
Two-Headed Gormatrons rate a "6" in Disobedience, and are trainable. Two-Headed Gormatrons sided with humans during the dragon Rebellion. This indecision could leave these dragons vulnerable, yet they still survive, possible because they don't smell very good or taste very good. The two heads can be at odds with each other and can spend days trying to go separate ways. One would think they would have an intellectual advantage over other dragons because of that, but alas they do not. The image of a Gormatron shows it to be a purple color. It does have two wings and two tails, and two pairs of legs. It is unclear where its posterior end lies. The two heads, however, appear to be at opposite ends of the body. This would be an opportunity beyond the anime-style movie that bore Cassandra Penteghast’s beginnings before we met her in Dragon Age II, and later as a companion in Dragon Age Inquisition.Like the name suggests, Two-Headed Gormatrons have two heads. What makes Dragon Age 4 so exciting is that it has the potential to tie up many of the loose ends that are stretched between the games and their printed companions, setting the stage for a mind-blowing conclusion to a build-up that first began with the humble beginnings of Dragon Age Origins.īioWare also previously revealed concept art that very much alluded to the possibility of having a Mortalitasi companion, or at very least a Mortalitasi key character, bringing the Nevarran Death Magic front and center. We even learned about the creation of the Veil itself, an otherworldly place that is heavily set in the games when regarding the Fade and the territory of mages. The third game threw curveball after curveball about the Forgotten Ones, the Dread Wolf, and the death of an elite society. So much of this corner of Thedas is both explored and ignored entirely, a paradox made even more evident with the most recent comic series with Blue Wraith that stars a returning Fenris taking back his homeland of Tevinter by killing slave owners and magisters alike.īut more than learning about these different parts of Thedas, the true implications revealed in Inquisition regarding the origins of magic, the Blights, and the downfall of the ancient elves has completely turned the lore we thought we knew on its head. The games leading up to this point have painted horrific pictures of what Tevinter is like, as well as Antiva where we waded through the bloody narratives of life there through the assassin Zevran. In the same game, we also met Cremisius “Krem” Aclassi, a transgender soldier stuck in the middle of slavery and the elite, a class abandoned by common kindness, again chased out for being anything other than what Tevinter wants a citizen to be. He was also the victim of an attempted blood ritual, by his own father nonetheless, due to Tevinter’s scorned eye on homosexual relationships.


We were later enthralled by Dorian Pavus in Inquisition, an Altus on his way to becoming a magister a compassionate character bent on making his countrymen see where they have gone wrong while learning key lessons about his own problematic upbringing. We were introduced to Fenris in Dragon Age 2, an escaped slave that teased the horrors his kind-faced at the hands of blood magic-wielding magisters. While the associated novels and comics have taken us deep within the underbelly of power-driven mages and a society built on the backs of slaves, the games themselves have only skirted this expansive location through characters met throughout the franchise. Dragon Age 4 is poised to take fans of Thedas where they have never been within the video game franchise: Tevinter.
