Black Brothers fight wildlings, Gold Cloaks keep peace based on the Lannisters' whims, and everyone mutters quietly of the Others who reside where snow flourishes. A web of intrigue stretches from the crown in the Red Keep all the way north to the Wall. There are five different endings based on what you do in the last chapter, but the bigger changes occur throughout the adventure as characters are either present or absent based on how you treated them earlier.įor the most part, Game of Thrones stays true to the world George R. Alliances are frequently forged and destroyed, so choose carefully. Regardless of what card you play, the world changes slightly as you get deeper into the story. You respond in conversations with whatever you most want to say and bear the consequences of your actions. There's no morality judge to keep you in line. But if you appear to be a pushover, a clever villager might talk himself out of punishment for a murder he committed. If you approach a prostitute in Mole's Town with insults on your lips and violence in your heart, she may run away instead of offering you the valuable information you require. To kneel at the feet of evil is to align yourself with wickedness, so he takes the punishment for his choices without wavering in the slightest.ĭialogue choices determine how others react to your characters. He acts with his rigid view of morality in mind at all times. The greater good is a burning flame in the back of his mind, always reminding him that things are better for everyone if he doesn't let his pride get in the way. He would rather be humiliated at the feet of Queen Cersei than suffer the wrath of her displeasure. Alester puts his family and townsfolk above all else.
Loosing an arrow at point blank range is how to kill with style.īoth Mors and Alester are strong figures that have a clear idea of the difference between right and wrong. When a letter arrives from the Hand of the King commanding him to protect a mysterious woman, he travels to southern lands to keep her safe. Trapped in his own exile after he disobeyed orders during the war that placed Robert Baratheon on the Iron Throne, Mors mercilessly slays wildlings and deserters to stay true to the sacred oath he swore. Way up in the north, Mors calls the Wall home and the Night's Watch his family. Internal conflicts flare up in Alester as he tries to wrestle power away from Valaar without succumbing to the dirty influences whispering in his ears. Merely walking through the gate should, by rights, make him the ruler given that his lord father recently passed, but his conniving bastard brother, Valaar, stands between him and his rightful seat of power. Alester returns to his home of Riverspring after spending the last 15 years in self-imposed exile. You view Westeros through the eyes of two separate characters created just for this adventure, Alester Sarwyck and Mors Westford. Rather, the game's story travels a parallel path to the cataclysmic events that rocked a kingdom. Game of Thrones doesn't retell the story of the novel. Now Playing: Game of Thrones Video Review By clicking 'enter', you agree to GameSpot's