#Ashton learning more about the Hishari
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ariadne-mouse · 2 years ago
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the main party reuniting its two halves and all their respective new experiences, perspectives, knowledge, traumas, etc meshing and clashing together is going to be WILD and I can't wait.
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danwhobrowses · 1 year ago
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Okay so I was gonna do a big gush over all the new Bells Hells outfits on the recent cr episode (a surprise since I had expected that they'd show them for the live show), but instead I'm gonna encourage you to check out @agarthanguide who is answering asks about the process of designing them, they're very insightful, and I'm sure they're more than happy to answer more - within reason ofc.
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topaz-mutiny · 2 years ago
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MEANWHILE, IN MY CRITICAL ROLE BRAIN:
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*rattles cage like a desperate animal* i need the looooore
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utilitycaster · 3 months ago
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while reading sone c3 meta i realized c3 defenders are as incurious about the world as bells hells. not to say read/watch the lore but they could do some research. the biggest thing rightniw is the calamity is a family scabble on exandria but i never see them acknowledging why the gods are fighting. or that the gods always chose each other which is so wrong. calamity is because the gods dont chose each other, they chose mortals. the entire fight is to save mortals and at the end they saved 1/3 of mortals vs the total wipeout that could have happened. im reminded that in a world with living gods bells hells didnt even know their names or what they were like. i can see why this party resonates with the incurios.
So on the one hand I would say that the Prime vs. Betrayer fight is complicated, because the motivations that lead to it are them torn between what they want and their refusal leave or kill each other. The Schism happens because the Betrayers want to leave, but won't leave without the Primes, and the Primes don't want to leave and want to help mortals against the titans. The Calamity happens at least in part because the Betrayers want to kill the mortals, which in turn is at least in part motivated by the fact that they see the mortals as coming between them and the Primes. The Primes meanwhile do want to prevent the Betrayers from killing the mortals, and as we've seen, make an effort to spare noncombatant mortals (an effort which in Divergence largely succeeds, and Downfall fails), but are unwilling to kill the Betrayers and instead seal them both times.
However, the larger point, both that Bells Hells are exceptionally ignorant of religious knowledge and history in Exandria and make little effort to rectify this or even acknowledge that they don't know much, and that many of their loudest fans are incurious as well, is true. The thing that actually strikes me is that, given that of the Predathos options that did not involve either a simple defeat of those trying to unleash it or a simple unleashing and destruction of the gods, both involved the Luxon, there was a profound not just lack of curiosity, but dismissiveness of Ashton learning about the beacon earlier in the campaign by their alleged fans. Whether or not you liked it, the potion of possibility and beacon in their head, more so than the shard, was the culmination of their arc and absolutely plot crucial - and it was not uncommon earlier in the campaign for people to be like "who CARES, fuck Essek, let's go to the Hishari." When, in the end, the shard served more as an interesting mechanical bonus, an opportunity for some of the best roleplay of the game that was then mostly abandoned, and an excuse to go to the Shattered Teeth; the role of the titans was ultimately only something to bring up in fruitless arguments and justify dickish behavior. Even more so than the ignorance of Exandrian lore that I saw with some frequency, that stands out to me: even within the campaign they purported to love, they didn't care about exploring something that might gently brush up against Campaign 2. It's a real cutting off one's nose to spite one's face, and it made them look stupid, and Bells Hells felt similar: they did not want to find out information that might show them to be wrong, or show people whom they disliked to be right.
This incuriosity is still alive and well:
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This is probably a vague of this post by me - but that post, I should note, came from me checking something in the transcript:
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The fans of Campaign 3 don't even care enough about the campaign and party they are expending so much energy to defend, to engage with the questions the characters thereof are thinking about. They're willing to throw Dorian under the bus in a failed attempt to win an argument. Dorian cares about this, actually, is the thing, and he's mostly brushed off, and even if Bells Hells had said "oh damn you're right", my point is not "why doesn't Bells Hells care" so much as "framing this as the merciful option is again a very self-centered perspective, rather like how donating your impulse purchase fast fashion clothing still often puts it in a landfill, but there's a middleman that lets you pretend you're doing the more eco-conscious option."
And yes, it is similar to how Bells Hells, as the party of Campaign 3, didn't care enough about the people and world they claimed to speak for to learn about it. Recall how many NPCs told Ashton that the titans were dead? I think a fair interpretation is that party didn't want to talk to people because they might have told them something that challenged their limited worldview and required they change, grow, and empathize with others.
