), neglect the kid of a father, and kind of ruin the child’s, mother’s, and guy’s life. Get real, dude.I let Jonna die. Win – win.Now the boy and his mother’s way of life is in question, but this is all still Lothar’s problem, not Geralt’s. They’re vastly different. Plus, the new woman is probably no worse off this way too: he probably would have walked out on her as well eventually.This quest is tough for me. Killed the bitch.
Oh, and I hadn’t had time to loot Jonna’s herb shop just yet I opted to let Lothar decide the fate of his child based on this:This one hit me hard. Who’s to say his now ex-wife won’t get remarried? Yet the child is alive and so my Geralt cannot kill her. I even went to her after carving her name in, to see if anything further would happen.If you force Lothar back into the relationship with Jonna, she lifts the curse on the boy. Jonna was the Rannvaig herbalist and sold alchemy ingredients and alchemy manuscript pages.
Regardless he made a choice and any sane person should live with it. She only said she’d lift the curse when Geralt showed up. You can later see that when he does arrive in town, Jonna tries to tell him he'll soon forget about them and she'd bear him healthy sons but Lothar tells her off point blank he only agreed to return to her, not to love her.
Killed the bitch. Which ,while despicable, is no cause for murder.For me, she hurts, and that is so very understandable, her reaction was way too much as she threatened not him, but his child.
She’ll not have another opportunity to marry quite likely, either, as the man she dedicated herself to for the years she was young and appealing left her. It wasn’t because she was prettier or that I was fickle. After speaking with Lothar, I used witcher senses on the Nithing and followed the trail to the shawl. Nothing in this story could possibly justify the escalation from a situation in which no ones safety was at risk to attempted murder.This doesn’t even touch upon the more obvious reasons of why Joanna doesn’t deserve consideration.To start with she gets found out and asked to lift the curse rather politely; do you realize how fucking absurd that is?
if you CANT do this then the game fails as a choice-driven game.Please forget my question in the previous post, I think I fully comprehend now why your answer was as such: you are operating your fancies beyond the architecture of the game.Even if the player is given free reign of the main chatacter’s choices, I believe he is still bound by what the writers perceive as Geralt’s character and thus only offer choices which most possibly would cross his mind. And…that’s why I did the other option.
A woman is left by a man whom we amuse she has been cohabiting with for 10 years. She stops being a vendor even if you helped her.If a curse is THIS easy to do…why doesnt he just do it back to her anyway? The use of magic instead of conventional weaponry is irrelevant. Or maybe their son will shoulder the burden?
Head back to Lothar and tell him what you discovered. This wasn’t a threat, it was attempted murder. He used her and dumped her which is very harsh, but then her coping is appalling as well. Based on what we see of Skellige culture, I doubt it would do much difference though as the punishment for the attempted murder of a child i most likely death. Jonna claims she was with Lothar for 10 years, and then he left her for the other unnamed woman. Talk to Lothar about how to lift the curse.If you decided to kill Jonna: 1. I thought about it and realized how big of a double standard is at play here.If the victim had been a woman whose daughter was threatened by a curse placed by a man, jealous because the woman had left him, I would have had zero sympathy. I was with a woman for a year and really liked her. She'll then agree to lift the curse but for a steep price: Lothar must return to her and denounce his son, which would strip his wife and children of honor and condemn them to poverty. Not killing her leaves the boy and his mother to fend for themselves for the rest of their lives. Venez découvrir tout ce qu'il faut savoir sur la partie : "Le Nithing" du jeu The Witcher 3 : Wild Hunt dans son wiki.
It comes down to a choice. I had a hard time with this quest, while trying to kill a child isn’t NEVER the correct solution, Lothar deserved to be punished some way. Examinez ensuite ce dernier, puis suivez les traces à l'aide de vos sens de sorceleur. Examina el tablón de anuncios de Rannvaig y lee el anuncio “Nithing” para activar esta misión.
Investigate the Nithing. Such articles are published under the Gosu Noob author and that means the thing you are reading was created by the whole crew. Nice double standards, here!Do you ever understand what you just wrote? Because even in this light escalating to cold blooded torture and murder, even should the target of been Lothar and not his son, removes any hope of sympathy from anyone who is even remotely reasonable. Are you serious? And killing “bitches” is no problem at all.Funny, in real life it’s often the opposite that happens: woman leaves man, man kills woman.