: However, the majority of the game's levels (two before
: Madrigal, all of them after Madrigal) have no
: warriors, nor any melee except Trow, Zerks and Heron
: Guards (which the narrator obviously ain't). It's one
: thing to have a level or two which don't feature a
: unit who, according to the narrator, should be there
: (e.g. Garrick and a squad of Warriors should appear on
: Beyond the Cloudspine); it's another to have the
: narrator's unit absent for more than half the game.
: Unless the narrator switches bodies at will, I think
: he pretty much has to be an archer.
: This would also explain why he's interested in joining
: the Heron Guard. Having been trained by the Legion
: rather than the fir'Bolg, he'd have learned a lot more
: about melee combat to complement his unexceptional
: archery skills, and so it'd be more plausible that he
: could become a katana-swinging Heron than it would be
: for one of his more specialized fellows.
yeah, he probably is a warrior, but I've stood by my little argument since day one. Just because there are no warriors in most of the levels doesn't mean that he is not one. The battles that take place in the Myth games do not necessarily represent all of the units that are really there. A prime example of this is the Watcher, where 100 zerks go to take out the watcher, but you only really control 40 or 50 at most. Most of the battles (besides the hero battles) were probably much larger scale than they looked, and had more units in them than just those in the game. Warriors probably took part in every battle, but the game just didn't use them with all of the battles.