The other option being "no"? The game phrases it as a choice. The player would expect a choice. Even if it is just "yes or no." It feels unintentional. Even if it isn't a bug. I understand anno probably unlocks some other tf I haven't found yet, but there should be an option for "nah, just fix her insides, we don't need a full transformation."No it's not. To get the other option you need some syri/anno interactions.
The other option is different route possible to take, one the doctor is alluding to in his dialogue. Although i'd agree that perhaps having this other route show up as disabled button with a hint how to unlock it in the tooltip, if the prerequisites ain't met, would be helpful for the player; if only because evidently not everyone is going to pay close attention.The other option being "no"?
I do not appreciate this comment. I did see the dialogue talking about other options. "anything else miss dorna has in mind." Which isn't much of a hint on its own, basically just saying that there are other options. That, combined with "happy as I am" told me that there should be a "no change" option. I didn't realize there was anything else at first because dialogue is vague, not because I wasn't reading the text-based game. Don't put this on me.[...] if only because evidently not everyone is going to pay close attention.
Sorry, it wasn't meant to be negative -- it's pretty normal for players not to scrutinize every scene, especially when the game is as text-heavy as this one can be. It's just something for the developers to keep on their minds and try to proof their work against.I do not appreciate this comment.
yeah ok fair enough. Sorry for getting so defensive. In my defense it is midnight and I am used to passive aggression, but I shouldn't have jumped to conclusions like that.Sorry, it wasn't meant to be negative -- it's pretty normal for players not to scrutinize every scene, especially when the game is as text-heavy as this one can be. It's just something for the developers to keep on their minds and try to proof their work against.