I like the part where Conrad in episode 4 teliports to save you and when the ep ends he is standing right next to you but then episode 5 comes and he warped to another universe and waited for everything to calm down before coming back lmao
If you kill conrand it dosent feel like it weighs on the story.
Think about it this way: at the end of the penultimate episode of anf if … moreu save contad he save u from kate driving, but if conrad is dead there are no consequences, i mean if javier losed an hand because hw didn’t save conrad it would have more impat youknowwahtimsaying
Wow I so strongly disagree. SEVERAL scenes give the player a very different experience based on whether you shoot Conrad or not (The Badger scene, the scene in the apartment, the very end of episode 4) plus like I said, he is actually given a fully fledged arc, which you can really any say about 3-4 other determinants
If you kill conrand it dosent feel like it weighs on the story.
Think about it this way: at the end of the penultimate episode of anf if … moreu save contad he save u from kate driving, but if conrad is dead there are no consequences, i mean if javier losed an hand because hw didn’t save conrad it would have more impat youknowwahtimsaying
I like the part where Conrad in episode 4 teliports to save you and when the ep ends he is standing right next to you but then episode 5 comes and he warped to another universe and waited for everything to calm down before coming back lmao
I really don't think Conrad had a good character arc if you keep him alive. Episode 2 he will stop at nothing for revenge, episode 3 he gives up these ambitions after 30 minutes and apologizes to Javi instead of Gabe or Clem, episode 4 he just leaves his friends for no reason and then shows up again for no reason, episode 5 he literally vanishes for the entire episode and you find him reading a cowboy book at the end.
Look, I applaud Telltale for actually making a triple determinant character who can survive a season, but let's not pretend that post-episode 2 Conrad is this super well written character or that Telltale didn't struggle to figure out what to do with him most of the time.
Wow I so strongly disagree. SEVERAL scenes give the player a very different experience based on whether you shoot Conrad or not (The Badger … morescene, the scene in the apartment, the very end of episode 4) plus like I said, he is actually given a fully fledged arc, which you can really any say about 3-4 other determinants
Nah, the character arc was fine.
It's Telltale's recurring inability to make anything outside of their most important character(s)(which is usually just one or two characters) feel adequately cohesive, fleshed out, or well paced across multiple episodes that's always the real issue.
It didn't help that ANF only had about an hour of screentime per episode in this case.
I really don't think Conrad had a good character arc if you keep him alive. Episode 2 he will stop at nothing for revenge, episode 3 he give… mores up these ambitions after 30 minutes and apologizes to Javi instead of Gabe or Clem, episode 4 he just leaves his friends for no reason and then shows up again for no reason, episode 5 he literally vanishes for the entire episode and you find him reading a cowboy book at the end.
Look, I applaud Telltale for actually making a triple determinant character who can survive a season, but let's not pretend that post-episode 2 Conrad is this super well written character or that Telltale didn't struggle to figure out what to do with him most of the time.
He still was hell bent on revenge in episode 3 throughout the episode. It's not like he drops his mission of revenge all together, that is definetely still his end goal, his ONLY goal. But he is a good person, and he had some time to think about what he'd done in the tunnels, so he apologize. Then after he kills Badger he has no idea what to do, that was all he cared about. He lost his home, his wife, and he doesn't want to die trying to save people he doesn't care about, so he leaves to figure out who hes going to be now "i just gotta figure it out; Who the new Conrad is" And as he's leaving he realizes his purpose. Richmond can be his new home, and Javi can be his new family. So he comes back, this time to stay, and that concludes his arc.
That was kinda a rushed version, but his arc makes perfect sense. It's an arc of revenge, redemption, recovery, and, going along with the theme of the season, family.
I really don't think Conrad had a good character arc if you keep him alive. Episode 2 he will stop at nothing for revenge, episode 3 he give… mores up these ambitions after 30 minutes and apologizes to Javi instead of Gabe or Clem, episode 4 he just leaves his friends for no reason and then shows up again for no reason, episode 5 he literally vanishes for the entire episode and you find him reading a cowboy book at the end.
Look, I applaud Telltale for actually making a triple determinant character who can survive a season, but let's not pretend that post-episode 2 Conrad is this super well written character or that Telltale didn't struggle to figure out what to do with him most of the time.
One funny thing about the Thicker than Water part: depending on factors I don't actually know, his reasoning for coming back is any combination of feeling it was the right thing(or as he puts it, something convinced him to come back) and/or the herd outside keeping him from actually leaving.
Oh, and the end message of the game generally that he delivers is that death isn't something to be feared, but rather dealt with as a natural expectancy. Or in his case, not letting what he lost consume him.
He still was hell bent on revenge in episode 3 throughout the episode. It's not like he drops his mission of revenge all together, that is d… moreefinetely still his end goal, his ONLY goal. But he is a good person, and he had some time to think about what he'd done in the tunnels, so he apologize. Then after he kills Badger he has no idea what to do, that was all he cared about. He lost his home, his wife, and he doesn't want to die trying to save people he doesn't care about, so he leaves to figure out who hes going to be now "i just gotta figure it out; Who the new Conrad is" And as he's leaving he realizes his purpose. Richmond can be his new home, and Javi can be his new family. So he comes back, this time to stay, and that concludes his arc.
That was kinda a rushed version, but his arc makes perfect sense. It's an arc of revenge, redemption, recovery, and, going along with the theme of the season, family.
