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 This is an "It Just Bugs Me" entry. This area of the wiki is more friendly to the idea of conversation in the article itself, due to the highly subjective content. The regular entry on this topic is in the main wiki. Overlord
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- Does Overlord: Dark Legend take place in the past or an alternate universe? I can't tell.
- Seriously, in Overlord 2, what the HELL was Rose thinking marrying Marius? It's one thing to marry down but that guy is the most staggeringly annoying guy in the entire game.
- Actually, Rose was marrying UP. If she wanted to aid the Empire, getting a position of power would have been necessary to do anything. She would have had nothing after the Tower was destroyed, and Marius seems to have been Solarius's right hand man, making him the second most powerful person in the Empire. By marrying him she was getting what she wanted.
- What exactly was Rose's motivation for abandoning the Witch Boy in Nordberg prior to the events of Overlord 2? She had to have been smart enough to realize that was going to be a bad idea.
- She was going to go work for the magic hating Empire, so having a kid with magic around would be bad for her. By that time the old tower had been destroyed and the minions had gone underground, so as far as she was concerned the Witch Boy was incapable of becoming an Evil Overlord. It doesn't seem like she was very attached to the Witch Boy, so she had no problem leaving him behind. One or all of those reasons could be why she decided to abandon him.
- Are Velvet and Rose the daughters of the Wizard or the Evil Overlord possessing him?
- They're the daughters of the Wizard. They flat-out say so if you stand around them after the Wizard moves into the cellar.
- Why didn't the Overlord in the first game execute Gnarl for his betrayal?
- Being evil is fine and dandy, but getting rid of the one guy who actually knows how the place works is crazy.
- Gnarl had already told the Overlord how it all worked by that point, and besides, what kind of idiot would ever even consider trusting the evil sidekick who just betrayed him not 5 minutes ago? How could the Overlord trust him not to give false information that would kill him, considering Gnarl is a known traitor?
- Now, now. Gnarl didn't betray the Overlord directly. That was Rose/Velvet's doing. Gnarl merely serves the current Overlord in control of the Dark Tower, and that was the Wizard. Gnarl even pointed out that he'd gladly go back to serving you if you could wrestle control back from the Old Overlord.
- Gnarl didn't actually do anything against the player.
- If the Silent Order had their mouths sewn shut, how do they eat or drink? What happens if they get sick and vomit? Or their nose gets stuffed up?
- If one of them starved to death or suffocated, I would imagine that another member of the Silent Order would revive him. Probably happens about once every other week.
- After being turned evil by the Overlord in Overlord II, why does Queen Fay declare him ruler of the elves? Wouldn't she want to be an evil tyrant instead of the mistress to one?
- It's the domination spell. Subservience is part of the package.
- In the ending of Overlord II, it is implied that Gnarl is biding his time, waiting to betray the new Overlord. If that's the case, why did he go through all the trouble of finding and raising him in the first place instead of simply taking charge of the minions himself? And how does a frail old minion intend to defeat a huge, magically-empowered man?
- Gnarl takes command of the Tower and the Minions between the rise of each Overlord, and every time the Hives are scattered and the Tower Objects stolen. Obviously Gnarl can't wield the Overlord's power alone.
- In Overlord II, when each of the three mistresses offers to ensure that one of the animal types cooperates with the Overlord in his final battle with the Glorious Empire in return for being made First Mistress, why doesn't he just say "You three will get all the animals to cooperate with me or I'll kill you."? That's sounds exactly like something an evil overlord would do.
- Sounds more like something a misogynist tyrant would do. Let's just pretend that the Overlord prefers happy mistresses rather than cowed ones.
- Misogynistic? How? I can assure you that I would have said that in his place to any man or woman, were I an evil tyrant.
- That and I doubt any of the Mistresses would take such a comment. They can easily floor him with a slap and they aren't exactly weak-willed individuals.
- A slap? He's wearing armor at least several inches thick, is far bigger than they are, and is magically empowered. 2 of the 3 are normal humans, and the other had her magical power drained. He's also wielding a friggin huge weapon o' doom. And you'd be surprised how weak your will can be when such an individual is threatening you with death.
- The slap part is true, you can target your mistress and if you take a swing at her, the weapon misses and she slaps you back, and the Overlord staggers. I was equipped with the end-game helm, armor, and mace, in case anyone was wondering. They should make / name the next game Overlady if this keeps up.
- Presumably the Overlord listened to Gnarl's advice on not trying to get on his Mistress' bad side.
- Why not just use the Evil Presence spell to dominate them and make them do it? As a bonus, it would ensure their complete and eternal loyalty to him. No one likes being back stabbed by a mistress-turned-traitor, after all.
- If I were the Overlord I'd much prefer affectionate mistresses rather than obedient slaves. Beyond that, it's a gameplay element, dude. You get one bonus for the endgame portion, and you get to choose which.
- Pure Gameplay And Story Segregation. You can be "special friends" with all 3 at the same time, but still get only one type of mount in the mission.
- In Overlord II, why waste the fully charged Tower Heart just to take down an anti-magic shield as opposed to, say, manually digging under it?
- Just being inside the shield is enough to render the Overlord helpless, which is exactly what happened prior to getting sent to the Arena. Even if it were possible to dig under the shield, anything sent inside it would instantly lose all magical powers and be a sitting duck for the Empire.
- Was Gnarl in on the old overlord's plan the whole time? He didn't seem surprised at all when he returned. Also, it would explain why he and the minions went looking for a new master in a coffin.
- Good question. Someone certainly ordered the Minions to save the eighth hero and nurse him back to health, and I doubt any of the other Minions could possibly carry out such a plan without Gnarl knowing about it. Well, maybe the Jester...but it seems unlikely.
- For all we know, Gnarl was in on the old overlord's plan because he came up with it in the first place. I wouldn't put it past the crafty old geezer to come up with something like that and have the skill (and proper choice of words) to make his 'master' think it was his from the get-go.
- The Overlord's actions in the first game are, for the most part, the opposite of evil. Even if he's doing it for revenge, he saves multiple peoples and revives a forest. Even if you take the uncorrupted route, Villain With Good Publicity has to end somewhere.
- I'm not quite sure what you mean by the last part, but if you take the corrupted route, then the Overlord is pretty much the most evil character in the game. The good path isn't as bad, but he is still conquering everything he comes across. And killing everyone who gets in his way. Due to the nature of his opponents this might not make him evil, but it isn't very heroic either.
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