There's a line from I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings: "[My mother] said I must always be intolerant of ignorance but understanding of illiteracy," with the implication that there is a difference between a lack of knowledge that comes from lack of opportunity, vs. lack of knowledge that comes from not caring. And that's the thing. If a fan doesn't know all the lore, or even gets something wrong in good faith? That's fine! There's a lot, and if people don't know every detail of the history of the Calamity that's not a failure on their part, particularly if they acknowledge that they might be missing some information and are still learning. But if someone looks at the story, and looks at the questions within it - in some cases, questions directly stated by the characters within it - and says "who cares?" that's incuriosity. It's not a lack of knowledge; it's a disinterest in gaining it, and a lot of fans of C3 are not just incurious but openly proud of it.
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quipxotic · 9 months ago
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Let's assume sometime during c3e105 various members of Bell's Hells get an opportunity to talk to gods or representatives of gods. I know Ashton said in c3e104 he wants to talk to the Arch Heart, but I hope whatever god they're an aasimar for reaches out to them. That's an element of Ashton's backstory that's had more of a role in fandom discussions than it ever has had in the story and, if we're getting towards the end, now's the time. And maybe with that we can learn a bit more about what happened with the Hishari and the ceremony that changed Ashton's life?
Probably won't happen, but I can hope.
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crtakespropogandist · 2 months ago
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Benefit of hindsight pt. 1
I've said previously, and still believe, that Campaign 3 was insurmountably hamstrung by its own premise. But the CR crew had no way of knowing that for sure, because nobody had ever tried to execute that kind of premise before. Actual Play is a relatively new medium, and some pioneers need to die of dysentery for the caravan to proceed. The cast deserves kudos for all the new ground they've broken and the hard work they've done.
However, I do think there were some ways that specifically Matt could have elevated the campaign while altering the plot, setting, and characters as little as possible overall, and I think the hypothetical animated series would hypothetically benefit from a couple of these changes. If I were Matt and got a do-over, here's what I'd tell myself:
Try not to punish players for staying in-character by withholding lore that they don't explicitly look for, but would benefit from knowing (the PCs may not care about why Otohan turned on the Matron or what exactly happened in Molaesmyr, but the players and the audience might)
Switch up introductions/session zero backstories. Instead of pairing Imogen with Laudna and Ashton with FCG, pair Imogen with FCG and Ashton with Laudna. Start the campaign with Orym, Dorian, and Fearne having already met up with Bertrand and established connections in Jrusar
Light a fuse for conflict with the gods by having FCG (and all their baggage) come across Imogen pre-campaign shortly after she's prayed for a friend to help her understand her freaky dreams
Marisha brought Delilah back because she was still interested in her, but nothing new was learned. Give Laudna more dreams for FCG to explore, dreams that led Laudna to travel to Marquet pre-campaign by way of Jiana Hexum's residuum smuggling biz. Give Laudna dreams/visions where she plays out Delilah's earlier, Cerberus-relevant backstory AS Delilah (and projects Imogen onto Sylas when Marisha's character inevitably gets a thing for Laura's)
This is the most step-on-toes change, but make Taliesin choose between Hishari/titan crap and Dunamancy crap, and encourage him towards Dunamancy crap. That way Ashton's build stays the same, they don't have to go out of the party's way to get their questions answered, the party can learn about the Luxon/Predathos dynamic, and at least one PC is firmly rooted in Marquet as opposed to Tal'dorei/Wildemount/Issylra/the Fae Realm/the sky (Aeor, Ruidus, Silken Squall)
Put the Nobodies in the Paragon's Call
Liam loves rping a Sad Queer, and Laura loves reconciling with a bad parent, but "the twins" have both expressed a willingness to expand their horizons. Take them up on it
Liam explicitly wanted to make a supportive character who starts from a place of acceptance and uplifts the other PCs. Give Orym hopeful NPC interactions and regular updates from Dorian in Robbie's absence to keep him healthy throughout his plot-mandated gauntlet of wound-reopening
Go full in on Liliana as an antagonist (not necessarily an evil villain, but someone who opposes BH and never switches sides). Reveal unethical ways that Ludinus got the answers to win her loyalty. For instance, psychic experimentation on criminal Vergessen patients like a certain failed Volstrucker and the woman who saved him
Stay tuned for more bullets!
