Summary

  • Dragon Age: The Veilguard won't introduce a canon world state.
  • Game director John Epler tells TheGamer that as far as he's concerned, there is no canon.
  • Instead, it's still up to players to decide what's canon in their playthroughs.

Dragon Age: The Veilguard is ditching the Keep - a site used to store players' world states across the Dragon Age series. However, this doesn't mean that The Veilguard is making a particular playthrough canon.

Sitting down with TheGamer staff writer Gabrielle Castania at San Diego Comic-Con, game director John Epler goes into more detail on Dragon Age: The Veilguard. Here, he confirms that there is no canon world state. As far as BioWare's concerned, it's whatever we want it to be.

Dragon Age: The Veilguard Doesn't Have A Set Canon

Epler expands on what canon means in Dragon Age when asked if The Veilguard will pick a particular world state.

"We get asked that a lot, especially because when we start doing products like comics [and] shows, people want to know what's canon," says Epler. "We have to decide one that is for that media canon, but I don't think there really is a canon state of the world.

"I do think there are some more interesting ones, I'm always a fan of the most chaotic and strange paths through the game, but no, there's no canon. There's always what your world of Thedas is, what your people have done... it's your own canon. Canon is a very personal thing in Dragon Age."

We already know that we'll be recreating our Inquisitor in The Veilguard, so we can expect the decisions they made to have some significance.

While this might seem obvious, given that all previous games have let us transfer characters and decisions over, this isn't always a given. In fact, Dragon Age has made a habit of removing some decisions - perhaps most glaringly with Dragon Age: Origins. For example, neither of Cullen's Origins endings can be canon, since that would write him out of the next two games (we could only be so lucky), and Anders can straight up die in the expansion, before turning up unharmed in Dragon Age 2.

We'll have to wait and see if The Veilguard can stay faithful to all world states, or if some creative liberties are taken. But at the very least, we now know there isn't a canon world state that's overriding everything.

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Dragon Age: The Veilguard

RPG Systems 4.0/5 68 5.9/10 OpenCritic Reviews Top Critic Avg: 80/100 Critics Rec: 71% Released October 31, 2024 ESRB M For Mature 17+ // Blood, Nudity, Sexual Themes, Strong Language, Violence Developer(s) BioWare Publisher(s) Electronic Arts Engine Frostbite
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Dragon Age: The Veilguard is the long-awaited fourth game in the fantasy RPG series from BioWare formerly known as Dragon Age: Dreadwolf. A direct sequel to Inquisition, it focuses on red lyrium and Solas, the aforementioned Dread Wolf. 

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