt over it and I hurt for them.
Good writing, ESO writers!
Everyone will have different characters they feel empathy for. Those three were the most recent major characters I really identified with because of the depth ESO's writers were able to bring to their sometimes overused stock characters.
Stuga.
The "super annoying stalker that you want to graphicly murder from the first "Do you know,..."" written to perfection.