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hayleysayshay · 7 months ago
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campaign 3 in cartoon form, TLOVM styleeeee
the pacing of campaign 3 is... interesting, and with the pacing of the tlovm adaptation, i've decided they could probably do the whole story in like, three seasons.
Now admittedly, this isn't a 100% accurate TLOVM style version of campaign 3, because I'm going to suggest ending on cliffhangers and sad endings that TLOVM clearly doesn't want to do. If someone wants to suggeset the happy season endings, be my guest, you're probably more accurate
Season 1: you set up each character and their storylines. We meet daddy (Eshteross) Bertrand is introduced and dies by ep 3, Chetney is in by ep 6. explain Ruidus born, show FCG glitch, suggest Ashton's mysterious backstory, Fearne’s parents explain plot to do with the moon and Ludinus, it's very scary. Otohan Thull is introduced and we end with Imogen going super saiyan but Laudna is DEAD. Perhaps Dorian leaves just before the Otohan fight and Orym sad :c
Season 2: Laudna is DEAD but they go to Whitestone and semi-deal with Delilah and meet VM, who give them some moon related tasks. Ashton and Fearne find the shards, Ashton learns more about their past and the Hishari, FCG gets fixed a little, fun werewolf episode for Chetney. Imodna confession! More Ludinus info! Then they meet the M9 and then the Solstice happens, Vax's orbing time, and they all get blasted away.
Season 3: Post solstice split, we get more god happenings, FCG falls in love and is the happiest they'll ever be. The gang meets up, shardgate, Fearne takes the shard, they go to the moon, FCG dies, I am sad, they get Delilah under control again (she been acting up since the solstice), Dorian comes back, Downfall flashback, Dorym confession, then BH meet the VM and M9 for whatever the fuck is going to happen in this upcoming fight for the EPIC FINALE.
YES season 3 of this is incredibly strained with the amount of plot, just like season 3 of TLOVM so it's accurate <3 Unless something happens and he becoems super interesting, Braius is getting cut (soz I think they're fun for a D&D game but do you rly need him narratively?) IDK Sam'll be fine lol. But yes I'll stand by moving the solstice to 'later' in the show than the campaign. Let season 2 be an epic fight, a small victory and failure, setting up t he epic win of season 3.
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disastergenius · 5 months ago
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I think that if Campaign 3 is wrapping up and we are to see more of Bell's Hells, it's going to be in oneshots or in short (<5 episode) mini-campaigns with split parties.
Reasoning:
Based on the last BH 4SD announcement, people are predicting 3-5 episodes are left of C3. It could be slightly more, since 4SDs have been a bit inconsistent schedule-wise and they could have something like 6-8 episodes and just decided to stretch it to the campaign wrap-up instead of a 4SD so close to the end. But it sounds like the campaign really is in it's end game and thus will end after Ludinus's defeat. While the cast has expressed interest in following up BH storylines or at least continuing with BH characters, it does seem like the campaign proper is ending post big boss battle.
Bell's Hells as a party are not always the most interested in following things that don't involve them directly, so some characters may not want to pursue certain storylines with the others. imo, BH have been pretty isolated in caring about their personal relatedness to an issue but not much past that, regardless of other party member involvement (ex: only Ashton wanted to learn more about the Hishari cult, Delilah interest was limited entirely to when she was an active threat and not otherwise), so I don't really think it's a stretch to say that some PCs are not going to want to continue looking into certain plots after they defeat Ludinus. So splitting the party would give them more freedom to explore arcs either fully absent so their characters don't have to fake an investment in a plot (for lack of a better term, this is not related to the cast having no interest in other characters but their PCs personal goals) or to possibly play as other characters if they were all still playing.
Similar to the way many said in C2 that Veth really had no reason to stay with the party after she was returned to being a Halfling (regardless of whether this is a take you agree with), BH overall don't have as much a reason to stay together at the end of the campaign. They've completed their mission, they're splitting from there, so doing short split campaigns would fit with that if they wanted to keep exploring plot lines they didn't get to touch on during the main campaign without dragging all the PCs along.
Outside the game, it gives them something familiar to work with for their audience (continuing C3 which is popular despite what both fans and haters of it will say about it), and let's them play characters that they do clearly enjoy playing. They've all telegraphed some intents that they have for the futures of their characters, some of which could probably be neatly wrapped up in an epilogue but others they sound like they want to fully flesh out. So short of doing books or other media (which would be their usual options), short mini-campaigns might be the way to explore those plots instead.
