Lilani said:
I gotta agree with this assessment on companions. I didn't like Miranda too much as a character (though I sympathized with her more after her story missions), but at least she made me feel something. She didn't feel like a placeholder. Jacob, Ashley, and Kaiden all feel utterly lifeless. I sacrificed Ashley on Virmire only because he was a racist *****, but even then I knew she was just the other side of the coin from Kaiden's kiss-ass shtick. Jacob got a little bit of life from his loyalty mission, but I did that mission to ensure the best possible outcome at the end, not because I was actually interested in helping him. Unlike Jack, Mordin, Grunt, Samara, Garrus, Legion and the rest who I was clamoring to help and learn more about.
I've never understood how people can boil Ash down to "racist *****". Pretty much everything she talked about with aliens ended up happening. The Council didn't believe anything Shepard told them(understandable to a point), had their own race's interests far above Humans even after they joined the Council, and really had no interest in anything beyond Council space even if it was affecting them. Honestly my only real gripe about her is the pink jumpsuit, but you can get that for Shepard in-game too and swap it out pretty early on. Also her graphical upgrade in 3, I really dislike her giant shiny lips and her hair going from military to model.
Not to mention she talks quite a bit about the actual racist human political party in less than flattering terms(like, she says they might've been founded with good intentions, but they have nothing to do with the current iteration of it all), and even has her own dialogue if you have her in your team when you run into them on the Citadel...I mean, if she's a racist, she's pretty damn bad at it. I mean, Miranda, Jacob, Kaiden, they all say similar things in that Humanity is going at it alone, even if they've got a handful of alien allies here and there, and nobody's ever called them racist.
Just never got that accusation is all.
AD-Stu said:
I know exactly what you're getting at there, and I agree to an extent.
I'm a little bit inclined to give them a pass on the lack of alien races thing, for a couple of reasons. One is that we just don't know enough about the universe yet: the Remnant/Jaardan are MIA aside from the machines they left behind, and the presence of the Scourge suggests some kind of war or extinction-level event or something. Or it's possible the kett assimilated the other species.
They might have an in-universe reason is what I'm saying... though who knows what our chances are of actually getting the answers.
The second is that, if I've understood correctly, Andromeda takes place in a much smaller area of space than the OT. The OT spanned the entire Milky Way galaxy, whereas Andromeda only happens in a single cluster (since there's no mass relays facilitating longer distance travel). If we think about the OT and there being maybe a dozen or so sentient species, having a lesser number in just one cluster feels plausible.
But would more species have been cool? Yes, absolutely.
One thing I was disappointed by was that many of the worlds didn't feel particularly "alien" - Havaarl and Habitat 7 did, but everything else felt pretty familiar. Though now that I think about it, that feels about right too. Think about all the worlds we saw in the OT, or in pretty much any other work of science fiction, and they all look pretty familiar. There might even be a valid scientific reason for that (planets that support life need to have certain things in common, etc). Having three of the five worlds you spend the most time on all being variations on brown/beige deserts was definitely disappointing though.
The problem I have with giving them a pass is that, sure, it's a small cluster and they're just starting a new story, but there's no real interesting things that the Angaran and Kett have biologically or culturally. The Angaran may as well dress up in ripped fishnets and bikinis and the Kett are just the Turians and Krogan smashed together. Not to say that the OT was completely original in terms of alien design and evolution, but it at least spent alot of time introducing you to multiple members of the species as side characers.
It's like the new Star Wars, Rey may indeed be some kind of amnesiac prodigy, but the only indications before her amazing feats are that she's a scavenger on NOT!Tattooine. Which accounts for some things to a point, but doesn't explain in-movie why she can just pick up a lightsaber, something that's been confirmed and implied in-universe as something that requires training from an early age to even be moderately proficient in, or how she goes from flight sims to actual piloting, I mean, even in real life, the Air Force has quite a bit of extra training after flight training. It's not like they just go from Flight 101 to trying out for the Blue Angels. If they'd had it be something that was constantly be questioned, either the audience themselves or even through looks on the character's faces, I would've accepted it as something that is acknowledged and wait for the next movie, but it was just sorta plopped in there and turned into a "we're gonna answer it as we go" kind of thing.
There may well be more species involved in this anti-Kett revolution, but there's not even a hint of them in pretty much any of the various notepads and fluff scattered around. For me to accept that there's actually more, they need to tease these things before they show up, even if it's only through names and "but you aren't Angaran" type comments.
But I'm sorta there with you on the life support planets, it's just that even when compared to ME2, you had Illium, which is basically just a big city, Tuchanka which is a post-apocalyptic bag of ruins, and various ships that all had their own personality, from the Normandy to the Quarian fleet, to the various space stations, which even then, had distinct layouts and props scattered around them to differentiate the places inside from one another.
Also not locking classes, that's sorta one of those things I have a personal pet peeve about when it comes to class systems. It's one thing if everyone can just equip different stuff and get different abilities, but Ryder can just swap and everyone else is stuck with what they are. It's not interesting if you can just change your abilities on the fly. Really takes out alot of the "punishment" of choosing classes at certain points.