Bg3 hot take: Jaheira is not a grandma companion. She's That Bitch and you occupy half a paragraph in her 600-page biography.
Old woman ≠ grandma.

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@garlic-and-vanilla
Bg3 hot take: Jaheira is not a grandma companion. She's That Bitch and you occupy half a paragraph in her 600-page biography.
Old woman ≠ grandma.
⁺˚⋆。°✩₊ 🧙♂️🦑🐈✩₊°⁺˚⋆。
Honestly, the Emperor was right to deceive me at first. He's right that I wouldn't have trusted him. Case in point: I did not trust Omeluum in my first run when I was actually trying to roleplay and make somewhat genuine decisions (not "it's a game, let's just see what happens" decisions). I didn't even do its quest.
Ideally, someone would be honest with you so that you can decide, with all the info, whether to trust them or not. But desperate times and all that. He needed our trust. The fate of a lot of people depended on it. Even if he only cares about saving himself, it's still saving a lot of other lives too, including ours.
Also, plenty of people hide or change things about themselves for their own safety or comfort. Queerness, disability, religion. Things like makeup, hair dye, clothes, and surgery can change how we look. Many people don't even use their real name or share pictures of themselves online.
Also, half of our companions lie or manipulate or withhold info from us too. Astarion tries to manipulate you by seducing you. Astarion, Shadowheart, Gale, and Wyll all withhold important info about themselves.
Also, what does it even matter? Elf, half-orc, mindflayer, what difference does that make? He was still doing what he said he was---protecting us.
Also, he's pretty honest about everything else. He tells you right away that he stole the power he's using to protect you. Tells you he's doing this because he wants to be free of the Absolute. Tells you he ran the Knights of the Shield. Tells you how he got captured by Gortash, mind controlled again, and sent on the nautiloid to find the prism. And when he tells you the tadpole powers will help in your fight, that is also simply the truth.
I have never felt any sort of betrayal from the Emperor.
The Companions: After killing my abuser, I just feel hollow. I thought revenge would fulfil me. But really, it’s left me with more complicated feelings.
Rolan: BITCH!! NO SPINE HAVING ASS BITCH!! YOUR HOUSE IS MINE NOW!!
hes doing some very scientific research
oathbreaker_cary on IG
Video description: A Black man wearing elf ears and dreads and a bandana on his head, pretending to talk to another person. Onscreen text in white says: "I'm Three Drinks Deep at the Elfsong Tavern and Someone Mentions Wyll Ravengard." The angle changes several times and Cary gets more and more animated as he speaks.
Transcription: (sounds of people talking)
Oh nonono, I'm jumping in here. I'm jumping in here because I read the piece in the Gazette, the piece on Wyll Ravengard.
Offscreen voice: Whaddya mean?
You can't slander this man.
Offscreen voice: What're you talking about?
Cary: You can't slander him. No but hear me - hear me well: he was banished from the city by his father at 17. Mind you, he protected the city from a cult of Tiamat. Tiamat cultists. You know where Tiamat was? SHE'S IN HELL. They tried to bring her to Baldur's Gate, and he stopped it. He stopped it! Nono and see this is why you backed Gortash, cuz you lack critical thinking.
Offscren voice: I don't see how that's relevant (repeats)
Cary: You do. You do. You simply do. You- you're completely mischaracterizing this man: he had every chance to just be evil. He coulda been a piece of shit, but he chose light. Where there is surely a path of darkness, he chose light every single time. For 7 years, he went and made a name for himself. As a hero - the Blade of Frontiers. For 7 years.
7 years, a devil in his ear, trying to sway him to a path of darkness, surely. And yet he chose the path of heroism. And you- and you- and you're calling him a fraud? Wyll Ravengard is NOT a fraud. Lorroakan? Fraud. Wyll Ravengard is not a fraud! Not only - not only does he save Baldur's Gate 7 years ago - when he was a teenager, ok? But he comes back with a band of ragtag heroes and helps protect the city from a cultist? The Absolute cultists?
They - DID YOU SEE THE FUCKING BRAIN IN THE SKY? Are you kidding me? This man has saved this city on more than one occasion, and he's not even 30 yet. HE'S NOT EVEN THIRTY YET AND HE SAVED THE CITY TWICE. And you wanna call him a fr- Get the fuck outta my face.
When Fighting Back Becomes a Crime: Ansur, the Emperor, and Fictional Racism in BG3
As someone who did not grow up in a Western cultural context, there was a specific moment in Baldur’s Gate 3 that left me deeply uncomfortable. It wasn’t the fact that we had to kill Ansur, or even the tragic history he shared with the Emperor. It was the moment when Ansur fails to kill the Emperor in his sleep and then, incredibly, condemns him for the act of fighting back.
