Who was in the wrong here?
>>3868619
square
>>3868619Dycedarg.
>>3868619neither
Wiegraf was being idealistic. Gustav and the rest of the death corps were being realistic.
>>3868619
Planning for the long term doesn't mean ignoring the short.
>>3868619
One of those men is a terrorist, the other is a revolutionary. Sadly, at the end of the day there isn't that much difference between them. Something Wiegraf is all too eager to prove once he loses sight of what he's fighting for.That being said, he deserved better than what he got.
>>3868631
revolutions are just terrorists who win
>>3868629
If by "short term planning" we mean selling out to the very men we seek to depose. If he's going to trot off to Master Dycedarg's table for scraps the moment his tummy rumbles why even offer his sword to Folles to begin with?
We've seen how Dycedarg treats his people; clemency is just an eight letter word to that asshole. It is a bad plan. Gustav was better off robbing the Ivalese equivalent of a liquor store than becoming a damned narc.
>>3868632
I hear if you win big enough you get a pretty metal hat and a big comfy chair in a castle.You lose absolutely everything else, though.
>>3868636
...still one of the best characters, and stories, in video gaming.