All that to say, I don't know what they're planning next, and we'll have to wait and see into the new year what their plans are. I'm sure as the campaign wraps up they will be putting out more things, whether that be the beginning of Campaign 4 or smaller arcs with Daggerheart (I personally want to see Candela return but that seems unlikely) or simply taking a break for a while to focus on M9 Animated/TLOVM Season 4, but I'm excited.
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unicyclehippo · 9 months ago
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questions i would have liked bells hells to answer/ things i would have liked to see (disclaimer i am abt two weeks behind)
- where did Laudna’s shadow powers come from & what is the shadowfell like
- what happened at the hishari village, could ashton explore that & remember more about themself & their family?
- meet the silken squall
- FRIDA ur partner is dead sorry
- Is there any truth to the Dominox vision for chetney? could there have been more push & pull with the wolf beyond the removal of the bloodlust mechanic?
- what was up with that super expensive construct that cyrus lost & was blamed for?
- is Hexum still learning violin?
- what’s up w the stratos throne? what does their region look like? how are they organised? what’s the VIBE? otohan used to operate in that area, was there info about her there? history?
- what’s going on in yios? we only rly got to see the inside of a warehouse, a hotel room casino, & briefly the school. who is there? what are they up to? could they have gone fishing?
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salad-ace · 2 years ago
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I’m seeing some people sad that Team Issylra didn’t follow more threads and be more single-minded about just putting their heads down and getting to their friends but here’s a few things about Team Wildemount that made their path make more sense:
1). They got thrown to a place familiar to at least one of them and then met up with a person familiar to them and ended up in a city that was “safer” at least than Team Issylra
2). They were just as determined to get back to their friends but were told that no one with the ability would be available for several days
3). Along with that information they were told that Ludinus, the person they are fighting, lived in Molaesmyr and figured that going there to get info while waiting for a ride was better than just sitting around.
Team Wildemount didn’t care more about threads they could follow because of a desire to adventure, they did it because they had nothing else to do in the meantime. For Team Issylra while going to the Hishari village would have been awesome from a viewer side because we could learn more about Ashton, they were never going to stray that far off the path when they already had a way to get back to their friends.
Wartime shapes your priorities and for both teams the #1 priority was always get back together ASAP
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railraptor · 2 years ago
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I was a little disappointed that we didn't learn more about the Hishari/Ashton's backstory when it was dangled in front of Team Issylra, but seems like that's still in the future....
I feel like that whole thing is going to be a bigger piece of the puzzle than it seems when we first heard hints of it, back in the museum of death.
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inconmess · 2 years ago
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So Abadina is ex Hishari (kinda suspected that tbh and I think I made a post? I forget. Or maybe it was a discussion I had with someone) and she didn't inform Ashton about that but was defo curious.
What are the chances that Ashton would like to explore the site? I think likely but who knows? Wouldn't be surprised if this was connected to Ludinus in some odd way too. I mean, the other team did divert to Molaesmyr to learn more about Ludinus and I need more Ashton lore. Waiting to see the second half, hopefully without interruption.
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captainsspnanon · 2 years ago
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C3E65 reaction
Imogen Laudna stuff in it's own separate untagged post. Don't search it out if you love the pairing, I'm not here for drama.
FUCKING fanTASTIC episode!!!! ALL of it!
Looking at the timeline for this, as I finished watching late last night but immediately went to bed rather than typing up my reaction, as I always then spent like, 2 or 3 hours on tumblr after no matter how much I say I'm just going to make my reaction then go to sleep.
We got some solid conversation between the groups, and Laudna's freakout was 100% justified. As much as team wildemount did have their own struggles (and they DID!), it was a much more comforting trip than team issylra, especially with all the downtime they got. (had team issylra gotten those five days of wibbly timeline, i'm not sure if it would have been downtime, or if it would have been hishari drama or other drama.)
At the start of the episode, both my mom and I were a bit confused as to why Ashton was so chipper. However, when they had their conversation with FCG about trying to do better, not necessarily being okay but not being bad either, finding a purpose, actively engaging in friendship rather than avoiding it for fear of being burnt again, THEN it made sense. It's certainly one of the times where I would have preferred Taliesin to show more of the emotional transition on screen, but that's not how Tal RPs, and I'm used to that. 4 Sided Dives/Talks are always the best to find out what's truly going on with Tal's PCs, which is a sign of how much he has the inner life for them, and also (in my slightly negative opinion) a sign of how much he isn't really showing it outright in main campaign. And I admit my usual annoyance with Ashton asking Milo to make something but not verbalizing it so that the cast can be surprised when Taliesin shows whatever it was off. I didn't mind it to start, and it made sense with a lot of Percy's things to not take up time, but I've since learned that Taliesin will just do this all the time and yeah. I'm over it. However, by the end of the episode we know at least that the immovable rod was put in the hammer, as well as the scatter spell crystals, so at the very least we know a good chunk, so I feel better about it.
