(edited by Pahawe.4865)
The lack of nations during the Living Story.
I don’t really see any of the races, except the Charr, as having any actual nations.
The human nations all got destroyed, and only a few towns forts, and cities survive, and their borders are ill defined, and overlap with other races. The Norn and Asura are displaced from their homelands and mostly concentrated in their home cities. The Sylvari are spreading, but they don’t seem to have established national boundaries.
A little racial/cultural focus wouldn’t hurt now and then. In trying to be inclusive of all 5 races in all parts of the story, each one tends to become a homogenous lump of sorts.
I don’t really see any of the races, except the Charr, as having any actual nations.
The human nations all got destroyed, and only a few towns forts, and cities survive, and their borders are ill defined, and overlap with other races. The Norn and Asura are displaced from their homelands and mostly concentrated in their home cities. The Sylvari are spreading, but they don’t seem to have established national boundaries.
Kryta still exists, with it’s monarchy and council. But I agree that the borders are ill defined, that however does not stop the existence of certain people/groups/institutions that can be seen as more or less “racial government bodies”. For example the Pale Tree and the firstborns of each cycle are somewhat leaders. The council of Rata Sum leads it’s secret police and so on. I believe OP wants those bodies to be more active in the story, I wouls like it as well.
Indeed JG, I’d like to see more of an involvement from the races themselves than simply tossing in characters like Marjory, Rox, Braham and Taimi and leaving it at that. The Seraph’s brief involvement with the siege was a fine example of how this could have been expanded upon; did they really need to just make a brief appearance to try and arrest Heal-O-Tron? Why did they just turn back and return to Divinity empty handed, and why did Divinity not send aid and soldiers down to Lion’s Arch? Surely, Logan and a few of the Seraph’s finest wouldn’t have gone amiss after Scarlet’s attempt on the Queen’s life.
It was an opportunity to give the Krytans more screen time, and it spawned a nice little side story that left the player with a question: exactly how were the Seraph planning to use Heal-O-Tron? Are they truly so corrupt now that Caudecus is out of the picture that they’ll stoop to blackmail to get their goals? And how far up the chain of command does that corruption spread? Indeed, it also gave an opportunity to showcase a little bit of internal conflict among the major powers of Tyria. What would have happened if the Seraph hadn’t taken no for an answer, and tried to force their way into Vigil Keep after Heal-O-Tron? Would blood have been shed to protect the little golem, or the rights of the Vigil? It’s that kind of intrigue that the story needs more of, in my opinion.
A little racial/cultural focus wouldn’t hurt now and then. In trying to be inclusive of all 5 races in all parts of the story, each one tends to become a homogenous lump of sorts.
I agree with that. Lore is rich, do not erase it’s richness !
Yah, I wasn’t at all a fan of all the other major racial cities turning a blind eye to Lion’s Arch. Its a center of free trade between all races, I would think that all races would want to protect it in turn for that reason if not for the fact that Scarlet represents a potential threat to all other cities as well (and in fact has ALREADY attacked all other areas except the Grove and Rata Sum at some point), assuming she wasn’t stopped.
Even one of the NPC’s during the event was like “Balloons? Is that really all Divinity’s Reach can do to help”?
But perhaps they really are all more or less completely tied up in their own affairs. I mean, between the Pact already taking capable fighters from all races and the ongoing struggles with dragon minions and other enemies (centaurs, flame legion, bandits, ect) perhaps the other cities are really struggling to protect themselves as it is, much less send troops to Lion’s Arch, even if we might not quite see the conflicts as being that intense game-wise.