Have you changed as you've progressed? *Episode 1-3 Spoilers*

I've noticed the further I get into the season my decisions and morals have changed of that when I first started episode 1.

Episode 1 I was so bent out trying to get people to like me like Hershel recommended and also by being honest which is 1 trait I've stuck out with that I was sometimes blinded by what I thought was the right thing like not threatening to knock Larry on his arse.

Episode 2 was when I was trying to ground my own authority and take leadership, I refrained from killing both St Johns and Larry, I felt pretty good as I took the moral high ground but I still noticed slight changes in my approach such as being straight forward with the group and the fact I brutally beat Andy St John to an inch of his life (but come on who didn't).

Episode 3 is where I've noticed a lot of change, I've been blunt with Kenny and Lily not giving a shit what they think along with telling everyone in the group about my past, I still show compassion such as shooting the girl in the head for mercy and shooting Duck, but I've also threatened to kill Ben and Chuck in the process.

I've gone from wanting to be the peace keeper to the guy dishing out death threats. I hate to say it but the more I play it the more I turn into Larry!!

Comments

  • edited September 2012
    I know what you mean. During the course of episodes 1-2, I wanted to be the hero and do the morally right things. When I played episode 3, I had to stop thinking about the morally right things and start considering the safety of the group instead.
  • edited September 2012
    Episodes 1 and 2 I was playing for the group, as in I put the group ahead of me regardless of the consequence. Episode 3, especially after carly died, I started making decisions more so on instinct and not over thinking it. If I didnt like an idea I didnt appease the group by saying I agree.

    Basically I played episode 3 more realistic as if I was in that situation. I played 1 and 2 solely trying to like you said make everyone happy and not to upset anyone.
  • edited September 2012
    For me, I tried to keep the group happy and safe in Episodes 1 and 2... after Carley... it became obvious that survival has to be first and foremost.

    Anyone "with me" (Clem and previously Carley) is my top priority.

    Anyone who's for themselves (Kenny-> Who put his family first, and I can't blame him) or appears to be a danger (Lilly, who I saw as an ally till that moment.. despite everything... and Ben, who I clearly can't trust) is on their own.
  • edited September 2012
    Hell yea. In Episodes 1 and 2 i was trying to help everyone and be the good guy.

    Now that Episode 3 has pretty much destroyed my Lee (on the inside) i don't give a crap about anyone else except Clem. Screw everyone else.
  • edited September 2012
    Episode 1, I was loyal to the people I rolled with from the beginning and who seemed to hit it off best with Lee. I also was sympathetic to anyone else even if they were assholes. This made me kind of submissive, I realize, and Kenny called me out on it and said the team was going to need a leader and that I should be that guy.

    Episode 2, I took Kenny's words to heart and just tried to save as many people as I could while trying to get them not to tear the place apart. I fed Larry, chatted up Lilly, listened to everyone's concerns, and tried to be nice. Also, I tried to be a role model for Clementine, which eventually made Lee a role model for EVERYBODY even if Kenny got pissed off.

    Episode 3, I settled in as team diplomat and leader and started treating Lilly like a deposed queen. I entertained her thoughts but mostly just tried not to let her walk all over everybody. Just tried to make sure everyone had what they needed and made sure to take on the hard decisions so other people didn't have to.

    Recently started a new game with a dominant Lee.

    Mostly he just teams up with Kenny to kick zombie ass and make sure Kenny doesn't forget that we have to save lives. Kills bad living people. Stays quiet when he's not sure about the different relationships (which is really enlightening I have to say...you learn a lot about people when you're not trying to get them to stop talking and be nice to each other).
  • edited September 2012
    I played the game pretty dominantly. I always tried to make Lee the leader whenever he could. Only really cared about Kenny's family , Clem and Carley. So surprisingly I haven't really changed at all.
  • edited September 2012
    Since I was following the comic before this came out, my playstyle hasnt changed one bit. I figured this would be a game about death, shady survivors and resources, was pretty much spot on.
  • edited September 2012
    I find myself becoming a smidge more compassionate in the game - probably because I'm feeling jaded at the level of death and the bad luck our group is having as a whole.
    For example, I just COULDN'T let that girl suffer in town. I remember thinking to myself that I would hope that someone would do that for me.

    If this were real, I knew this would have been stupid. For one, shooting her in the head would have been a very difficult shot to make (especially as she is thrashing about trying to escape the Walker's) two, I know she is already dead (she was bit right in front of me) and that any shot I make will attract Walkers over to me and Kenny, who are very much alive. Third, I know that Kenny and I still have to get our supplies - that it will affect the well being of our group if we come back empty handed.

    Had this been the beginning of episode two, I would not have made that shot.

    I think ending her suffering renewed my spirit, however, because after that almost NOTHING phased me up until I offered to shoot Duck.
  • edited September 2012
    I've noticed the further I get into the season my decisions and morals have changed of that when I first started episode 1.

