Forum Discussion
@Nykara360 wrote:
The difference being humans let other races in the angara do not, they were specifically staying away from other races after what the kett did,
So although on earth alone is multiple species, the angara are different, they werent open to relations with other species.
I suppose I was just pointing out that whether humans wanted others to be able to explore around the solar system or not, those other aliens would have regardless. We might have had the ability to stop them from taking residence on Earth, but stopping them from simply being around 30 plus tsar systems and 100 other planets would have not been possible.
Hence, even though the Angarans keep to themselves, we still landed on their planet and we were on a planet that had none of them on it,
The Kett are still around and so are the Remnant. The harsh reality for the Angarans is, even if they decided they didn't want the Milk Way galaxies there, we weren't going to go anywhere else (at least not in the immediate future) and there would be practically nothing they would have been able to do to stop us.
The more I think about this discussion, it seems to become a situation of humans being special rather than our galaxy. Which is typical since that is what we are and it is our story, lol.
I keep seeing people trying to use the story, as well as the fact that this is only one cluster, to attempt to justify the lack of alien races we encounter.
While I understand why one would do that, this is actually incorrect in response to my question because my question is talking about the motivation behind the story rather than the story itself.
The reason it is looking at the motivation is because the story is fake. It could have been almost anything they wanted it to be which means that the story itself is inconsequential. As I pointed out before, if I wanted to have less races in my new story than I did in the other one, of course I could come up with a feasible reason for it, but my motivation remains that I was being lazy.
It's like when they didn't make Vivienne able to be romanced in Dragon Age: Inquisition, and their argument was something to the affect of "When you see her story you'll understand." This was an unacceptable argument because her story would have been whatever they wanted it to be which means she wasn't able to be romanced because they didn't want to allow her to be.
My question was also incorrect because it failed to look at the other possibility that there could have been budget (and or other limiting factors) constraints that caused us to have so much less sentient races featured in this game.
Even with the story they have in place, there could have been 1 or 2 more races without too many changes, but the point is, the story could have been anything. 1 cluster or not, that has nothing to do with whether or not we could have encountered more races because if they wanted us to encounter more (exceptions aside) no one would have complained about it granted there are 100 planets there and all of this is made up.
Granted the number of problems this game already has, I'm thinking this may have occurred due to real world limitations. Adding just one more race to the mix would have increased their workload drastically and thus provided more that could have went wrong. This would be especially true if any romance options would have been available because of this other race.
That's my opinion anyway.
- 8 years ago
Well, I would assume that budget was MUCH bigger with EA than when BW was creating ME1. MEA was being developed for 5 years. Number of landable planets is much smaller than in ME1, and much smaller than number of locations in DAI. Number of races is much smaller than in ME1. Number of romantic "scenes" is similar to ME1, and number of relation-building team members / NPCs just as big.
We can go on-and-on-and-on with the comparison - and MEA will not usually be on a winning side.
It definitely seems that there were issues with game development, but I am quite sure that number of sapient races is something that must be decided very early in development. I mean: writing the whole story, placing race in lore, preparing models and animations, dialogues, interactions, adding quests... While I believe it is still possible to introduce additional races later in the development (or even to remove them if truly needed), my understanding is that limited number of races was "a design" rather than "a result" of development issues.
We can discuss and assume a lot, but the final effect is that even though MEA is a good game (in my opinion at least), Andromeda is still less "alive", diverse, and imaginative than Milky Way was in ME1. Which is a shame, taking into account that the game premise is to make us feel as explorers in a new land - especially when compared to ME1, which had a premise of making us a galactic commando clashing with galactic-scale threats, but delivered MORE in terms of exploration and discovery. :-(