Well, I personally would be happy to see more kids. Besides, I think Telltale would have a little more leeway to deal with teenagers being violently cruel than little children.
Well, I did say it wasn't my most original idea.
The serial killer in the form of a child would work well if Clementine finds herself in … morea Lord of the Flies environment, but I doubt Telltale would pull it off without making the antagonist act like the kid from Omen.
The only way I can see this happen if the adults take a backseat from the cast and the children and teenagers take the spotlight, which will allow the player to see how they act in a zombie apocalypse when the adults aren't around.
Suppose if Wellington was actually a child slave camp to raise the strongest survivor from birth, this would be a perfect opportunity for your idea to be explored.
Well, I personally would be happy to see more kids. Besides, I think Telltale would have a little more leeway to deal with teenagers being violently cruel than little children.
Someone who possess an overbearingly strong sense of self-entitlement, ungratefulness, victim blaming, and lack of empathy for others. The k… moreind who expects to be rewarded for even the smallest tasks given.
Initially appears as a reliable and unassuming ally of the group with strong opinions over all subjects, even irrelevant ones. Eventually the flaws starts to become more apparent the more in danger the group is in, whether they are directly the cause of it or not, and quickly causes tension in the group by committing unnecessarily cruel acts for the sake of 'surviving' when more ethical and reasonable options are available, such as abandoning well abled people to their deaths in situations where they could easily be saved with team effort.
And then comes the betrayal as the individual ends up feels humiliated (from his/her point of view) over an argument with the group, which ruins his reputation. He/she leaves the group, but not with… [view original content]
The only way I can see this happen if the adults take a backseat from the cast and the children and teenagers take the spotlight, which will… more allow the player to see how they act in a zombie apocalypse when the adults aren't around.
Suppose if Wellington was actually a child slave camp to raise the strongest survivor from birth, this would be a perfect opportunity for your idea to be explored.
Would have been much better of an idea than what we ended up having . Especially since Clementine's 'war paint' and the shadows surrounding her never had any relevance to the story whatsoever.
I never thought of that. Interesting.
Would have been much better of an idea than what we ended up having . Especially since Clementine's 'war paint' and the shadows surrounding her never had any relevance to the story whatsoever.
Not a psycho. A normal person who just happens to be between us and our goals would be a fresh change comparing to all the mad men out there. The kind of vilain who makes you wonder if it's not you the bad person in the story. He/She would not be especially bad or nice, just a survivor trying to...well survive and maybe protect a community. A vilain we could understand and empaphise with. A woman would be interesting too.
I want to see Clementine become the next antagonist. It would be so different and outlandish but sadly I can see Clem becoming a sort of antagonist, or at least deutragonist.
No, its more in his reasoning, he comes across as a cold uncaring person who doesn't give a shit about anyone Like he sees the Nate situation differently than most people. In his mind he sees Nate a guy who gave Russel a ride. Something a friend would do. the old people he didn't know them personally, so he didn't care what happened to them.
How would his PTSD effect him? Does he just show it in his violent actions, or does it make him kinda traumatized like Sarah?
I like it though. Sounds like a solid character,
I'd like to see a group of orphan children who survived in their orphanage, and they capture the group by luring them in with the fact that they're kids, run by a crazy 14 year old, and Clem's the only one who can see who they really are because she's a kid too. Then when, they finally capture them, it takes them by surprise because they're much more dangerous than the group had previously thought.
Looked more like fresh blood or paint to me, since the blood used as a disguise for the walker hoard was darker. They don't really look alike, but it doesn't really matter in the end.
The shadows are clearly living humans rather than the zombie horde - zombies in this series generally have much more distorted silhouettes than live characters. Additionally, the original music for that slide suggested some kind of ritual/battle:
Let's face it - they had very different plans for the last three episodes, but didn't bother to change the slides to fit the new plots. Well, aside from changing the background for episode 3's slide...
The shadows are clearly living humans rather than the zombie horde - zombies in this series generally have much more distorted silhouettes t… morehan live characters. Additionally, the original music for that slide suggested some kind of ritual/battle:
Let's face it - they had very different plans for the last three episodes, but didn't bother to change the slides to fit the new plots. Well, aside from changing the background for episode 3's slide...
Eddie was one of the generic 'strangers' surrounding Clem, not a zombie. The loss of her hat points to a loss of innocence.
As grim as Amid The Ruins was, it had the potential to be even bleaker.
Comments
Well, I personally would be happy to see more kids. Besides, I think Telltale would have a little more leeway to deal with teenagers being violently cruel than little children.
The only way I can see this happen if the adults take a backseat from the cast and the children and teenagers take the spotlight, which will allow the player to see how they act in a zombie apocalypse when the adults aren't around.
Suppose if Wellington was actually a child slave camp to raise the strongest survivor from birth, this would be a perfect opportunity for your idea to be explored.
The whole time I was thinking Becca.
Maybe the scenario implied in Amid The Ruins' original slide would come into play here?
I never thought of that. Interesting.
Would have been much better of an idea than what we ended up having . Especially since Clementine's 'war paint' and the shadows surrounding her never had any relevance to the story whatsoever.
The war paint is the blood covering her face at the start of episode 4.
Not a psycho. A normal person who just happens to be between us and our goals would be a fresh change comparing to all the mad men out there. The kind of vilain who makes you wonder if it's not you the bad person in the story. He/She would not be especially bad or nice, just a survivor trying to...well survive and maybe protect a community. A vilain we could understand and empaphise with. A woman would be interesting too.
I want to see Clementine become the next antagonist. It would be so different and outlandish but sadly I can see Clem becoming a sort of antagonist, or at least deutragonist.
No, its more in his reasoning, he comes across as a cold uncaring person who doesn't give a shit about anyone Like he sees the Nate situation differently than most people. In his mind he sees Nate a guy who gave Russel a ride. Something a friend would do. the old people he didn't know them personally, so he didn't care what happened to them.
I'd like to see a group of orphan children who survived in their orphanage, and they capture the group by luring them in with the fact that they're kids, run by a crazy 14 year old, and Clem's the only one who can see who they really are because she's a kid too. Then when, they finally capture them, it takes them by surprise because they're much more dangerous than the group had previously thought.
Looked more like fresh blood or paint to me, since the blood used as a disguise for the walker hoard was darker. They don't really look alike, but it doesn't really matter in the end.
Kirkman has a group called the Whisperers who are currently doing that in the comics.
They only dress up as Zombies, I mean people who straight up think they are gods or something creepy, like sacrificing to the zombies and such
The shadows are clearly living humans rather than the zombie horde - zombies in this series generally have much more distorted silhouettes than live characters. Additionally, the original music for that slide suggested some kind of ritual/battle:
Let's face it - they had very different plans for the last three episodes, but didn't bother to change the slides to fit the new plots. Well, aside from changing the background for episode 3's slide...
It's not that clear.
All see is Clem with blood on her face surrounded by bodies. This occurred.
The only thing I can see that doesn't fit is Eddie.
Eddie was one of the generic 'strangers' surrounding Clem, not a zombie. The loss of her hat points to a loss of innocence.
As grim as Amid The Ruins was, it had the potential to be even bleaker.
Eddie was one of the shadows around her, yeah. Just as at the start Rebecca is one of the figures around clem amongst the zombies.
Hahaha sorry, the loss of the hat is the 'loss of innocence'?
Since when?
Oh please, every single episode of the walking dead has the potential to be bleaker.
Now that I got the Nate thing out of the way for a direct antagonist goes maybe someone like this.