    Episode 1 I was so bent out trying to get people to like me like Hershel recommended and also by being honest which is 1 trait I've stuck out with that I was sometimes blinded by what I thought was the right thing like not threatening to knock Larry on his arse.

    Episode 2 was when I was trying to ground my own authority and take leadership, I refrained from killing both St Johns and Larry, I felt pretty good as I took the moral high ground but I still noticed slight changes in my approach such as being straight forward with the group and the fact I brutally beat Andy St John to an inch of his life (but come on who didn't).

    Episode 3 is where I've noticed a lot of change, I've been blunt with Kenny and Lily not giving a shit what they think along with telling everyone in the group about my past, I still show compassion such as shooting the girl in the head for mercy and shooting Duck, but I've also threatened to kill Ben and Chuck in the process.

    I've gone from wanting to be the peace keeper to the guy dishing out death threats. I hate to say it but the more I play it the more I turn into Larry!!
    Pretty much the same, except I killed both the brothers for being assholes and I dumped Lilly off cause she was a danger to the entire group.
  • edited September 2012
    I became more cruel as I played but did it in a way so my group wouldn't shun me.


    Episode 2 I let them live knowing that they would die from the zombies it was a better punishment then killing them, it also let me kill them without killing them, I wouldn't shock the group or scare them if I let them live. I didn't let side with Kenny on killing Larry. At least not the way he did it. He should have waited it was rash and stupid to do it like that.


    Reasoning killing someone outright in front of the group could cause some of them to fear you and from what we saw from Lilly fear and paranoia are not good.

    Episode 3, I did not perform a mercy kill on the lady in the street. She was doomed and with her there we have enough time to gather supplies. If there was a way though to save her before she gotten bitten I would have done so, Sadly there wasn't she was to far and couldn't risk not being able to gather supplies for the group because of a mercy kill.


    I let the Saint Johns live so they could suffer far more before they died.
    I let the women in the street live so she could help the group. I didn't want to let her suffer but it had to be done.

    With Lilly and Kenny

    I always picked who I felt was in the right in the moment. I just wanted what was best for the group.
  • edited September 2012
    To be honest, I've always tried to be a survivor. I had 1 moment in Ep 1 where I gave the lady the gun to kill herself, but from then on its been survival of the group. I killed Larry, took the food and let the girl die.
  • edited September 2012
    Wrighty wrote: »
    To be honest, I've always tried to be a survivor. I had 1 moment in Ep 1 where I gave the lady the gun to kill herself, but from then on its been survival of the group. I killed Larry, took the food and let the girl die.

    thats exactly what i did
  • edited September 2012
    I'm definatly getting more depressed the farther i get, I know thats what they want, but it really helps relate to the comics or show feeling what the characters feel
  • edited September 2012
    In episode 1 I sided with Kenny, because he seemed to be the good guy then. I tried to play the good guy all the time, the peace-keeper. I tried to save everyone I could, like the teacher and Ben, because it was the right thing to do. I killed Jolene because I thought she said she'd kill everyone at the dairy. I actually felt bad.

    Then in the meat locker, I helped Kenny kill Larry because I thought he would turn. Pitchforked Danny so he couldn't hurt anyone else. Going into episode 3 my body count was at 3. I shot the girl in the street, because Kenny was a real d-bag at the start. I tried to say I wouldn't kill any more human beings after the dairy incident, but then the bandits attacked. I was actually happy though, because a threat had been eliminated and I thought that Lee had a real chance at happiness with Carley.

    Then after Lilly blew her brains all over the side of the road, I abandoned her. Learned that Duck was bitten and I lost some hope. Then after Kat killed herself and I shot Duck, my hope died completely. Now my only friends are Clem and Kenny, and I've become so jaded that the only thing I want to know about any newcomers is there name. I got close to everyone in the original group and I don't think my Lee could take another death like that.
  • edited September 2012
    I went from being nice to being neutral to not giving a shit about anything
  • edited September 2012
    Interesting thread.
    I did not change at all over the episodes. I play as if I were Lee and because I did not change within the last months, my gameplay didn't either. (I'm one of those peace-keeping, moral idiots.)
    On the other hand, I have a second game running, which I play immediately after finishing a chapter, where I do not identify with Lee, but instead play him as an egoistic asshole. (Well, except regarding Clem. I know, it's just a game, but I just can't stand being an asshole to a little girl - not even in fiction.)
  • JenniferJennifer Moderator
    edited September 2012
    I did change my choices, especially in episode 3. In episode 1, I never would have
    let the girl get eaten alive while Kenny and I snuck into the pharmacy. But Kenny was hurt and I didn't want to attract the walkers. I felt really bad when she was screaming outside the building, but she was a lost cause either way.
  • edited September 2012
    For example, I just COULDN'T let that girl suffer in town.

    That was a given for me as well, I couldn't leave her like that. However, I have found that my first instincts are not always the most fitting for me. Alternate plays often reveal responses that feel better. Katjaa for instance, while she did thank Lee for offering, she very much had her own agenda and I felt like I had overstepped. My second play was very different.
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