Though I've had few in-game encounters with JM|-, they seem to be a good faction.
(03-02-2014, 09:55 PM)Junker Marauders Wrote:
the Congress, who are official, who are the 'lawful' side of that coin.
If the Congress are going to be the more lawful-ish orientated Junkers, with a few pinches of smuggling in-between; the Junker Marauders would be the more unlawful-ish orientated Junkers, with a few pinches of lawfulness, but only for appearance, which is traditional with Junkers.
the more lawful-orientated pursuit of the Congress.
We want to make Junkers more diverse. We want to add diversity to the Junker roleplay. We want to prove that we're a competent faction that is ready to fill the boots of that role. We attempt to maintain a high standard of roleplay in our piracy encounters, trying to stand up as a rolemodel for a pirate faction.
You're diversifying the Junkers, and following the traditional vanilla Junker roleplay. This is great, however from my experiences you're not really on the different side of the quasilawful "coin" (which I know well, given my experience from UC). The Congress, though they don't pirate, do in fact smuggle quite often. How they manage to get away with it is another story altogether, but I digress - this is the Marauder thread after all.
Though a well roleplayed, truly quasilawful Junker faction would be awesome, the Mauraders will be fun to encounter and I look forward to seeing you folks.
Oh, before I forget. If you're going to include Gallia in your ZoI, you ought to be aware of some things. The Gallic Royal Navy, Gallic Royal Police, and Maquis will shoot you, so they should probably be listed as Hostile. Unione Corse and Council are a definite Unfriendly, with leanings toward hostility, depending on how you interact with them. Gallic Brigands could be either neutral or unfriendly given their other diplomatic ties, but sadly there's not really many players for them.
"You see what your knowledge tells you you're seeing. ... how, what you think the universe is, and how you react to that in everything you do, depends on what you know. And when that knowledge changes, for you, the universe changes. And that is as true for the whole of society as that is for the individual. We all are what we know, today. What we knew yesterday, was different; and so were we."
- James Burke, The Day the Universe Changed (1985)