Morgoth Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 (edited) Is there a source of what actually changes when Anomen goes CN or LG? How much is actually the same between the two? How many banters change? Are dialogues in ToB changed if he goes CN or LG? What about to the post-end speech, when you've defeated the blackhearted? Edited June 9 by Morgoth Quote Link to comment
jmerry Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 A few of Anomen's banters are different, both in SoA and ToB. They're usually conditioned on the "AnomenIsKnight" or "AnomenIsNotKnight" global variables; naturally, these variables are set by dialogue in the ceremony. In addition, Anomen gets either a direct alignment change via dialogue action or a spell cast on him for the alignment change, wisdom change, and name change (Sir Anomen). Anomen has only two epilogues - one if you romance him and stay mortal, one if anything else. In the dialogue for that final choice, if you're in a romance with him, his advice changes based on his alignment. Quote Link to comment
Morgoth Posted June 9 Author Share Posted June 9 (edited) Thanks a lot. Is it possible to define your "a few of Anomen's banters are different"? If you could point it to me, I would research it myself. Just let me know how I could check which banters get "changed" with Nearinfinity Edited June 9 by Morgoth Quote Link to comment
jmerry Posted June 9 Share Posted June 9 Check yourself. Just search dialogue files for ~AnomenIsKnight~, ~AnomenIsNotKnight~, and ~Alignment("Anomen"~ (some of the conditional dialogue uses alignment checks instead of variable checks). After all, I'm using Near Infinity for this too... Quote Link to comment
Morgoth Posted June 9 Author Share Posted June 9 (edited) I've opened near infinity. Using the string ~AnomenIsKnight~ gives me no result. I use Search > Advanced Search > Resourcetype:Dlg. Am I doing something wrong ? Edited June 9 by Morgoth Quote Link to comment
jmerry Posted June 9 Share Posted June 9 (edited) I was using WeiDU conventions there - the tildes are delimiters, not part of the string to search for. " marks would seem more natural, but one of the strings I mentioned there has a " in it already. Edited June 9 by jmerry Quote Link to comment
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