(07-21-2014, 02:12 PM)TheLastCandle Wrote: Sometimes I think people have a serious persecution complex when it comes to criticism of Ul'dah/the Syndicate/Momodi's popoto souffle. Lolorito is pretty clearly acting selfishly for his own gain. I'd say he's hovering somewhere between Neutral Evil/True Neutral using the D&D scale. I usually hesitate to apply the system to characters not in a D&D setting where there is a very tangible presence of "good" and "evil."
Yeah, it's really kind of amusing, tbh.
(07-21-2014, 02:17 PM)Unnamed Mercenary Wrote: We know what happened when refugees did flee to Gridania/The Shroud though. The sylphs freaked out. Assuming the elementals either allowed, put up with, or couldn't do anything about it, Ul'dah was made to be the manufactured choice because it has that "American Dream" idea of pushing up the ranks. ...they just don't tell people that it's probably impossible.
Far as I can tell, Gridania took every single refugee they could without upsetting the Elementals. Â But they were also directly on the front lines of the Ala Mhigan border, so I could see why people would be worried about settling there - what with the bad blood between the two city-states, the Garleans, AND possibly violent Elementals policing the place.
And yeah, the "American Dream" angle makes sense.
(07-21-2014, 02:17 PM)Natalie Mcbeef Wrote: They came to Ul'dah because it was literally the only place that will take them.
That's simply not true. Â :-\ Â Where are you getting this? Â I know you love Ul'dah, but seriously...
Quote:Gridania is Xenophobic, and turned away everyone they could,
While Gridania is xenophobic, they did not, as far as I can tell, "turn away everyone they could." They took as many refugees as they could without breaking their pact with the Twelveswood. Â Around this time, btw, the Sylphs summoned Ramuh for the first time - in direct reasponse to the influx of refugees and the Garlean troops moving through the forest. Â Gridania managed to calm them down, but when a second wave of refugees came tromping through the forest, the Sylphs freaked out again, and summoned Ramuh a second time.
Quote:they probably couldn't afford the boat to Limsa,
Apparently some of them could, because Limsa did take refugees in, and as a result ended up with both Titan and Leviathan summoned. Â So that was great.
Quote:and Ishgard is closed.
Ishgard actually has some refugees working for them in Coerthas. Â I think a better rationale is that a) Ala Mhigo and Ishgard didn't get along in the first place and b) it's a frozen wasteland and people don't like frozen wastelands filled with religious fantatics.
Quote:Ul'dah could have just turned them back into the desert, and they'd be nothing but a footnote in some quests. Instead it makes an honest effort to take care of them. While you say that Gridania took in some but stopped after they hit their limit. Ul'dah is way over it's limit, that's why there is so much turmoil. Ul'dah can't keep supporting these people, but they are trying as long as they can. So I don't get why Ul'dah and the syndicate get painted so unfavorably because of the refugee problem.
It's because of how they have chosen to deal with it. Â The Syndicate is portrayed, in quest text and cutscene, as taking advantage of the refugees as much as possible and basically making their plight worse in order to achieve political and economic goals. Â It's interesting to note that most of the refugees jump at the chance to work for a decent employer who will actually pay them a decent wage - and make comments that imply that many of them can't find jobs in Ul'dah, or if they do, they're underpaid or not paid at all.
I am actually surprised that Ul'dah didn't draft most of them into the army and make a special unit just for the refugees. Â Gridania has one. Â