I'm wondering how to keep all companions (Verse and Barik) on the Rebel path. I've gotten conflicting answers on how to do this, such as Barik needing high fear or a simple dialogue check and Verse needing high loyalty or being saved from Graven Ashe. If anyone can tell me what I need to do to keep them both with me on the Rebel path I'd appreciate it.
I really want to be a rebel in this game. But the only way rebellion makes sense is if the fatebinder is some sort of demigod or archmage. Otherwise, the rebel cause is so absurdly hopeless it makes one want to laugh hysterically in a fit of gleeful madness.
After the edict ends, my mission is to gather allies to rebel against Kyros. Nevermind that I'm doing this under the watchful eye of Bleden Mark, it turns out in the end that it is all for nothing, because the scarlet chorus is still large enough to overwhelm my forces with a fraction of its numbers. smh.
We begin by choosing Loch Loop from the list of Scotland routes and flip a u-turn at the start to get us pointed in the right direction. This puts us on the right path for a lead-in of approximately 3km which takes us up through Corkscrew Castle and over Breakaway Brae Reverse to the Breakaway Brae banner where our loop begins.
Narratively speaking, Betray Alliance (to start the Anarchist path) isn't so much the Fatebinder disagreeing with the associates they're following. Rather, it's expressing their desire to gain more personal power, with the implication that they can no longer do so on their current path.
As for the Rebel path, the Fatebinder has felt that they had enough of being part of Kyros's army, or that they are confident of subjugating the Tiers by relying on the locals instead of the help from either the Disfavored or the Scarlet Chorus.
While starting the Rebel path does not literally involve a "Betray Alliance" option, if you choose to falsely support Ashe, Barik will demand to speak to you outside the Disfavored camp. You can then use "Betray Alliance" to return to the Disfavored path. Note that in Act I, Barik is more opposed to supporting the rebels than Verse (although she too will lose some Loyalty along the way). In Act II, if you inform Barik that you are only using the rebels (Subterfuge check), his Loyalty will increase.
At Vendrien's Well Citadel, you'll eventually fight both the Chorus and the Disfavored. Also, unique to the Rebel path, there will be Vendrien Guardsmen in the citadel, not to mention the faction leaders who gather in Ascension Hall. Thus, a Betray Alliance on the Rebel path would mean fighting much closer to home compared to the other two paths.
Abimael Guzman, leader of the Sendero Luminoso, or Shining Path, rebels who nearly overthrew the Peruvian state in a bloody Maoist revolution, has died while in prison, the government said. He was 86.
To use this, replace all occurrences of your project root path with a variable like $rebel.projectpath.myprojectid in your rebel.xml, replacing myprojectid with a unique ID for your project. rebel.projectpath is a mandatory prefix to have the JRebel IDE plugin auto-expand these values.
Automatic expanding of rebel.projectpath.* variables for servers started from outside the IDE (e.g. with CLI scripts) is supported as of JRebel for Eclipse 2019.2.0 and JRebel for IntelliJ 2019.2.2. This feature is not supported for the NetBeans and JDeveloper plugins.
Deprecated path variables. Due to inconsistent behavior across IDEs, these old variable are not recommended. Specifically, you should refrain from using them if JRebel users in your team are using different IDEs.
Carh'la Bastra: So is Imperial Intelligence sending younglings to check up on me now?
PC: I am not an Imperial agent. I was the one that helped Solo.
Carh'la Bastra: Okay. Your bio-metrics check out with those sent to me by Inaldra. So why are you here?
PC: I've decided that I should help the rebellion.
Carh'la Bastra: I really have nothing to back up your word that you aren't an Imperial agent. But right now the Imps know the faces of most of my agents and I do need some help.
PC: I will do my best to help.
Carh'la Bastra: A shipment that I am interested in has been acquired by three different groups. A Jawa trading party, Valarians and Darklighters. Here is the information that I have. Let's start with the Jawas first. They are on a trade circuit. Here is their last known location.
PC: It will be done in a flash.
The Rebel School exists because traditional education made it impossible to achieve our dreams. So, we created a new path. A way that everyone who has a business in their heart can find success. Whatever that success looks like for them.
But in dusty agricultural towns and villages across the province, the rebels have recently gone on the offensive, expanding their presence with a renewed sense of purpose. The rebel fighters include Islamic militants.
Although rebels control wide areas in northern Syria that border Turkey, the Jordanian frontier is only about 60 miles from Damascus, or a third of the distance to Turkey in the north, where fighters control large swaths of territory.
On Friday, regime forces abandoned the last of several checkpoints in Dael after a 24-hour rebel offensive. Dael has a population of 40,000 people, making it one of the bigger towns in the region, which is dotted with small family farms and is less than 10 miles from the Jordanian border in Daraa province.