That reaction stayed with me because it reveals a moral logic the game seems willing to accept. It is the idea that some beings are not only killable, but actually blameworthy for refusing to die.
I can understand Ansur’s fear. I can understand his desperation and his grief. What I cannot accept is the judgment that follows. When Ansur attacks the Emperor, he is not responding to a crime. He is responding to a fear of what might happen in the future. Yet, when the Emperor chooses to survive, the narrative frames his self-defense as a betrayal. It becomes something that needs explanation or even forgiveness.
This framing matters. Being attacked and defending yourself should not require a moral justification. Survival is not a crime. When a story suggests otherwise, we have to ask a difficult question. Who is expected to accept death without resistance?
This is not a hypothetical. The game offers a clear point of comparison in Gale. When Mystra asks Gale to die so that a future catastrophe can be prevented, the players overwhelmingly criticize her. She is seen as cold, manipulative, and controlling. That reaction is important. It shows that players are not actually comfortable with the idea of one person dying for the greater good.
So why does that reaction change so dramatically for the Emperor?
The answer is uncomfortable but clear. Gale is treated as a person whose right to live is a given. Even after he makes catastrophic mistakes in his pursuit of power, and even when the magical artifacts he consumes to stabilize his condition start to fail, he is never treated as a mistake. He becomes a literal ticking time bomb, yet his existence is never something that should have been erased in advance. (For the record, I actually like Gale a lot. He is my favorite companion.)
But as a mind flayer, the Emperor’s existence is treated as a problem to be solved before he has even committed a single harmful act. His potential for harm alone justifies preemptive violence. More disturbingly, his refusal to die makes him look morally suspect.
The standard quietly shifts here. The question is no longer what he has done. It is simply what he is.
This leads to what I call the trap of retroactive justification. I often see players defend Ansur by pointing to the Emperor’s later actions. They mention his secrecy or his manipulations to excuse the original attempt on his life. But this move itself reveals the trap. Once a character is marked as part of an evil race, they are no longer judged by their actions at the moment of violence. Instead, they have to prove they deserve to survive at all. They have to be better than everyone else. They have to be more honest and more restrained just to earn the basic right of self-defense.
This is not how we judge characters like Gale. We don't retroactively decide Gale should have died because he is flawed. But for the Emperor, every imperfection is used as evidence that Ansur was right from the start. On the night Ansur tried to kill him, the judgment wasn't based on a crime. It was based on his tentacles.
When a character is condemned before they act, the issue is no longer about individual morality. This is fictional racism, or perhaps lookism, though in this game they effectively function as the same thing. It is the kind of structural prejudice that makes entire groups disposable by default. If you are a mind flayer, your right to live is conditional. You may be tolerated, but you are never fully innocent and you are never fully entitled to fight back.
This logic is even harder to ignore in Act I. The game frames the safety of the tiefling refugees as a moral imperative and pushes players to eliminate the goblin camp to achieve it. Even though the story suggests only killing the leaders is necessary, the mechanics tell a different story. Once the leaders are dead, the entire camp becomes permanently hostile. There is no negotiation and no retreat. Success is defined as eradication.
Many players don't hesitate because the game rewards this path with experience and loot. Violence is not just permitted, it is structurally encouraged. What makes this troubling is that the game acknowledges both groups are capable of cruelty and kindness. Yet only the goblins are treated as collectively killable.
Averages are irrelevant here. Tieflings can be cruel and goblins can be peaceful. But when being born into a specific race functions as a death sentence before a crime is committed, we are no longer talking about ethics. We are talking about racialized moral superiority. It is a system where some characters are allowed complexity while others are expected to disappear quietly.
Because I did not grow up in a Western cultural context, this logic feels uncomfortably familiar. Not because it maps onto a single real-world group, but because the structure of the bias is so recognizable.
Baldur’s Gate 3 asks many questions about choice and consequence. But it seems unwilling to confront one truth. Who is allowed to fight back, and who is expected to die without protest? When the answer depends on race rather than action, it is not a tragedy. It is fictional racism embedded in the rules of who gets to live.
fan art i drew of Gale dekarios meeting Drizzt Do’Urden at costco
When the world is cruel and unwelcoming, press ZL to turn into a squid
I do love minthara……she’s experienced immense trauma from being mind controlled to do evil things that she didn’t choose to do & as soon as she’s done being mind controlled she’s like THANK GOD. Now i can go back to doing evil things with PRACTICALITY, EFFICIENCY, and FREE WILL
"Spear" соmm
24. Healing It hurts.
my piece for Down By The River artbook
out of context minthara
Thank you for the commission(by my friend😊💜)