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Prosecutor godot
Prosecutor godot










prosecutor godot
  1. #Prosecutor godot plus#
  2. #Prosecutor godot series#

Personally, I very much disagree with what people say about Klavier.

#Prosecutor godot plus#

This is my rank of best to worst prosecutorġ- (probaly the best overall balance of skill defently a tough opponent)Ģ- (got by a little bit more on whim and emotion but otherwhise good)ģ- (i thought she was a bit to childish to be a prosecutor everytime you get something right she just yell at you and call you a fool though she had a few good argument i say she was sub par at best)Ĥ- ( well he has more going for him then klavier he was sorta ok on 3-1)ĥ- ( worst prosecutor ever he practily did apollo job for him well not that i blame him seeing how bad apollo was but that's for a different topic i guess plus i hate his fake accent i bet he's never even been to germany) To get through the crap and work with the defence to get to the truth then yes, I think he does that better than past prosecutors. I can not say if he is a good prosecutor as what makes a 'good prosecutor' seems subjective. I think the higher ups in the Prosecutors Office know Godots true history and the whole 'being great' is not so much as a prosecutor but his past life experience.įundamentally, Godot is a character much like his own coffee, dark and bitter as well as likely very hurt.ĪHAHA, EDIT! I am doing the very thing which gets my essays marked down, going off topic. I might be wrong of course, my short-term memory is shot and as I'm playing T&T now. I am sure I read and commented on a post complaining about motives not being used a lot, I think Godot used them for his cases, trying to give motive to why someone was killed by the defendant. He seem to give due where due was needed, why? prove it? simple questions and arguments but fundamental, the basics of it might be something which was missing for most of the other trials, too far flung into tricks and cleverly organised witnesses to get away from the whole 'why' questions. I always thought Godot made a good foil for Phoenix and made him actually work things out, not so much just 'beat' Godot but get to the truth of the matter. The court battles are a challenge to me- not the be all end all.

#Prosecutor godot series#

I personally play and love the Phoenix Wright series cause of the characters and storylines. The rest don't really matter- unless Phoenix Wright has to be difficult to play for it to be enjoyable for you. His tragedy is that his heart has been torn so badly that he couldn't defend a man till it was mended once more. His character wasn't mean to be a prosecutor. Godot was passionate, fiery, romantic, and it came out EVERYWHERE in his character. I mean, really- Edgeworth for me flopped as a character, cause aside from being dead sexy and awesome in court, he really didn't interest me at all with his moping around. For me, his tragedy is what makes it for me. Someone like him was too emotional to be a prosecutor, but he fought SO hard to get to where he was. As it was said earlier- he only wanted to size up Phoenix and see what kind of man he was for 'what he did'. I don't really care if he was a good prosecutor or not. Klavier may get a lot of flack for being 'boring', but at least he used good arguments to counter the defense's position most of the time. Tl dr No, Godot is not a good prosecutor. Actually, do I even need to say anything here? (I love how the prosecution can just decide a witness is wrong whenever they feel like it while you always have to back it up with, uh, proof. Then when you do break Armstrong, Godot is sure to make it clear he's 'probably' lying. In 3-3, when you point out the HMD contradiction in Armstrong's testimony, Godot just says "Oh, well, Kudo meant it was on the right side" and it's accepted at that. In 3-2, when you're trying to break Atmey about Bullard's murder, Godot just goes "Whoop, looks like you're getting somewhere with this so no more testimony for you!" and since it's coming from the prosecution, the judge goes along with it. (Wow, you confused the JUDGE! Good work, Armando, not everyone can pull that off!) At all.īB and meb did a pretty good job of summing up Godot's prosecuting 'skills.' Basically, he just used the prosecutor's advantage to force his lousy points and metaphorical bullshit to confuse the judge into taking his side. That's one thing I hated about Godot the way everyone kept saying he was so good and so cool and etc. I believe he even says at one point that Godot is the "most formidable opponent" he's ever faced.












Prosecutor godot