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Here it comes:Darksythe wrote:hmm intrestingill have a read into this... a log here what was changed and repaired might be nice
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Humanity is a moral code. Now consider your treatment of Cooper. First, there's the matter of extortion. You exploit his ignorance of vampirism to rob him of nearly five hundred dollars. Then, you send him on a fool's errand to attempt to assassinate one of the following: A Camarilla prince, an Brujah Anarch leader, or the US President. Cooper may be a vampire himself, but he is a neonate and a Thin Blood on top of that. His chance of surviving any of those three encounters is miniscule at best.Humanity is a moral code that allows Kindred to retain their mortal sensibilities in the face of their transformation in to parasitic monsters. In essence, it is what keeps a vampire from becoming a mindless animal, enslaved by their thirst for blood.
That's all true, yes, but you don't actually kill him. Other vampires hunt the thin bloods for sport, don't they? At the beginning, Jack tells you that breaking any number of laws will be the normal order of the night before the night's out, and that humanity loss comes from killing innocent humans. He may be an innocent, but he's not human, and you don't kill him. No harm, no foul. There is nothing in the vampire code of humanity that obliges you to protect the militantly stupid from themselves, or that prevents you from taking advantage of them. Heck, ordinary real-life people do that to each other all the time. It's called 'marketing'.Anaximander wrote:It might help this discussion if we first define humanity. Rather than use a dictionary definition, let's use the one offered by the game itself. Take directly from the in-game tip about humanity:
Humanity is a moral code. Now consider your treatment of Cooper. First, there's the matter of extortion. You exploit his ignorance of vampirism to rob him of nearly five hundred dollars. Then, you send him on a fool's errand to attempt to assassinate one of the following: A Camarilla prince, an Brujah Anarch leader, or the US President. Cooper may be a vampire himself, but he is a neonate and a Thin Blood on top of that. His chance of surviving any of those three encounters is miniscule at best.
There is nothing moral about the way you deal with this poor idiot. You rip him off and send him to almost certain death. The humanity loss is warranted, in my opinion.
I agree with you, also you loose a humanity point when sending Milligan to Pisha so personally killing someone is not necessaryAnaximander wrote: There is nothing moral about the way you deal with this poor idiot. You rip him off and send him to almost certain death. The humanity loss is warranted, in my opinion.
Milligan is clearly not an innocent and is clearly a threat to the Masqurade due to the fact that he is Not innocent.
How about when we threaten Vandal, do we get a Humanity hit for that?
Or when we threaten Mercurio (as a female) to turn him into a Unik if he refuses to tell us about Jeanette, humanity hit?
You take his money, not his life. The real difference between this and Cooper is that you don't send this snob to his demise. Robbing this man is as immoral as robbing Cooper, but robbery and extortion by themselves aren't quite bad enough to warrant a humanity loss.Of how bout the Blueblood when we take his money, by threatening him, Humanity hit?