Sigh.
Holy crap, I see i need to be 100% accurate in order to communicate with you. Okay, let me try again, ahem: when i was talking about the Great Northern Wall being destroyed, i was referring to the actual ruins of the Great Northern Wall being reduced to tiny microscopic tiny bits inside of a giant crater created by some random giant spacecraft driven by some random crazy sylvari, so nothing would remain of the original wall.
There, i think that was precise enough.
I think you missed the point I was making, rather than being unclear yourself. Yes, there are still ruins of the Great Northern Wall. It doesn’t really matter if they’re just smashed further in the coming year in GW2, or if they’re atomized, or whatever. My point remains that breaking things and changing the world has been a part of Guild Wars since, well, the prologue of Guild Wars: Prophecies. It’s what the series is built on. The game could have started in war-torn Ascalon with the Charr siege already underway, but instead they introduced you to a pristine, idyllic world and then tore it away from you, letting you find the ruined doll of the child who skipped along with you later as a loot drop to drive home just how horrible the events were.
The Searing was part of the main story of the campaign. It had a lot of background and was a major part of the plot. Charr using a powerful old magic given to them by the Titans (who had also a lot of background behind them) to retake their lands, for they were there before the humans arrive. That was awesome! and that’s only the beginning.
However, the destruction of this ruins with a godkitten giant flying drill is just pure vandalism. What freaking purpose does it serve? and please don’t tell me that we will have to wait for the next update to see that purpose… it’s been 1 year since Flame and Frost (or 6 months since Queen’s Jubilee) and we still have no clue on why the hell She does what She does (except the I’M CRAZY LALALALA part).
Alright, next point. When you started playing Prophecies, when the wall came smashing down due to Burntfur’s spell, were you aware of all of this background behind the attack that you’re happily touting here? Did you know about the powers driving the Searing Cauldrons, of the Titans who had granted the Charr these powers? I’d hope you didn’t, to know that you would have had to be reading spoilers. The story was revealed as you progressed through the game.
Now I know back during Prophecies that there were some players who whined and complained about the Searing and that they loved pre-Searing Ascalon and would have characters that would never leave it. Okay. But I certainly don’t remember having any players who complained about the powers the Charr wielded in smashing the wall, calling Burntfur a Mary Sue villain doing impossible things. I don’t remember hearing anyone complain about the White Mantle’s insidious hold on Kryta and how unrealistic it was that such a cult could gain influence. Even if there were people who might complain about such things, after a few weeks/months there were spoilers available that revealed how the Flame Legion aligned with the Titans, or how the Mursaat were involved in Kryta, and so on. The difference with Scarlet’s arc is that there has (at least until recently) been no ability to look ahead and find spoilers. The story is being told in episodic form, we can’t peek ahead at what is to come. This means that you aren’t getting all the answers you want right away, and for some people that’s apparently inexcusable. You want to know how the story ends, sometimes even before the story truly starts.
I’ve been avoiding spoilers, myself. I don’t know what Scarlet is after, but I do know why she’s after it. After the last month of updates I’m pretty sure I’ve figured out what’s going on in her head and why it’s pretty earth-shaking, at the end of the day, even without knowing exactly what she hopes to get out of drilling through Lion’s Arch. Am I complaining that I don’t know what she hopes to achieve? No, because I’ll find out in two weeks. You will too. But you’ve already made up your mind to hate her for whatever reason, be it “she’s a Mary-Sue” or “it’s unrealistic that they’d follow her” or “she’s a Sylvari and they didn’t exist in the first game”.
If you dislike her, you dislike her, that’s fine. She wasn’t designed to be a likeable character. I just think, after that tangent I went off on, if you’re someone who likes maintaining old locations the way they were, that this is the wrong game series for you.