See I get the reason the Reapers are doing what they are doing but if they really believe that the creations will one day destroy the creators, why not simply come back every 50 thousand years and destroy the synthetics?Bara_no_Hime said:I had no problem with that part. The Reapers ARE the civilizations - they are Borg-like collectives controlled by the Catalyst. That was the AI-Logic solution - make all organics into synthetics when they get advanced enough.Wakikifudge said:So you didn't mind that there was very little closure and that the entire reason for the Reaper's existence didn't make sense?
Basically, all those colonists in ME2 weren't being killed - they were being "downloaded" into the Human Reaper. Somewhere out there was a Prothean Reaper and a Capital-size reaper for each Cycle (with the Destroyer class reapers being the other races). They were preserving the DNA of each race - as if the DNA was the most important part.
It was Machine Logic. Technically they were "saving" each race. But not in any way that the race would want to be saved.
Anyway, this was all previously implied. Harbinger said it all through ME2: "We are your salvation." "You are only hurting yourself." "You will become as We are."
THAT part was well foreshadowed and I thought paid off very well.
However...
For me, it was Liara. Yeah. Particularly since the guy on the radio said that everyone in that charge (apart from Shepard and Anderson, I guess) died. So I was like "oh fuck, I just got Liara killed" - and then there she was, on the ship.Wakikifudge said:Or how about how Joker just randomly decides to flee the battle. Very uncharacteristic of him especially after what he did in the second game.
Also, how is it possible that Garrus, who I took with me on the final mission, somehow managed to come out of the crash landed Normandy?
I think that was just bad programming. I think they assumed that you wouldn't bring your beloved into a war-zone... which was stupid, considering that Liara is one of the best anti-husk characters available (Stasis Bubble FTW).
The only thing I could think of was that, after the push failed Liara et al retreated, got picked up by the Normandy, and that they were attempting to board the Citadel from the Normandy when things went crazy. That MIGHT have just been FLT drive, not a Mass Effect jump. Maybe.
That's all I've got on that one. Sorry - that was the only part that really bothered me. It still didn't make me angry - just confused.
The squadmember teleportaion Joker joyriding bit, yeah. The Reaper plan makes perfect sense in screwed-up AI logic. The Lord Reaper obviously doesn't understand what being a "person" means - unlike EDI. It thinks that preserving the DNA is the same as preserving a civilization - which is why it's the bad guy.Wakikifudge said:It's not that it doesn't provide closure, is sad, or that your choices form the other games have little affect on it (I was perfectly fine with all that). It's that the ending actually doesn't make any logical sense.
Also, if a unified species is truly something they believe is so good for the galaxy, why didn't they just do it themselves a long time ago?
The way I see it, they had 3 ways to deal with the threat of synthetics destroying their creators. They chose the one that made the least sense. Why do they even have to leave the galaxy? If they really believe in helping organics then why not just wait until each civilization has matured and then introduce them into the rest of the galaxy themselves? They would be able to monitor any synthetic creations and the people of the galaxy would regard them with the utmost respect for helping their species move to mass effect technology.
There are two options for the Reapers that are clearly easier and better for the galaxy. The only reasoning I could possibly see is that they fear what organics could become and thus decided to "preserve" each race when they became too advanced for their own sake. Of course, if this is true, then that contradicts the ending of the game.
Final thing, Joker was not using the FTL drive, he was traveling through a Mass Relay. That is why they got stranded on a random planet. The mass relays were destroyed while they were traveling through one. Why does he and the rest of the crew just abandon all of the forces? I see how you can make the case that he picks up your squad member from Earth and then leaves but they don't explain his motives at all. Why would the man who once went with Shepard on a SUICIDE mission and risked his life to save humanity decide to leave the final battle when the entire galaxy is on the line.