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  1. #1
    Player
    PorxiesRCute's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2021
    Location
    Gridania
    Posts
    349
    Character
    Nekhii Qestir
    World
    Kraken
    Main Class
    Botanist Lv 100
    Quote Originally Posted by Iscah View Post
    Also, while it's lovely he's found this "the hhetso are sacred" creed, I never got the impression that's actually the Hhetsarro mindset on this front? They follow the herds but they still use the rroneek for hides and meat, unless they're exclusively taking the ones that died of other causes.

    (Kind of awkward that they give roast rroneek as one of the reward options for the quest if they don't actually eat them...)
    This was actually the most realistic part to me! Think about how many people say they love animals and then turn around and eat them.
    (0)

  2. #2
    Player
    Iscah's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2017
    Posts
    14,097
    Character
    Aurelie Moonsong
    World
    Bismarck
    Main Class
    Summoner Lv 90
    Quote Originally Posted by PorxiesRCute View Post
    This was actually the most realistic part to me! Think about how many people say they love animals and then turn around and eat them.
    That's not really comparable.

    In any case it's not inherently hypocritical to "love animals" but also use some individual animals as sustenance (so long as those animals are well cared for), but specifically for the Hhetsarro, what we know is that they treat the movement of the rroneek herds as a guide for their own movements while also at least occasionally killing individual rroneek for necessary resources.

    For a tribe that treats this ebb and flow of nature as the guide to their lives, having a natural predator take a single rroneek is something I would have expected is maybe a little sad to them but not something that needs to be prevented.

    It would have been kind of interesting if Koana did all his heroics and then the chief was like, "well, we did need to kill the deadly apex predator heading towards the village, but we do let nature take its course for things like that" and it became a further learning moment for Koana instead of him getting a single revelation of the whole philosophy in one go.
    (3)