At the very least, it’s a spiritual continuation of the strange beauty pageant that brought FemShep into existence in the first place. Cynically, one could look at this as a tacit admission that BioWare didn’t put enough work into the original FemShep model. Polygon inquired if the male version of Shepard will also get a face lift, but has yet to receive a response. “She competes more with the iconic male Shepherd in terms of overall quality now,” he continued. The average player might not see the difference, he admits, but the hope was that the newer model would “catch the light better.” The team decided to do “another pass” on her where they slightly modified “some larger forms of her face, or adding some medium and fine details like wrinkles and pores and specular breakup.” “I think she was a really good example of an ME3 character that, you know, had still some room for improvement,” Meek said. The remastered version won’t have this problem, as the default FemShep we all know and love will be available from the get-go. This, he said, came with an inherent disconnect: You could have played the first two games looking one way, and then boot up the final game only to look entirely different. Easier on the eyes - at least, according to BioWare.ĭuring a hands-off presentation detailing the changes coming to the remastered version of the sci-fi trilogy, environment and character director Kevin Meek noted that the iconic female version of Shepard wasn’t introduced until Mass Effect 3. You might miss it, but if you look closely, you might see that the standard Commander Shepard model for women in Mass Effect Legendary Edition is a little different.
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