Correct.
In an alternate universe where you create your Witcher and their story is entirely player driven, there's a 75% chance I go with Phillipa.
.It has always been Yennefer, anyone that goes with Triss is wrong, #IHaveSpoken
First post gets it doneIt has always been Yennefer, anyone that goes with Triss is wrong, #IHaveSpoken
That's because she's a side character in the books.Triss feels like a side character in season 1 of the show. Hopefully she gets bigger role in next season. But I also think she's miscasted, looking at her I just don't get the feeling that she is Triss.
yupIt has always been Yennefer, anyone that goes with Triss is wrong, #IHaveSpoken
I too would rather burn down a hedge maze than spend time in it it with the flat board of a personality that is Triss.I mean I just..am having a lot of fun with Triss at this party, the 4 minutes I spent with Yennifer made me feel like she would not want to go run around hedge mazes with me, she would just burn it all down to the ground.
Thank you.
This is good.Yennefer:
- Headstrong and confident, understands the value in caring for yourself
- Ambitious, working towards goals, always learning and improving her skills
- Career driven, thinking of her future, good at networking
- Assertive, able to deal with Geralt's wishy washy flaky old grumpy Witcher shit directly with no ambiguity
- Genuine motherly, nurturing qualities to those she values as her children, such as Ciri
- Caring and loving, sensual and exciting, in private with her partner
- Draws from literally decades of personal experience, including a traumatic upbringing in poverty, to shape her view of the world and broad empathy for people
Triss:
- Messy drunk
- Knows full well that Yennefer and Geralt are true lovers and takes advantage of Geralt's amnesia anyway to manipulate him into sex
- Has red hair
I find boring or disgusting the stories where the hero can have sex with any woman, because those women can't wait to have sex with him. In those stories women are the hero's prize, the warrior's reward, and as such they have nothing to say, they can only moan and faint in the hero's strong arms.
I am convinced that only with contact with the other sex - wether it is cause of attraction, care, confrontation or opposition - a hero can fully grow. When I created Yennefer's character I wanted Geralt to fully grow, but then I decided to make things complicated. I created a female character who refuses to be a fantasy stereotype. To please the reader. - Andrzej Sapkowski
Source
Their love transcends the physical... to be more specific, Geralt would be a fantastic base/singer for Dandelion's symphonic metal band.