No real comments on FCG's emotional state, especially re: FRIDA, as he right now seems to be keeping it pushed down. However, I did appreciate how much he pushed back on other party members in regards to the opinions of the gods. Things did get smoothed over a bit more easily than I was expecting it to, based on the comments from 6sd, but at the same time it makes absolute sense as this party really is the 'smooth things over' party, especially when compared with VM and M9. I don't consider it a bad thing, tbh, even though I love the interparty drama, because it's a different dynamic that's being explored.
As I've already talked about getting spoiled about the imodna kiss, I'll keep this section brief. 1) I adore how they clearly forgot how Matt held his face to do Zhudanna and I love that they both nearly lost it. 2) Marisha flailing whenever getting romanced will never not be funny. 3) I actually hope that when we next get her on 4sd, she can talk more about the fact that she built a PC to be 'unromanceable'. We know that Liam had designed Caleb to not have another romance, and we saw how that fell apart. I wonder what her thought process was behind it and how she feels about it going forwards, as Liam made the choice with Caleb to RP the unrequited, and then take the steps for the requited, whereas Laura took the initiative with this romance. 4) Pour one out for my mom who is mourning the platonic friendship that she felt mirrored very strongly a friendship that she has which she was enjoying seeing portrayed.
OKay, the NON-romance stuff! I'm very excited to see how it plays out with both Imogen and Laudna feeling the need for power from sources that they feel they can't trust. Laudna not even being able to admit that she wants the power from Delilah, this could be a very interesting road to go down. AND LUDINUS YOU FUCK. So excited to see where else he's dropping his propaganda. Is it just Marquet? It's GOT to be around all of Exandria, right???
Moving on to Fearne, Chetney, and Orym - I'm a little disappointed they didn't share more information with Ajit, but it was a good conversation nonetheless. There were a few things that he said which made me feel as if Matt was leaving a few options open for if the party wanted to do a few paid tasks in town, a la the Mighty Nein. I didn't see any of them being accepted, but I liked that they were still put out there, even if the party is pretty much mainlining the plot at this point. The bounty hunter sent by the shopkeeper was unexpected (or would have been if I hadn't gotten spoiled, dammit) and was a fun mini-combat! I wonder how long Matt had that sitting in his pocket.
THE DUSKMAVEN. That whole scene was SO good! I was a bit surprised at first with how emotional Orym was, considering he didn't really have a connection with her beforehand, until I realized that this was the first time he's been in any temple since the shit hit the fan. I suspect that no matter WHOSE temple it was, he would have been the same way, with the possible exception of the Dawnfather. Having multiple party members receive a vision was definitely a good play, as this moves from FCG being the only one with actual interaction to four members. Vax as an orb forever screaming? fun times fun times. ...there's the morbid angsty part of me that hopes they share that information with Keyleth who shares it with VM. LOOK I LIKE SOME GOOD HURT/COMFORT SOMETIMES OKAY.
LILLIANA ON RUIDUS. LUDINUS ON RUIDUS. IRA ON RUIDUS TALKING WITH REILORA. oh I cannot WAIT to see how things go from here! MOON'S HAUNTED Y'ALL AND THEY ARE GOING BACK WITH A GUN.
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deramin2 · 2 years ago
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There is no way that Matt dropped that in to be ignored, and there's no way that Taliesin "oops my backstory has been a center piece for the last two campaigns" Jaffe is going to just look at that and leave it alone.
What I think is happening is the "gotta stop the appocolypse" OP is discussing, but also I think Ashton is just trying to process that. They compartmentalize their trauma as much as Laudna and I think they're just going,
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ID: text chat screenshot reading "there's a lot to unpack here but let's just throw away the whole suitcase." End ID
He's wondered about Hishari for years and he just got this big infodump he can barely process. And then he's told he could just go there and where all those answers are. And of course as viewers we're like YES! GO THERE AND GIVE US THE SWEET JUICY ANSWERS!! And I'm sure Taliesin is also thinking that.
