Comments (9) Latest comment 3 years ago

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  • Eraysor #1 3 years ago

    I wonder if killing Wrex has much of an impact on the sequel.
  • davisorle #2 3 years ago

    Post deleted at 20:44:35 16-04-2012
  • ChthonicEcho #3 3 years ago

    I don't want a cheap Wrex knock-off. I want Wrex.
  • jack_klugman #4 3 years ago

    I enjoyed the entirely misjudged marketing opportunity at the end of that video.
  • TheDifficult3rdAlbum #5 3 years ago

    *spoilers, obv*

    The way I read it is if you did not kill Wrex in the first game, Wrex is still alive in the 2nd.

    If you did Kill Wrex, then you get this guy. He is the same "class" but a different character.

    Much like if you killed Ash or Kaiden, you'll get a "replacement" soldier and sentinal character respectively.
    Edited by TheDifficult3rdAlbum at 18/08/09 @ 19:13
  • Xerx3s #6 3 years ago

    Don't you start the game as a completely different character (until you become Shepard)? New lead protagonist is new support tritagonists no?
  • JensonJet #7 3 years ago

    The Difficult 3rd Album. I think you're absolutely correct. It's a guess I made a while back. It's just too difficult to have so many possible future's otherwise. All that will happen between newcomers, and old players regardless of what life/death choice you made for characters is the same story, the same dialogue (more or less) with either the character you allowed to live, or didn't kill, or a new 'replacement' character. We could still be wrong, but I can't see that there are dozens of different outcomes or story arcs. If not because then by the third game we'd have endless variations. Ultimately we're all heading in the same direction and will get to the very same, ending (perhaps with one or two, if we're lucky alternatives!).