i have work 2mrw but um … 💚 this 4 a plot dm ? 😳
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i have work 2mrw but um … 💚 this 4 a plot dm ? 😳
You know, the more I think about it, Nanna being the first enchanter’s apprentice and being so study oriented…She’s probably lowkey competitive
Actually I don’t think I’ve talked about the orange thing outside of allusions in some of my flashback prompts. So, when Nanna was very little and still living in Nevarra, her family had a small orange grove that grew just outside her bedroom window, so oranges and orange blossoms were a staple of the short childhood she spent on the southern coast.
Now obviously, Ferelden’s climate isn’t very supportive of citrus growth, being colder and harsher as it is, so Nanna hasn’t been really exposed to it beyond the occasional imported lemon. But the first time she does, she will start crying and not understand fully why.
Work thought to keep myself awake but I’ve been of 2 minds of how to build Rashath’s clan, because obviously there’s the one he was born to but also. Have been very enamored with the idea of a built clan of exiles
Tell me what, if anything, Nanna takes for herself from the Tower during A Broken Circle
Trauma.
Ok I assume you mean besides that HDHSJHD I think the biggest takeaway I can think of is the shattered illusion of Templar strength.
Firstly it came from Greagoir; the Knight-Commander posited himself as THE authority of Ferelden’s Circle, no matter how much Irving tries to paint this as a working relationship or a personal friendship. The fact that Irving wanted further investigation on the claims of Jowan being a blood mage and he was overridden says enough. The fact that Greagoir was right doesn’t matter—he ignored calls for evidence and signed off on the Rite without any consultation from Irving whatsoever. He was already doing the late Act 2-Act 3 Meredith thing without the same provocations. As far as Nanna was aware, he and the Templars were the prime authority.
But then she arrived back at the Tower and aside from having to admit to her of all people that the Templars had completely lost control of the Tower, but he also showed his hand that as a Grey Warden—even one that’s been accused of regicide—he doesn’t have authority over her. He can’t wave her off and can’t force her to leave or to stay(which was one of her fears and why she waited so long to come in the first place), and there’s a degree that she can match his authority on. For the first time, Nanna experiences Greagoir having to address her.
The short version is it’s the first real jolt that makes her reevaluate what she thinks she has to do as a mage.