Remember how Guardians are chosen...
Devotion inspires bravery....
Bravery inspires sacrifice...
Sacrifice leads to death.
English
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Pretty sure that is just a morale boosting phrase said to new Guardians to make them feel better about themselves. "Hey buddy welcome to the Last City on Earth! Where our enemies literally attack us daily with system destroying weapons! Now we see you just woke up yesterday, now we're going to send you to face a 20 foot tall space rhino with a minigun. Have fun!"
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Since the beginning of D2,those triats are part of what qualifies someone to become a Guardian.
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They're just used for morale. Savathun didn't sacrifice anything to become a guardian. Ana Bray was just doing her normal job before she died. Uldren betrayed his own people to freeish Riven. None of them sacrificed themselves to be ome guardians
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It is how one qualifies to be a Guardian. We've been told this since at least the Red War from year 1 D2.
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Like I said before. We have seen Guardians who do NOT follow that creed yet become Guardians. The Vanguard probably made that after looking up Guardians and people who knew them before they died. Like what was that person doing before they died. You're not even making any examples or explanation. You're just saying, "iTs hOw tO bE gUaRdIaN"
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You are entirely too literal. It is the mindset of those that died must align with... Devotion,Bravery,and Sacrifice. That makes one a candidate to become a guardian. That has been implied since at least D2's base campaign the Red War; and was reiterated during Witchqueen. You can dislike it,but that is what the games have said.
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I understand the game said that. But Bungie constituency is very VERY iffy. They almost never follow their past lore unless it came out months after what they put out. That creed is badass saying, but we once more see people who were ressurrected by the Traveler. Yet we don't see what that person do anything SELFLESS. Become a guardian days later or centuries later
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Protagonist privilege.
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But once again. We've seen now guardians who didn't follow the creed. Become guardians. The Vanguard mostly likely made it as a way from the amount of Guardians who were recorded and known. They probably did a study/research of what someone was doing before they died. That's the most logical way I can think of how they made the creed. And the way they say all this is to bring morale or give meaning to what a Guardian should do. You're just ignoring everything I'm saying and just going, "It's how someone becomes a Guardian" without any explanation
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No. That is precisely how Guardians are chosen. Embodying those over the course of one's life.
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[quote]No. That is precisely how Guardians are chosen. Embodying those over the course of one's life.[/quote] They're the traits we're told lead to one becoming a Guardian, there's several characters that disprove it. Ana was just at work, she did nothing brave nor did she sacrifice anything, as a Guardian she is selfish. It's very hard to imagine that Drifter ever sacrificed himself for another person ...
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By thr light all you're saying is just. "ThATs hOw OnE bE gUaRdIaNs" without EXPLAINING. I gave three people who were revived and became Guardians who DID NOT FOLLOW THE CREED. Yet HERE THEY ARE
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From Ana's backstory for example. She deactivated Rasputin's coding or some -blam!-(Can't remember exactly from the cutscenes) she was just soing her job normally and working with Rasputin. She didn't sacrifice anything at the time. She was just doing her job. The Creed is just what defines a guardian and their role. To help others, even if it means we die. And it's only stated at the launch of Destiny 2. No where mentioned in Destiny 1 beforehand. It's a brand new concept that is probably used to raise morale for new light guardians
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Those triats are part of what qualifies someone to be a guardian.