Unavowed north grove11/18/2023 One of the drawings on the wall even looks like a large human heart! I was sure that the password was on that wall somewhere. I will say that I at first thought the mission was self-contained within that building, too, and that there must have been some other way to get the password. I didn't know the body disappeared, though. There IS evidence of murder on the moss-covered body, but you don't notice it unless you chose the cop background, in which case you spot the knife marks on his neck. I can't help but point out that this one is mistaken. Originally posted by Wadjet Eye Games:This is all a touch nitpicky, but I will address the concerns anyway. I'll definitely swing back around to Unavowed soon, though. Got stuck on the laptop, came here, got temporarily turned off of the game, started playing another one with a recent expansion. Hey, if the body disappears, that definitely resolves some potential issues. I would question the whole "person has been exposed to magic and thus is probably a friend if they have powers" assumption, but you're literally a dev, so it's basically Word of God on this one! XD I guess I'm just conditioned at this point to think: There's a body here, I've now been here, this is a building in an area that has law enforcement, law enforcement knowing about me specifically is a problem (even if I look like someone else, because overreliance on mind-clouding magic often leads to it failing at the WORST times!), I need to make sure no one around here has seen me NEAR the building, much less going in and out of it waving around a picture of someone who may be connected to this corpse, which could lead to people -discovering- the corpse, and all that. It covers it quite comprehensively, thank you. New York doesn't have CCTV like London does, and even if there were cameras around they need a reason to check them. The latter is odd, but not murder and the body disappears anyway. One froze to death, the other is covered in moss. There's no actual evidence of murder on either body. The police generally doesn't spend a lot of manpower solving those. The victims are also homeless vagrants. The people you are questioning are homeless vagrants. You don't look like the person who committed the murders. And even if weren't, you are still veiled. If someone recognizes you through the veil, then they are someone who has deeply experienced the supernatural ("void touched") and would probably be on your side. The police officer is well aware that people were squatting in the building, but nobody has filed a complaint so they haven't done anything about it. So the body in the Village Eye will probably not be found anytime soon. It is established that the presence of ghosts tends to keep the average mundane human away. Nobody knows it's a crime scene except you. This is all a touch nitpicky, but I will address the concerns anyway. I guess I'm just used to tabletop games set in urban fantasy settings where these are things to consider during an investigation, and footwork often IS part of those investigations. unless the house fuzzes cams, in which case it raises different questions, which will also draw more attention. If you don't, that leaves a trail to the subway, to the station you boarded at, potentially to the house. If you disappear off their camera feed, that's going to raise questions. That's still in memory for some people.Įven if not, how about cameras? If the people in the photo are dead and a public investigation starts, and the person you showed the photo to comes forward, it's only a matter of time before they start checking cameras. If they somehow can, you committed a high-profile double-murder in the city about a year ago (or at the very least, the Bartender origin story did). Will the person you talk to be able to see through a veil? That's a risk. This is assuming you can't mind-wipe people. Interacting with a person in a way that is like "Hey, look at this photo, do you know these people" is even more potentially problematic if one or more of those people are currently dead and an investigation starts, or related to dead people in such a way that they get considered persons of interest, and so on, because it can all potentially lead back to you, even if you have nothing to do with the murder. Potentially being seen going back and forth into and out of it, more so. Being at what may become a crime scene is problematic. We've already entered it once, while veiled (not invisible, just veiled). What about veil being compromised? Even if someone knows who you are - that does not disable veil from other persons. What's that about "leaving crime scene"? It doesn't make sense. You're investigating, you should go here and there and talk to people.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |