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*** Di Ravello's logs go into great detail about how he manipulated his way into becoming Medici's dictator, and it proves that the psychopathic general [[TheChessmaster played just about EVERYONE he ever met like a fiddle]]. Within two months, he wormed his way into a high-ranking military position by playing one of his fellow trainees against their Drill Sergeant, ultimately making him a national hero by saving the Sergeant from the Private (in an attack Di Ravello himself orchestrated). Within a year, he began an elaborate {{Gaslighting}} of the Brigadier-General, which over the next two years resulted in him disgracing himself in a way that led to Di Ravello becoming the de facto leader of the Medician military. He then worked with the Agency (yes, the same organization Rico was working with in the previous two games) to ramp up the gaslighting, ultimately convincing the ex-General that there was an elaborate conspiracy to threaten Medici's sovereignty, and prodded him into starting the first revolution. Just after four years after he set his plan into motion, the revolution had escalated to terrorist attacks and riots in the streets, causing wide-spread disapproval against the current president. Once the President's main political opponent forced a snap election to try to restore order, Di Ravello had the president killed in a riot that he successfully framed on his opponent, successfully putting martial law into effect, before successfully squashing the revolution, offering Rico up to the Agency as an Agent to keep them quiet after having his family killed, and ultimately ensuring that he faced minimal resistance as the supreme ruler of Medici for years. This is all ''before'' he learned that [[FromBadToWorse Medici was home to the unique element Bavarium, which is basically even more powerful Uranium,]] which he then used as a bargaining chip, trading small quantities to the USA and Russia in exchange for vetoing any UN Security Council attempts to limit his power, making him effectively untouchable to the international community. By the time of Just Cause 3, even his manufactured revolution has started to sputter out, forcing him to put the squeeze on the revolution's de facto leader and convincing him to try to make Rico leave the Agency (who, as an American institution, is powerless to interfere directly and is forced to feed Di Ravello information via Sheldon in order to keep American/Medician relations sweet) and serve as a catalyst to bring the Revolution BackFromTheBrink, just so he can show off his new superweapons to the world. '''Goddamn.''' The only thing that truly goes wrong for him is [[UnderestimatingBadassery underestimating Rico's badassery.]] If not for that, it's hard to imagine what could have ever stopped him.

to:

*** Di Ravello's logs go into great detail about how he manipulated his way into becoming Medici's dictator, and it proves that the psychopathic general [[TheChessmaster played just about EVERYONE he ever met like a fiddle]]. Within two months, he wormed his way into a high-ranking military position by playing one of his fellow trainees against their Drill Sergeant, ultimately making him a national hero by saving the Sergeant from the Private (in ([[EngineeredHeroics in an attack Di Ravello himself orchestrated).orchestrated]]). Within a year, he began an elaborate {{Gaslighting}} of the Brigadier-General, which over the next two years resulted in him disgracing himself in a way that led to Di Ravello becoming the de facto leader of the Medician military. He then worked with the Agency (yes, the same organization Rico was working with in the previous two games) to ramp up the gaslighting, ultimately convincing the ex-General that there was an elaborate conspiracy to threaten Medici's sovereignty, and prodded him into starting the first revolution. Just after four years after he set his plan into motion, the revolution had escalated to terrorist attacks and riots in the streets, causing wide-spread disapproval against the current president. Once the President's main political opponent forced a snap election to try to restore order, Di Ravello had the president killed in a riot that he successfully framed on his opponent, successfully putting martial law into effect, before successfully squashing the revolution, offering Rico up to the Agency as an Agent to keep them quiet after having his family killed, and ultimately ensuring that he faced minimal resistance as the supreme ruler of Medici for years. This is all ''before'' he learned that [[FromBadToWorse Medici was home to the unique element Bavarium, which is basically even more powerful Uranium,]] which he then used as a bargaining chip, trading small quantities to the USA and Russia in exchange for vetoing any UN Security Council attempts to limit his power, making him effectively untouchable to the international community. By the time of Just Cause 3, even his manufactured revolution has started to sputter out, forcing him to put the squeeze on the revolution's de facto leader and convincing him to try to make Rico leave the Agency (who, as an American institution, is powerless to interfere directly and is forced to feed Di Ravello information via Sheldon in order to keep American/Medician relations sweet) and serve as a catalyst to bring the Revolution BackFromTheBrink, just so he can show off his new superweapons to the world. '''Goddamn.''' The only thing that truly goes wrong for him is [[UnderestimatingBadassery underestimating Rico's badassery.]] If not for that, it's hard to imagine what could have ever stopped him.
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* The [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Di Ravello]] audio diaries, which you can find strewn across the gameworld, show in no uncertain terms that the good general is a [[TheSociopath murderous, manipulative, egomaniac asshole]] who finds it perfectly acceptable and even desirable to kill people for his own ends. He committed his first cold-blooded murder of a Medician soldier ''before he even left the boot camp''.
** It gets ''better''. During his plotting stage, Di Ravello watches a young racecar driver win a race he'd rigged in order to kill off an opponent. Later on, when striking a deal with the Agency, he remembers this driver and [[HouseFire burns down his house]] ''with the family inside'', leaving the kid (He's explicitly referred to as "boy" in the tapes) alive in order to uphold his end of the deal with the Agency (giving them more members). The kid's name? '''''[[PlayerCharacter Rico Rodriguez.]]'''''

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* The [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Di Ravello]] audio diaries, which you can find strewn across the gameworld, show in no uncertain terms that the good general is a [[TheSociopath murderous, manipulative, egomaniac asshole]] who finds it perfectly acceptable and even desirable to kill people for his own ends. He committed his first cold-blooded murder of a Medician soldier ''before he even left the boot camp''.
** It gets ''better''.''worse''. During his plotting stage, Di Ravello watches a young racecar driver win a race he'd rigged in order to kill off an opponent. Later on, when striking a deal with the Agency, he remembers this driver and [[HouseFire burns down his house]] ''with the family inside'', leaving the kid (He's explicitly referred to as "boy" in the tapes) alive in order to uphold his end of the deal with the Agency (giving them more members). The kid's name? '''''[[PlayerCharacter Rico Rodriguez.]]'''''

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* The Di Ravello audio diaries, which you can find strewn across the gameworld, show in no uncertain terms that the good general is a murderous, manipulative, egomaniac asshole who finds it perfectly acceptable and even desirable to kill people for his own ends. He committed his first cold-blooded murder of a Medician soldier ''before he even left the boot camp''.
** It gets ''better''. During his plotting stage, Di Ravello watches a young racecar driver win a race he'd rigged in order to kill off an opponent. Later on, when striking a deal with the Agency, he remembers this driver and [[HouseFire burns down his house]] ''with the family inside'', leaving the kid (He's explicitly referred to as "boy" in the tapes) alive in order to uphold his end of the deal with the Agency (giving them more members). The kid's name? '''''Rico Rodriguez.'''''

to:

* The [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Di Ravello Ravello]] audio diaries, which you can find strewn across the gameworld, show in no uncertain terms that the good general is a [[TheSociopath murderous, manipulative, egomaniac asshole asshole]] who finds it perfectly acceptable and even desirable to kill people for his own ends. He committed his first cold-blooded murder of a Medician soldier ''before he even left the boot camp''.
** It gets ''better''. During his plotting stage, Di Ravello watches a young racecar driver win a race he'd rigged in order to kill off an opponent. Later on, when striking a deal with the Agency, he remembers this driver and [[HouseFire burns down his house]] ''with the family inside'', leaving the kid (He's explicitly referred to as "boy" in the tapes) alive in order to uphold his end of the deal with the Agency (giving them more members). The kid's name? '''''Rico '''''[[PlayerCharacter Rico Rodriguez.''''' ]]'''''



* There is a location where you can find the [[Series/DoctorWho Weeping Angels]], and they move closer and closer to the center of the location they're in as long as you stand in front of it and look away from them. And to top it off? At the center, there's a carcass of a goat.
* After completing "Bavarium on a Plane", Di Ravello has a VillainousBreakdown, where he kicks one of his men to death while screaming how he's SurroundedByIdiots before yelling to the dead man, "[[WhyDidYouMakeMeHitYou Look what you]] [[NeverMyFault made me do!]]" It's given a GoryDiscretionShot, but that does nothing to change how [[PsychopathicManchild disturbingly childish]] Di Ravello acts or how little he regards other human beings.

to:

* There is a location where you can find the [[Series/DoctorWho Weeping Angels]], and they move closer and closer to the center of the location they're in as long as you stand in front of it and look away from them. And to top it off? At the center, there's a carcass of a goat.
goat. ''[[NothingIsScarier What happened here?]]''
* After completing "Bavarium on a Plane", Di Ravello has a VillainousBreakdown, where he kicks one of his men to death while screaming how he's SurroundedByIdiots before yelling to the dead man, "[[WhyDidYouMakeMeHitYou Look what you]] [[NeverMyFault made me do!]]" It's given a GoryDiscretionShot, but that does nothing to change how [[PsychopathicManchild disturbingly childish]] Di Ravello acts or how little much of a {{Sadist}} he regards is in regarding other human beings.



** There actually ''is'' an explanation. A large part of the backstory of the game is the 'cleansing flame' and 'the Burning of the North'. These incidents refer to a moment early in Di Ravello's reign where for whatever reason, he torched the entire north of the country, killing and displacing hundreds of thousands.

to:

** There actually ''is'' an explanation. A large part of the backstory of the game is the 'cleansing flame' and 'the Burning of the North'. These incidents refer to a moment early in Di Ravello's reign where [[ItAmusedMe for whatever reason, reason,]] he torched the entire north of the country, killing and displacing hundreds of thousands.thousands.
----
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** It gets ''better''. During his plotting stage, Di Ravello watches a young racecar driver win a race he'd rigged in order to kill off an opponent. Later on, when striking a deal with the Agency, he remembers this driver and [[HouseFire burns down his house]] ''with the family inside'', leaving the kid (He's explicitly referred to as "boy" in the tapes) alive in order to uphold his end of the deal with the Agency (giving them more members). The kid's name? '''''[[spoiler: Rico Rodriguez.]]'''''

to:

** It gets ''better''. During his plotting stage, Di Ravello watches a young racecar driver win a race he'd rigged in order to kill off an opponent. Later on, when striking a deal with the Agency, he remembers this driver and [[HouseFire burns down his house]] ''with the family inside'', leaving the kid (He's explicitly referred to as "boy" in the tapes) alive in order to uphold his end of the deal with the Agency (giving them more members). The kid's name? '''''[[spoiler: Rico '''''Rico Rodriguez.]]''''' '''''



*** Di Ravello's logs go into great detail about how he manipulated his way into becoming Medici's dictator, and it proves that the psychopathic general [[TheChessmaster played just about EVERYONE he ever met like a fiddle]]. Within two months, he wormed his way into a high-ranking military position by playing one of his fellow trainees against their Drill Sergeant, ultimately making him a national hero by saving the Sergeant from the Private (in an attack Di Ravello himself orchestrated). Within a year, he began an elaborate {{Gaslighting}} of the Brigadier-General, which over the next two years resulted in him disgracing himself in a way that led to Di Ravello becoming the de facto leader of the Medician military. He then worked with the Agency (yes, the same organization Rico was working with in the previous two games) to ramp up the gaslighting, ultimately convincing the ex-General that there was an elaborate conspiracy to threaten Medici's sovereignty, and prodded him into starting the first revolution. Just after four years after he set his plan into motion, the revolution had escalated to terrorist attacks and riots in the streets, causing wide-spread disapproval against the current president. Once the President's main political opponent forced a snap election to try to restore order, Di Ravello had the president killed in a riot that he successfully framed on his opponent, successfully putting martial law into effect, before successfully squashing the revolution, offering Rico up to the Agency as an Agent to keep them quiet after having his family killed, and ultimately ensuring that he faced minimal resistance as the supreme ruler of Medici for years. This is all ''before'' he learned that [[FromBadToWorse Medici was home to the unique element Bavarium, which is basically even more powerful Uranium,]] which he then used as a bargaining chip, trading small quantities to the USA and Russia in exchange for vetoing any UN Security Council attempts to limit his power, making him effectively untouchable to the international community. By the time of Just Cause 3, even his manufactured revolution has started to sputter out, forcing him to put the squeeze on the revolution's de facto leader and convincing him to try to make Rico leave the Agency (who, as an American institution, is powerless to interfere directly [[spoiler:and is forced to feed Di Ravello information via Sheldon in order to keep American/Medician relations sweet]]) and serve as a catalyst to bring the Revolution BackFromTheBrink, just so he can show off his new superweapons to the world. '''Goddamn.''' The only thing that truly goes wrong for him is [[UnderestimatingBadassery underestimating Rico's badassery.]] If not for that, it's hard to imagine what could have ever stopped him.

to:

*** Di Ravello's logs go into great detail about how he manipulated his way into becoming Medici's dictator, and it proves that the psychopathic general [[TheChessmaster played just about EVERYONE he ever met like a fiddle]]. Within two months, he wormed his way into a high-ranking military position by playing one of his fellow trainees against their Drill Sergeant, ultimately making him a national hero by saving the Sergeant from the Private (in an attack Di Ravello himself orchestrated). Within a year, he began an elaborate {{Gaslighting}} of the Brigadier-General, which over the next two years resulted in him disgracing himself in a way that led to Di Ravello becoming the de facto leader of the Medician military. He then worked with the Agency (yes, the same organization Rico was working with in the previous two games) to ramp up the gaslighting, ultimately convincing the ex-General that there was an elaborate conspiracy to threaten Medici's sovereignty, and prodded him into starting the first revolution. Just after four years after he set his plan into motion, the revolution had escalated to terrorist attacks and riots in the streets, causing wide-spread disapproval against the current president. Once the President's main political opponent forced a snap election to try to restore order, Di Ravello had the president killed in a riot that he successfully framed on his opponent, successfully putting martial law into effect, before successfully squashing the revolution, offering Rico up to the Agency as an Agent to keep them quiet after having his family killed, and ultimately ensuring that he faced minimal resistance as the supreme ruler of Medici for years. This is all ''before'' he learned that [[FromBadToWorse Medici was home to the unique element Bavarium, which is basically even more powerful Uranium,]] which he then used as a bargaining chip, trading small quantities to the USA and Russia in exchange for vetoing any UN Security Council attempts to limit his power, making him effectively untouchable to the international community. By the time of Just Cause 3, even his manufactured revolution has started to sputter out, forcing him to put the squeeze on the revolution's de facto leader and convincing him to try to make Rico leave the Agency (who, as an American institution, is powerless to interfere directly [[spoiler:and and is forced to feed Di Ravello information via Sheldon in order to keep American/Medician relations sweet]]) sweet) and serve as a catalyst to bring the Revolution BackFromTheBrink, just so he can show off his new superweapons to the world. '''Goddamn.''' The only thing that truly goes wrong for him is [[UnderestimatingBadassery underestimating Rico's badassery.]] If not for that, it's hard to imagine what could have ever stopped him.



** There actually ''is'' an explanation. A large part of the backstory of the game is the 'cleansing flame' and 'the Burning of the North'. These incidents refer to a moment early in Di Ravello's reign where for whatever reason, he [[spoiler: torched the entire north of the country, killing and displacing hundreds of thousands.]]

to:

** There actually ''is'' an explanation. A large part of the backstory of the game is the 'cleansing flame' and 'the Burning of the North'. These incidents refer to a moment early in Di Ravello's reign where for whatever reason, he [[spoiler: torched the entire north of the country, killing and displacing hundreds of thousands.]]
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** It gets ''better''. During his plotting stage, Di Ravello watches a young racecar driver win a race he'd rigged in order to kill off an opponent. Later on, when striking a deal with the Agency, he remembers this driver and [[HouseFire burns down his house]] ''with the family inside'', leaving the kid (He's explicitly referred to as "boy" in the tapes) alive in order to uphold his end of the deal with the Agency (giving them more members). The kid's name? [[spoiler: Rico Rodriguez.]]

to:

** It gets ''better''. During his plotting stage, Di Ravello watches a young racecar driver win a race he'd rigged in order to kill off an opponent. Later on, when striking a deal with the Agency, he remembers this driver and [[HouseFire burns down his house]] ''with the family inside'', leaving the kid (He's explicitly referred to as "boy" in the tapes) alive in order to uphold his end of the deal with the Agency (giving them more members). The kid's name? [[spoiler: '''''[[spoiler: Rico Rodriguez.]] ]]'''''

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** Worst of all is how ''fast'' it all happens. Within 4-5 years, he's gone from [[FromNobodyToNightmare a boot camp trainee]] to a general and the most influential man in the country, and highly respected by the people and the soldiers in the army. He crafted the illusion of a reasonable, fair-minded, respectable man from day one, and no one sees through it. By the time he goes from seeming benevolent hero of the people to nightmarish tyrant, he's so heavily entrenched that no one can resist him. He even goes so far as to manufacture a revolution, and putting the revolution down is what ultimately catapults him into his position of power.

to:

** Worst of all is how ''fast'' it all happens. Within 4-5 In just under 5 years, he's gone from [[FromNobodyToNightmare a boot camp trainee]] to a general and the most influential man in the country, and highly respected by the people and the soldiers in the army. He crafted the illusion of a reasonable, fair-minded, respectable man from day one, and no one sees through it. By the time he goes from seeming seemingly benevolent hero of the people to nightmarish tyrant, he's so heavily entrenched that no one can resist him. He even goes so far as to manufacture a revolution, and two separate revolutions-- putting the revolution down the first (against the democratically elected, but corrupt, President Dante) is what ultimately catapults him into his position of power.power, and the second (the one that Rico gets involved with) is designed to create an acceptable target to show the world his military might and catapult Medici into the position of a global superpower without sparking an international incident.
*** Di Ravello's logs go into great detail about how he manipulated his way into becoming Medici's dictator, and it proves that the psychopathic general [[TheChessmaster played just about EVERYONE he ever met like a fiddle]]. Within two months, he wormed his way into a high-ranking military position by playing one of his fellow trainees against their Drill Sergeant, ultimately making him a national hero by saving the Sergeant from the Private (in an attack Di Ravello himself orchestrated). Within a year, he began an elaborate {{Gaslighting}} of the Brigadier-General, which over the next two years resulted in him disgracing himself in a way that led to Di Ravello becoming the de facto leader of the Medician military. He then worked with the Agency (yes, the same organization Rico was working with in the previous two games) to ramp up the gaslighting, ultimately convincing the ex-General that there was an elaborate conspiracy to threaten Medici's sovereignty, and prodded him into starting the first revolution. Just after four years after he set his plan into motion, the revolution had escalated to terrorist attacks and riots in the streets, causing wide-spread disapproval against the current president. Once the President's main political opponent forced a snap election to try to restore order, Di Ravello had the president killed in a riot that he successfully framed on his opponent, successfully putting martial law into effect, before successfully squashing the revolution, offering Rico up to the Agency as an Agent to keep them quiet after having his family killed, and ultimately ensuring that he faced minimal resistance as the supreme ruler of Medici for years. This is all ''before'' he learned that [[FromBadToWorse Medici was home to the unique element Bavarium, which is basically even more powerful Uranium,]] which he then used as a bargaining chip, trading small quantities to the USA and Russia in exchange for vetoing any UN Security Council attempts to limit his power, making him effectively untouchable to the international community. By the time of Just Cause 3, even his manufactured revolution has started to sputter out, forcing him to put the squeeze on the revolution's de facto leader and convincing him to try to make Rico leave the Agency (who, as an American institution, is powerless to interfere directly [[spoiler:and is forced to feed Di Ravello information via Sheldon in order to keep American/Medician relations sweet]]) and serve as a catalyst to bring the Revolution BackFromTheBrink, just so he can show off his new superweapons to the world. '''Goddamn.''' The only thing that truly goes wrong for him is [[UnderestimatingBadassery underestimating Rico's badassery.]] If not for that, it's hard to imagine what could have ever stopped him.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Worstof all is how ''fast'' it all happens. Within 4-5 years, he's gone from [[FromNobodyToNightmare a boot camp trainee]] to a general and the most influential man in the country, and highly respected by the people and the soldiers in the army. He crafted the illusion of a reasonable, fair-minded, respectable man from day one, and no one sees through it. By the time he goes from seeming benevolent hero of the people to nightmarish tyrant, he's so heavily entrenched that no one can resist him.

to:

** Worstof Worst of all is how ''fast'' it all happens. Within 4-5 years, he's gone from [[FromNobodyToNightmare a boot camp trainee]] to a general and the most influential man in the country, and highly respected by the people and the soldiers in the army. He crafted the illusion of a reasonable, fair-minded, respectable man from day one, and no one sees through it. By the time he goes from seeming benevolent hero of the people to nightmarish tyrant, he's so heavily entrenched that no one can resist him. He even goes so far as to manufacture a revolution, and putting the revolution down is what ultimately catapults him into his position of power.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** Worstof all is how ''fast'' it all happens. Within 4-5 years, he's gone from [[FromNobodyToNightmare a boot camp trainee]] to a general and the most influential man in the country, and highly respected by the people and the soldiers in the army. He crafted the illusion of a reasonable, fair-minded, respectable man from day one, and no one sees through it. By the time he goes from seeming benevolent hero of the people to nightmarish tyrant, he's so heavily entrenched that no one can resist him.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** It gets 'better'. During his plotting stage, Di Ravello watches a young racecar driver win a race he'd rigged in order to kill off an opponent. Later on, when striking a deal with the Agency, he remembers this driver and [[HouseFire burns down his house]] 'with the family inside', leaving the kid (He's explicitly referred to as "boy" in the tapes) alive in order to uphold his end of the deal with the Agency (giving them more members). The kid's name? [[spoiler: Rico Rodriguez.]]

to:

** It gets 'better'.''better''. During his plotting stage, Di Ravello watches a young racecar driver win a race he'd rigged in order to kill off an opponent. Later on, when striking a deal with the Agency, he remembers this driver and [[HouseFire burns down his house]] 'with ''with the family inside', inside'', leaving the kid (He's explicitly referred to as "boy" in the tapes) alive in order to uphold his end of the deal with the Agency (giving them more members). The kid's name? [[spoiler: Rico Rodriguez.]]



** There actually 'is' an explanation. A large part of the backstory of the game is the 'cleansing flame' and 'the Burning of the North'. These incidents refer to a moment early in Di Ravello's reign where for whatever reason, he [[spoiler: torched the entire north of the country, killing and displacing hundreds of thousands.]]

to:

** There actually 'is' ''is'' an explanation. A large part of the backstory of the game is the 'cleansing flame' and 'the Burning of the North'. These incidents refer to a moment early in Di Ravello's reign where for whatever reason, he [[spoiler: torched the entire north of the country, killing and displacing hundreds of thousands.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** It gets 'better'. During his plotting stage, Di Ravello watches a young racecar driver win a race he'd rigged in order to kill off an opponent. Later on, when striking a deal with the Agency, he remembers this driver and [[HouseFire burns down his house]] 'with the family inside', leaving the kid (He's explicitly referred to as "boy" in the tapes) alive in order to uphold his end of the deal with the Agency (giving them more members). The kid's name? [[spoiler: Rico Rodriguez.]]



* The northern half of Insula Striate, separated from the rest of Medici by a massive military-guarded wall. Every town within has been bombed to shit, clearly a long time ago from the greenery. Only military installations and the Bavarium mines remain operational, and the only people you meet, aside from a handful of civilians picking through the rubble, are soldiers and militiamen. No explanation is given for what happened.

to:

* The northern half of Insula Striate, separated from the rest of Medici by a massive military-guarded wall. Every town within has been bombed to shit, clearly a long time ago from the greenery. Only military installations and the Bavarium mines remain operational, and the only people you meet, aside from a handful of civilians picking through the rubble, are soldiers and militiamen. No explanation is given for what happened.happened.
** There actually 'is' an explanation. A large part of the backstory of the game is the 'cleansing flame' and 'the Burning of the North'. These incidents refer to a moment early in Di Ravello's reign where for whatever reason, he [[spoiler: torched the entire north of the country, killing and displacing hundreds of thousands.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* The northern half of Insula Striate, separated from the rest of Medici by a massive Militia-guarded wall. Every town within has been bombed to shit, clearly a long time ago from the greenery. Only military installations and the Bavarium mines remain operational, and the only people you meet, aside from a handful of civilians picking through the rubble, are militiamen. No explanation is given for what happened.

to:

* The northern half of Insula Striate, separated from the rest of Medici by a massive Militia-guarded military-guarded wall. Every town within has been bombed to shit, clearly a long time ago from the greenery. Only military installations and the Bavarium mines remain operational, and the only people you meet, aside from a handful of civilians picking through the rubble, are soldiers and militiamen. No explanation is given for what happened.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* After completing "Bavarium on a Plane", Di Ravello has a VillainousBreakdown, where he kicks one of his men to death while screaming how he's SurroundedByIdiots before yelling to the dead man, "[[WhyDidYouMakeMeHitYou Look what you]] [[NeverMyFault made me do!]]" It's given a GoryDiscretionShot, but that does nothing to change how [[PsychopathicManchild disturbingly childish]] Di Ravello acts or how little he regards other human beings.

to:

* After completing "Bavarium on a Plane", Di Ravello has a VillainousBreakdown, where he kicks one of his men to death while screaming how he's SurroundedByIdiots before yelling to the dead man, "[[WhyDidYouMakeMeHitYou Look what you]] [[NeverMyFault made me do!]]" It's given a GoryDiscretionShot, but that does nothing to change how [[PsychopathicManchild disturbingly childish]] Di Ravello acts or how little he regards other human beings.beings.
* The northern half of Insula Striate, separated from the rest of Medici by a massive Militia-guarded wall. Every town within has been bombed to shit, clearly a long time ago from the greenery. Only military installations and the Bavarium mines remain operational, and the only people you meet, aside from a handful of civilians picking through the rubble, are militiamen. No explanation is given for what happened.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* There is a location where you can find the [[Series/DoctorWho Weeping Angels]], and they move closer and closer to the center of the location they're in as long as you stand in front of it and look away from them. And to top it off? At the center, there's a carcass of a goat.

to:

* There is a location where you can find the [[Series/DoctorWho Weeping Angels]], and they move closer and closer to the center of the location they're in as long as you stand in front of it and look away from them. And to top it off? At the center, there's a carcass of a goat.goat.
* After completing "Bavarium on a Plane", Di Ravello has a VillainousBreakdown, where he kicks one of his men to death while screaming how he's SurroundedByIdiots before yelling to the dead man, "[[WhyDidYouMakeMeHitYou Look what you]] [[NeverMyFault made me do!]]" It's given a GoryDiscretionShot, but that does nothing to change how [[PsychopathicManchild disturbingly childish]] Di Ravello acts or how little he regards other human beings.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* The Di Ravello audio diaries, which you can find strewn across the gameworld, show in no uncertain terms that the good general is a murderous, manipulative, egomaniac asshole who finds it perfectly acceptable and even desirable to kill people for his own ends. He committed his first cold-blooded murder of a Medician soldier ''before he even left the boot camp''.

to:

* The Di Ravello audio diaries, which you can find strewn across the gameworld, show in no uncertain terms that the good general is a murderous, manipulative, egomaniac asshole who finds it perfectly acceptable and even desirable to kill people for his own ends. He committed his first cold-blooded murder of a Medician soldier ''before he even left the boot camp''.camp''.
* There is a location where you can find the [[Series/DoctorWho Weeping Angels]], and they move closer and closer to the center of the location they're in as long as you stand in front of it and look away from them. And to top it off? At the center, there's a carcass of a goat.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* The opening cutscene of "A Terrible Reaction" has a chilling version of YouHaveFailedMe. When Di Ravello comments that the failure of Vis Electra cannot go unpunished, he doesn't kill the commander directly. Instead, he [[LeaveBehindAPistol hands the gun over to the commander, who promptly shoots himself in the face as soon as Di Ravello turns away from him.]] Not only does this show how much pull Di Ravello has over his forces (and/or how much his own men fear him), but nobody present [[LackOfEmpathy even acknowledges that it happens]].

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* The opening cutscene of "A Terrible Reaction" has a chilling version of YouHaveFailedMe. When Di Ravello comments that the failure of Vis Electra cannot go unpunished, he doesn't kill the commander directly. Instead, he [[LeaveBehindAPistol hands the gun over to the commander, who promptly shoots himself in the face as soon as Di Ravello turns away from him.]] Not only does this show how much pull Di Ravello has over his forces (and/or how much his own men fear him), but nobody present [[LackOfEmpathy even acknowledges that it happens]].happens]].
* The Di Ravello audio diaries, which you can find strewn across the gameworld, show in no uncertain terms that the good general is a murderous, manipulative, egomaniac asshole who finds it perfectly acceptable and even desirable to kill people for his own ends. He committed his first cold-blooded murder of a Medician soldier ''before he even left the boot camp''.
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* The opening cutscene of "A Terrible Reaction" has a chilling version of YouHaveFailedMe. When Di Ravello comments that the failure of Vis Electra cannot go unpunished, he doesn't kill the commander directly. Instead, he [[LeaveBehindAPistol hands the gun over to the commander, who promptly shoots himself in the face as soon as Di Ravello turns away from him.]] Not only does this show how much pull Di Ravello has over his forces (and/or how much his own men fear him), but nobody present [[LackOfEmpathy even acknowledges that it happens]].

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