The series of rebel gains coincided with what regional officials and military experts say is a sharp increase in weapons shipments to opposition fighters by Arab governments, in coordination with the U.S., in the hopes of readying a push into Damascus.
Officials and Western military experts have told the AP that Jordan has opened up as a new route for the weapons late last year. Two military analysts who closely follow the traffic said the weapons include more powerful, Croatian-made anti-tank guns and rockets, which the rebels have not had before.
The weapons appear to have come in play recently. In videos posted on the Internet earlier this month, rebels are seen carrying M79 Osa rocket launchers and more advanced weapons than the ones that the rebels were previously known to have.
A Syrian opposition figure who closely follows the fighting on the ground said recent rebel gains were due to the new flow of weapons from Jordan. He said a new supply route from Jordan to Damascus meant the rebels can now advance from different fronts to the capital. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss such matters on the record.
Syrian activist Maher Jamous, who is from Dael but lives in the United Arab Emirates, said that despite the steady advances and the latest rebel victory in Dael, the regime still maintains a strong presence in the strategic province that leads to the capital.
In other fighting, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said heavy clashes took place between regime forces and fighters trying again to storm a strategic military facility, known as the 17th Division base, north of the city of Raqqa that was captured by rebels this month.
In his speech, the president announced the establishment of an advisory board that will be joined by the likes of former presidential candidates Antanas Mockus and Clara López, former member of the M-19 rebel group and senator Vera Grabe and indigenous leader Ati Quigua, among others. The invitation has also been extended to the former Democratic Center presidential candidate Óscar Iván Zuluaga.
To pay my tuition I worked for a female sculptor who introduced me to her circle of friends. Smart, funny and irreverent, they were the second wave of Canadian feminism. I was ripe for a new consciousness, and they seeded my newly focused sense of rebellion.
Despite these clear indications of Dussindale's defensibility, written accounts fail to delineate the placement of rebel soldiers within the historic terrain, with the Old Ditch, in the west, and the Doles and Smee, in the east, both providing viable areas for deploying Kett's army. The use of military terrain analysis, however, can resolve this issue through the inference of the rebels' deployment based upon their force's composition and equipment. As the insurgents were armed with longbows and bills they would be more likely to adhere to traditional English tactical deployments from the 14th and 15th centuries, which were designed to maximise the effectiveness of these weapons in the absence of cavalry, pikes, or firearms. When arrayed in this fashion, English armies used linear units of billmen, often no more than four ranks deep, with wings of archers in open-order formations, preferably positioning their troops atop gentle slopes with flank protection and broken ground or obstacles ahead of them to slow approaching troops (Barr 2001). The success of these tactics in conflicts such as the Hundred Years War stemmed from the longbow's ability to harass targets at distances of up to 400m, provoking enemy forces to advance into the weapon's optimum range of 150m, where a trained archer could loose four or five arrows per minute (Strickland and Hardy 2005). The formations of those who survived to reach the English line were inevitably disordered by such concentrated shooting, as well as the obstacles placed in their path, allowing their charge to be received by the billmen, before archers, armed and trained for close-quarter fighting, launched counterattacks against their exposed flanks (Strickland and Hardy 2005).
The eastern edge of Dussindale was ideally suited to these tactics, allowing the rebel army to protect its flanks with enclosures and compelling the loyalists to descend into the valley and climb the opposite slope to reach Kett's position, exposing themselves to concentrated archery as they did so. The insurgents also used stakes as defensive obstacles, a common English tactical measure employed since Agincourt (1415), 'pitching their javelins and stakes in the ground before them' (Neville 1575, 62), and combined this stratagem with the unconventional decision to place gentlemen taken prisoner throughout the rising in chains before their front line (Southerton 1549-1559). These measures served a similar purpose, being intended to screen Kett's forces from incoming fire and disrupt the momentum of the loyalist assault so that the rebels could absorb their charge more effectively. Figure 14 provides an interpretation of this deployment, taking Neville's assertion that the rebels 'cut off all passage' (1575, 62) to the highways to denote a position between Peddars/Witton Way and Reading Way. When arrayed in its traditional fashion, with billmen in the centre and archers on the flanks, the army, having a similar number of soldiers to the English army at Crécy (1346), would require approximately 450m to deploy (Strickland and Hardy 2005), and so would fit between Readings Close and the Twenty Acre Close. The rising ground of the Doles would provide a vantage point further east for Kett's ordnance, with larger cannons probably being placed within Cranly Close alongside the army's baggage, where they could be grouped into batteries and protected by the surrounding hedges. Smaller field pieces were commonly assigned to infantry units for localised artillery support (Arnold 2001), a deployment alluded to by Southerton's statement that the rebels 'placed their ordnance all about them' (1549-1559, 259).
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