But the ending contradicts what happened in "The Arrival" DLC. The destruction of the Mass Relay in "The Arrival" unleashed enough power to destroy a solar system. If all the Mass Relays are destroyed, then every solar system with a Mass Relay is also destroyed.Deremix said:Yeah, guys, I have to agree with the people defending the endings. While not what most people were expecting, the endings were kind of perfect in their own way. It shows that the galaxy is once and for all free to rebuild, restart, free of the Reapers influence. And as the cutscene with the stargazers showed, civilization did continue, they did rebuild, and they're starting space travel on their own, without the tech left behind by the Reapers.
I understand the disappointment and rage though. It all stems from this: it's because there were no epilogues, no explanation as to what happened to all those characters that you spent so much time getting to know and love. And I am disappointed with this as well, but you just have to sit back and hope BioWare releases some sort of patch or DLC that gives epilogues for everyone.
Also, the synthesis ending makes no sense even with Mass Effect's magic science. How does the radiation magically rewrite everyone's DNA to contain synthetic components without killing them?
The good parts of ME3 are great but bad parts of ME3 reminds me of a lot of the dumbest stuff in Star Trek. The way they wussified the Reapers is a lot like what Voyager did to the Borg. They built them into this massive unstoppable force but had no idea how the heroes were going to beat them so they dropped their IQ by about 90%. The whole synthesis ending reminds me a lot of terrible episodes like "Genesis" and "Threshold" where the "science" part of "science fiction" is screwed up to such an unbelievable extent.