I played a mage who sided with the Templars on the twin grounds of egotism and logic.
First and foremost, he firmly believed that any mage less disciplined that himself (ie. everyone) belonged in the circle for the public safety.
Secondly, the argument between Orsino and Meredith - when Hawke has the opportunity to intervene - isn't about the annulment of the circle, it's simply about whether she has the right to search the Circle from top to bottom. That's a easy one: she does.
Regarding companions that you don't have the opportunity to refuse to bring into your little gang: the way I see it, if you don't summon them, don't speak to them, then you didn't take them. So they're apostates who live in the city? *shrug* It's nothing to do with you.
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First and foremost, he firmly believed that any mage less disciplined that himself (ie. everyone) belonged in the circle for the public safety.
Secondly, the argument between Orsino and Meredith - when Hawke has the opportunity to intervene - isn't about the annulment of the circle, it's simply about whether she has the right to search the Circle from top to bottom. That's a easy one: she does.
Regarding companions that you don't have the opportunity to refuse to bring into your little gang: the way I see it, if you don't summon them, don't speak to them, then you didn't take them. So they're apostates who live in the city? *shrug* It's nothing to do with you.