But also that's the site of Ashton's biggest trauma in a traumatic life. Of course they want to find an excuse to avoid it. Avoidance is what they do.
Ashton: "I'm a very big believer in you just keep, if you keep moving then, you know, momentum means that, you know, you don't really have to focus on anything unpleasant for too long." (CR C3 E62 0:35:33)
It makes sense that they might not be ready to confront that. They've wanted it so much for so long that actually having it in front of them as tangible instead of theoretical is really scary. It arrests the momentum. It means they actually have to decide how they feel and grapple with what happened as historical fact instead of nebulous feelings of rage towards people they basically don't remember.
But Team Unprocessed Trauma were there for him learning that, and I don't think they'll let him avoid it forever, either. It's a thread hanging there now, but eventually he and the rest of the party are going to pull on it. It's also possible that finding out what happened there will be key to unraveling Ludinus' plot. That would be very Matt Mercer.
So I'm also chomping at the bit, but I'm trying to have patience. There's going to be a payoff here eventually and it's going to be good. Taliesin deliberately leaves holes like this for Matt to fill and he will absolutely circle back. If C3 is around the same length as C1 and C2, we're less than half way through the series. There is going to be more time.
okay LISTEN. I fucking love the energy of the "the apocalypse is ACTIVELY happening right now, and so every day where we don't get things done is an active problem."
but DAMN do I wish we had a few days to fuck off to Tumilo to dig into Ashton's past. They fucking deserve to have a few days going after their own shit.
Remember, Ashton literally only decided to stick with Bells Hells because they heard Orym say the word "Ashari" and impulse-decided to help him on his own mission for the sake of maybe finding out a bit more about their past. They've spent a lot of time going along with these people, their new family, helping them all follow the trails of their own pasts. They deserve a chance to go after their own.
But the world is ending. The gods could all die tomorrow. How could Bells Hells possibly justify taking the time to follow any trail but the one Ludinus laid out for them? And yet, for Ashton, who has given so much of himself to all of them, how could they not?
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utilitycaster · 11 months ago
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As a bit of a tangent to this excellent meta, once you acknowledge that this is the campaign, I think the cast has adapted quite well. There actually aren't a ton of major hanging threads outside the main plot that would feel unsatisfying were they not addressed. This also doesn't mean they won't be addressed! The way to great post-canon one-shots as we've seen with Vox Machina and the Mighty Nein are those smaller items; everything tied up neatly with a bow is the kiss of death. But currently, we stand as such:
Orym, Imogen, and Fearne's initial goals evolved into something entirely integrated with the Ruidus plot.
Ashton and Chetney have both addressed their main goals (find out what was up with the Hishari; find the Gorgynei). Both have minor threads they could pursue, but nothing pressing.
FCG similarly addressed most of their goals; more backstory items would have come out in this current trip to Aeor had they not died, much as Ashton's story was also woven into the larger plot as a crucial sidequest in preparation; presumably Braius was created with the understanding that he is a late-game character.
The only major unresolved point outside of the Rudius/Predathos/Vanguard plot is Delilah, and I would note that there's strong precedent for leaving a reduced but not entirely vanquished secondary villain for post-canon resolution, though it's also very possible she'll be dealt with during the course of the campaign.
A lot of the PC-driven stories in prior campaigns were generated from earlier PC-driven choices, and the structure of that campaign makes that less likely. This again isn't a problem - it's just a choice. It provides for some fun one-shot premises (what do we do about Chetney being hunted in Jrusar? What if we found Dorao? Do we want to go to Hishari and piece together precisely what happened, or is Ashton satisfied with what they've learned?) but nothing here is absolutely crucial to end C3 in a satisfying manner.
I'd also like to point out that one of the biggest plot hooks I myself pointed to late in the game of C2 was Molaesmyr, and while that does remain, the Mighty Nein cleaning up Molaesmyr would probably have destroyed the plot of C3 entirely! Sometimes a plot hook is left open for a reason, and especially since we don't know the nature of a Campaign 4 or if there will be one, unresolved threads that would be enticing to explore narratively are a very good sign.
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quipxotic · 3 months ago
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So...now that Campaign 3 is over, will we be getting Bell's Hells comics, either as prequels or sequels to the campaign? I really hope so, I love the comics Critical Role has done so far for Vox Machina and the Mighty Nein.
What story would you most like to see if you could request one in comics form? Me, I want a prequel on Ashton so we can finally learn more about their parents and what happened with the Hishari.
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