
Emperor Catagia of Centauri (Babylon 5)

King Joffrey Baratheon of Westeros (Game of Thrones; TV version or book version)
Both happen to be the day before their eventual poisoning.
Which do you choose and why?
Moderator: NecronLord
Cartagia find you hanging from a noose with a suicide note the day of the trial. Blackmailing Londo is NOT a good idea.U.P. Cinnabar wrote:Cartagia, and somehow blackmail Londo into helping me out in exchange for not blabbing to Cartagia about the plan to off him.
And, Londo will doubtlessly explain that to me, before the sheer desperation of my ploy tickles his funnybone. Maybe enough for him to help me out a bit. Or, maybe G'kar will take pity on me. Any straw for a drowning man to grasp, however slender.FaxModem1 wrote:Cartagia find you hanging from a noose with a suicide note the day of the trial. Blackmailing Londo is NOT a good idea.U.P. Cinnabar wrote:Cartagia, and somehow blackmail Londo into helping me out in exchange for not blabbing to Cartagia about the plan to off him.
Until he met his timely but unlamented death in the usual George R.R. Martin fashion, he was the boy-king of Westeros in the TV/novel series Game of Thrones, who(surprise, surprise, Sergeant Carter) was a murdering, sadisitic, cold-blooded, unpleasant little shit. I'm sure actual fans of the series will have more to say on the subject, but that's the executive summary.JamesStaley wrote:I am not familiar with Joffrey Baratheon. Can someone explain him to me, please?
In case you've not found it out just yet George R.R. Martin is the writer for the "A song of Ice and Fire" book series on which the Game of Thrones TV series is based on.JamesStaley wrote:.....And who was George R.R. Martin?
Sorry for my ignorance here folks, but I don't keep up with recent/current stuff too much, and i'm not a gamer at all.
Granted that's mostly because Joffrey doesn't have any real capability for decency and capability of rational thinking is at best very minor (at worst it's non-existant) so being better them him at either isn't exactly high praise.Simon_Jester wrote:Well, even pretending that you're doing what you're doing for the good of the realm shows a higher order of thinking and human(oid) decency than Joffrey was capable of showing most of the time.
True though not exactly a plus for Joffrey's personality. Then there was the fact it would have been easier to count the people who didn't want to kill Joffrey when he was poisoned then to count the ones who did want to kill him (who didn't want to kill him:his mother and maybe his true biological father not sure about that one though (the identity of the true father is a spoiler so I won't reveal it), who wanted to kill him: pretty much everyone else).Simon_Jester wrote:Joffrey had gone a looong way out of his way to antagonize his uncle, of course, including hiring actors to perform skits specifically intended to humiliate him personally at the very feast he was poisoned at. So it's not as though Tyrion could deny that he had the means, the motive, or the opportunity to commit the crime.
Fantasy writer, (in)famous for his Game of Thrones novel series.JamesStaley wrote:.....And who was George R.R. Martin?
Sorry for my ignorance here folks, but I don't keep up with recent/current stuff too much, and i'm not a gamer at all.
No, I think you did a pretty good job of hitting all the best points of his character.U.P. Cinnabar wrote:Until he met his timely but unlamented death in the usual George R.R. Martin fashion, he was the boy-king of Westeros in the TV/novel series Game of Thrones, who(surprise, surprise, Sergeant Carter) was a murdering, sadisitic, cold-blooded, unpleasant little shit. I'm sure actual fans of the series will have more to say on the subject, but that's the executive summary.
Simon_Jester wrote:Joffrey had gone a looong way out of his way to antagonize his uncle, of course, including hiring actors to perform skits specifically intended to humiliate him personally at the very feast he was poisoned at. So it's not as though Tyrion could deny that he had the means, the motive, or the opportunity to commit the crime.
His biological parents(well at least his mother) don't want to kill him but that's about it.Q99 wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:Joffrey had gone a looong way out of his way to antagonize his uncle, of course, including hiring actors to perform skits specifically intended to humiliate him personally at the very feast he was poisoned at. So it's not as though Tyrion could deny that he had the means, the motive, or the opportunity to commit the crime.
But who doesn't?
Well, some may not have the means or opportunity, but nigh everyone has a motive.