Conflict in The Final Season: Very limited numbers of combatants on each side make every fight a battle of attrition. Weapons are few and far between forcing you to use your wits. Every action carries weight and consequence.
Conflict in The Final Season: Very limited numbers of combatants on each side make every fight a battle of attrition. Weapons are few and fa… morer between forcing you to use your wits. Every action carries weight and consequence.
Conflict in A New Frontier:
Comments
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I like the part where Conrad in episode 4 teliports to save you and when the ep ends he is standing right next to you but then episode 5 comes and he warped to another universe and waited for everything to calm down before coming back lmao
Wow I so strongly disagree. SEVERAL scenes give the player a very different experience based on whether you shoot Conrad or not (The Badger scene, the scene in the apartment, the very end of episode 4) plus like I said, he is actually given a fully fledged arc, which you can really any say about 3-4 other determinants
Yeah I mean his arc was pretty much over by then, but his disappearing act in episode 5 was still pretty disappointing
I really don't think Conrad had a good character arc if you keep him alive. Episode 2 he will stop at nothing for revenge, episode 3 he gives up these ambitions after 30 minutes and apologizes to Javi instead of Gabe or Clem, episode 4 he just leaves his friends for no reason and then shows up again for no reason, episode 5 he literally vanishes for the entire episode and you find him reading a cowboy book at the end.
Look, I applaud Telltale for actually making a triple determinant character who can survive a season, but let's not pretend that post-episode 2 Conrad is this super well written character or that Telltale didn't struggle to figure out what to do with him most of the time.
Nah, the character arc was fine.
It's Telltale's recurring inability to make anything outside of their most important character(s)(which is usually just one or two characters) feel adequately cohesive, fleshed out, or well paced across multiple episodes that's always the real issue.
It didn't help that ANF only had about an hour of screentime per episode in this case.
He still was hell bent on revenge in episode 3 throughout the episode. It's not like he drops his mission of revenge all together, that is definetely still his end goal, his ONLY goal. But he is a good person, and he had some time to think about what he'd done in the tunnels, so he apologize. Then after he kills Badger he has no idea what to do, that was all he cared about. He lost his home, his wife, and he doesn't want to die trying to save people he doesn't care about, so he leaves to figure out who hes going to be now "i just gotta figure it out; Who the new Conrad is" And as he's leaving he realizes his purpose. Richmond can be his new home, and Javi can be his new family. So he comes back, this time to stay, and that concludes his arc.
That was kinda a rushed version, but his arc makes perfect sense. It's an arc of revenge, redemption, recovery, and, going along with the theme of the season, family.
One funny thing about the Thicker than Water part: depending on factors I don't actually know, his reasoning for coming back is any combination of feeling it was the right thing(or as he puts it, something convinced him to come back) and/or the herd outside keeping him from actually leaving.
Oh, and the end message of the game generally that he delivers is that death isn't something to be feared, but rather dealt with as a natural expectancy. Or in his case, not letting what he lost consume him.
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Arvo would be unstoppable if he had that.
You cannot fathom how much I've mourned...what numerous hours of grief has done to me!
press f
Conflict in The Final Season: Very limited numbers of combatants on each side make every fight a battle of attrition. Weapons are few and far between forcing you to use your wits. Every action carries weight and consequence.
Conflict in A New Frontier:
I still think the battle of Richmond should've had this music playing in the background. It would've made it so much better
yo adoc pls save wolf 2
me on the walking dead subreddit and seeing the ending might have just been leaked
Yeah, I heard the ending might've been leaked a while ago.
well this was like 10 images n shit homie. shits wild out here cuh
Dat moment when Telltale themselves give into dis pear
tfw mods delete meme cuz i said the foul word "loser"
ˢᵒʳʳʸ ᵍᵉᶰᵗᶫᵉᵐᵉᶰ ᶦᵗ ʷᵒᶰᵗ ʰᵃᵖᵖᵉᶰ ᵃᵍᵃᶦᶰ
"Adrien!"
Everyone survive ep4, Clem and Violet get together, a community get founded and all live happily ever after
everybody ded
He doesn't look disappointed so much as sternly aware.
PAGE 600 WOOOOOOOOOO
Repost for page 600
Everyone survive ep4, Clem and Violet get together, a community get founded and all live happily ever after
everybody ded
pls dont be bad
Oh yea--SHIT!
(Sorry, I couldn't find a better meme)
for fucks sake kevin
me and the fellas walking up to skybound HQ explaining why they should make tales from the borderlands 2 like
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anf amirit
they got us in the first half not gonna lie
also kenny dlc april 23rd why is no one talking about this? smh
Oh hai, Anthony Mackie and Wanda Sykes!
Credit to @BetterToSleep
damn avesta step aside
9.7 likes and I bring back the booty bowl for old times sake
Ah yes, Fern. What a trophy.
Bring ?Back ?The ?Booty
Is that real? I've seen lots of people comment on Kenny DLC but couldn't find any news sources to verify it. If it's true, that's amazing
only 2 more months and kenny dlc will be released
once i get 100k likes i shall spill the beans
...-_-
tfw kent mundle says the original plot was about clem going between large groups, those groups being wellington and richmond
bruh wtf, i feel something had to have been miscommunication here
Edit: confirmed spelling error, was going to be a new place called Rancho Verde