none, the game is easy enough
No Fire extinguisher? Those use to be real popular once upon a time, not to actually put out fires of course.
Doesn’t have to be lethal… And perhaps we have enough of them as is…, But maybe a pack of emetic chewing gum?
Then the NPCs would have to have lines remarking on how nasty the gum tastes.
Edit: Better yet! Just have a pack of gum, then combine it with whichever poison you’d like if you have a syringe or vial.
Agh, forgot about those.
Nothing is more majestic looking than a tiger, but lions are social creatures so they are my fav.
- Teleportation
- Telekinesis
- Pyrokinesis
- Hypnosis/Mind control
- Invisibility
- Shapeshifting
0 voters
Keep in mind, in usual fashion, 47 is selecting this ability solely for how it will assist him with his job.
I went with teleportation because it will let him get in and out of a place without issue in an emergency, but will require him to use the rest of his regular skills to get the job done, unless he does something flashy like teleporting his target into the middle of the ocean or something. He wouldn’t want to give himself too much of an advantage and teleporting would be more about his own safety, which is practical and just good sense.
Jokes on you, I picked the most destructive power anyway!
But he’s still using it for his job, right? 47 really has very little need to just set random sons of bitches on fire.
Yes by lighting small objects on fire he can cause distractions, force evacuations of secure targets, in watery areas he can generate mist/steam that obscures him, blow up vehicles by making isolated fires in their tanks and if he needs to take out multiple cars then he can set whole buildings on fire.
I honestly suspect that if 47 had the shapeshifting, invisiblity, mind control or teleportion, he’d quit his job.
I dunno, he kind of does it because he had nothing else that he really wants to do or cares about. And like I said, if he had teleportation, he’d likely only use it to escape from places where an alert is unavoidable just for his own safety. He’d still want to trust in his own abilities for the rest of it.
I think back to SA when he was forced out of retirement because his skills were in popular demand, but if he had any of those abilities, he can easily stay out of reach of people who seek to use or destroy him. But if 47 had the option to leave assassination behind now, would he take it? Honestly its hard for me to say for sure, but I’m certain he would entertain the idea.
What’s your headcanon on what happened between Carpathian Mountains and the Epilogue?
- 47 took a year off, he traveled the world to understand his new sense of identity
- 47 spent a year in the shadows, not sure if Providence, the ICA or other enemies would attack. He waits by his apartment window with a rifle in the rain
- 47 Bought a big ol’ house to be used as his new base. He begins his career as a freelancer before contacting Diana
- 47 Found work at another agency. His reputation precedes him and he found work almost immediately
- 47 renounced his life as an assassin, he retires and donates much of his money to charities
- Other
0 voters
A combination of the first three, I think.
Freelancer isn’t out yet so, personally, that isn’t part of anything yet and until it is released, it won’t be.
For me, the first thing 47 did was to get rid of ALL of the ties in a big bonfire somewhere. Then he probably just laid low and did whatever he could from time to time to get by. Odd-jobs and such for whoever would pay him to keep sanity. Not another agency, per se, and he’s not just holed up in a house somewhere.
He took a leap year and began knitting. He Knitted some warm socks that came in handy in the H3 prologue.
He spent 6 months eating Cap’n Crunch, doing blow, and playing Mario Kart.
Then he spent the next 6 months getting back in shape.
Do you like Huey Lewis and the News?
- Yes
- No
- Their early work was a little too new wave for my taste. But when Sports came out in '83, I think they really came into their own, commercially and artistically. The whole album has a clear, crisp sound, and a new sheen of consummate professionalism that really gives the songs a big boost. He’s been compared to Elvis Costello, but I think Huey has a far more bitter, cynical sense of humor.
0 voters
I’m going with no here, since I only like one song by them.
I grew up with them. While some people probably only know them from Back to the Future, I was listening to them on the Loop (97.9) way back in the day and trying to tape stuff off the radio to make old school mix tapes.