Have you ever wondered at the importance of a character’s name to his or her make up and personality? Does an author — or in the case of Dragon Age: Origins, an entire team of authors and world designers — name a character based on the meaning of a name, or something that just subconsciously resonates? How about you? Do you name your character through any sort of convention, driving toward how you feel the character will represent him or herself throughout the story? Whatever the method, it is certain that we all put some degree of weight and meaning behind the naming of something. We even have an analytical practice (that some call science and others… don’t) called numerology to help us distinguish character traits based on names.
I found a site that automates this practice. I entered in some prominent character names. This is what I found:
By Robert "chilyn" Travis
I've played the exact same Warden in Dragon Age: Origins for years. In 2025, I will finally make a different one. Maybe.
Tried it before, doesn't work. I tried to to play a Dalish archer but ended up being a Dwarf Noble warrior again, must be a bug
My preferred origin is Dalish Elf Archer that recruits the Templars, Baelen's Dwarves with Golems and Dalish Elves. Took me 3 playthroughs to lock down a "true" file for me. What a game.
How does BioWare's latest stack up against its best offerings?
LOL
DAO pioneered a new era for cinematic rpgs while Vainguard pioneered well shampood hair.
In terms of traditional rpg aspects, origins wins. In terms of scale, presentation, and refined simplicity, Veilguard wins. Its not as simple as game A is better than game B, we have to set parameters
For example: Are there people that think origins is better? Yes, alot of them. Is it though? That is debatable.
Only for those with tremendously low standards and/or who are trying to push an agenda into gaming.
I'm thinking it's really just the former...that's what I hope anyways.
In no way, shape or form does this game come even remotely close to the nearest galaxy far away from dragon age origins or dragon age 2 for that matter.
I’d guess it doesn’t top it for me as I really enjoyed the first game but I can’t say for sure without playing both of them
GF365: "If you’re a reader, this list of great games for avid readers is for you. Games are a form of art, and some have written literature in them."