- Joined
- Aug 1, 2021
But its not arbitrary, and gives the lower classes a reason to support it. "In the Qun you have purpose, protection, and are meaningfully contributing to the greater whole"-a peasant in Orlais is slaving away for a Lord concerned with petty feuding and adulterous scandals. At some level the peasant knows they are slaving away for nothing. Just to feed their superior who has done nothing for them.
It is harsh and unforgiving-which is why we see characters like Tallis, Iron Bull, and a few others struggle with it-but it provides purpose and certainty in an otherwise unfair and capricious world.
The Arishok as you yourself note-cannot just do what he wants. He has to abide by the Qun, and there is no excuse for having failed. "You have a choice-succeed in the role allotted to you or die".
What appeals to the lower classes is precisely this-this severity is applied to everyone.
It is harsh and unforgiving-which is why we see characters like Tallis, Iron Bull, and a few others struggle with it-but it provides purpose and certainty in an otherwise unfair and capricious world.
The Arishok as you yourself note-cannot just do what he wants. He has to abide by the Qun, and there is no excuse for having failed. "You have a choice-succeed in the role allotted to you or die".
What appeals to the lower classes is precisely this-this severity is applied to everyone.