You should read the link Gilthoniel provided in one of the above posts. I remember she said back in Vizima that she doesn't want to hear excuses, but I'm pretty sure it needed to come out before she could feel secure about Geralt. As a final little thought, I felt Yen needed to have a talk to Geralt about Triss at some point. That would give the player a chance to get to know both love interests in Geralt's life before making a final choice. You have a chance post-Last Wish to convince her otherwise. That she isn't convinced that she can have Geralt with Yen back in the picture, or that he might not really want her now that his memories are back and Triss took advantage of him. If we could add some scenes, I'd rather tweak the scene with Triss at the docks to not be the definitive confession. The way it stands now, either the final confession to Triss should've been moved to after Last Wish or, like hismastersvoice suggested, Last Wish needed to happen sooner. Sure the wish doesn't prevent Geralt from falling in love with other people, but shouldn't that have factored into those moments? Shouldn't it have added a pretty big element of doubt that the relationship with Triss might not last or be sabotaged somehow because of the wish? That alone makes me scratch my head a little. The real issue was at what time the Last Wish takes place.īy the time you go out to find the Djinn with Yen your Geralt could already have confessed his feelings to Triss. Because you made it make sense with your actions.Īs nostalgic as the Last Wish was, I think it would have been better to handle the spell breaking as early as possible (perhaps even off screen, via some ex machina) and let Geralt and Yen figure the future out on their own. As the end of the arc comes around, regardless of whether you remain indifferent or rekindle the spark, it all feels organics and, well. The connection either grows organically or never takes off. You do the quest line and in doing so, you can choose to grow closer or remain distant. At the same time, you're essentially free agents with the ability to pursue the potential relationship again, if you so desire. You meet her, and even without knowing anything about the events of the previous games, it's easy to establish you have a past that isn't really in the past, so to speak. And then the D'jinn quest ends and the whole relationship drops off a cliff if you pick one of the options (but in reality nothing changes because Yen is necessary for the rest of the game), or continues on without any change if you pick the other. We did that, we went there, wasn't that great, how we (mostly Yen) laughed, etc. In fact, most of the interactions with her boil down to reminiscing. From the way you interact with each other in Wyzima, to the first bed scene, through the main quest line, you're constantly reminded that Yen is important. You meet Yen, and the game immediately tells you via dialogue that this isn't a smash and run relationship. chronological issue with the way the relationship with Yen was handled.
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