I love how Splinter Cell has a sense of humor that is actually fitting with the dark theme of the game. “Merry Christmas, Fisher, you’re off the leash, kill all the guerrillas you like.
I hadn't watched this video and I thought I knew all interrogations and unique dialogue by heart, but I didn't know about the one you get for idling in the very beginning. Wow, after 16 years... Thanks for this. Consider adding "& unique dialogue" in the title.
There's so much interesting dialogue in this game; I wonder why it was pulled from stores? Like, here's two other exchanges that I didn't expect in a Tom Clancy game: 25:32-25:50 FISHER - Why should he risk so much for Indonesia? INGRID - It's not _for_ Indonesia, it's _against_ America. He thinks he was personally betrayed. He hasn't been back in Jakarta since the war began, *if* they're admitting this is a war yet. FISHER - They're still calling it an "incident." There's a thousand-bomb minimum on wars. 28:40-29:13 FISHER - Here. I would've gift-wrapped him, but I couldn't find any duct tape. INGRID - It always shocks me how young he looks, like a little kid compared to his face on television. FISHER - You honestly liked him? INGRID - No. Respect, maybe. But I know he's a monster. He has a child's idea of war. He can't tell the difference between a citizen and a soldier. He thinks the whole world is a morally-viable target. FISHER - There's only one nation on the planet fighting the whole world. INGRID - Huh. Whose side are you on? FISHER - You know I can't say that. INGRID - Yeah, I know. …
Also as dahlia mentions "our govm. Are alies, our enemies are *yours*. Also you can compare Cohen attitude towards dahlia tal at the beginning of the Jakarta level. Also, from the wikia-soth means honor in Cambodian, but he was a Cia asset in Indonesia,the irony.
Maybe; he might also have picked that idiomatic saying up from somewhere, but I also think it'd be interesting if he was confirmed to be Jewish by one of Tom Clancy's ghostwriters, Ubisoft, or even Clancy himself premortem.
@@therealememci5380 there are also hints of that I guess. 1.)in various games he mentions God, and not Jesus. 2.)in the books, he marries a Jewish woman, that teaches him some krav Maga. 3.) Sam handles, morgenholt(sc1) and Cohen are both jewish 4.) fisher might not be zionist (pro-Israel) but pro-jewish nonetheless. He also comments on Jerusalem "huh... So this is where peace and love came from". Also saying. Cohen: my mom always wanted to make a pilgramadge here Fisher: (in a bored tone) That's sweet...
"We're Kosher" can just be slang for "We're cool." An Indonesian man working as a technician for a guerilla group is unlikely to be familiar with it. I believe that was the gist of the exchange.
As much as PT feels off compared to the first game (in my opinion, it feels like an expansion pack from a different group) and is inferior to Chaos Theory (which feels like a true sequel to the first game, by which it truly is) in so many ways, it still has its charm, and I hope it eventually leaves abandonware and even get updates that can help with its performance on modern gaming platforms. Also, the multiplayer deservedly rocked. Shame it and CT's aren't officially running anymore.
I have the first one, Pandora tomorrow, and chaos theory I've bought the very first splinter cell for the PS2 2004 when I came out. Along with GTA vice city and GTA 3.
Splinter Cell (Ubisoft Montreal), Pandora Tomorrow (Ubisoft Shanghai), Chaos Theory (Ubisoft Montreal). Double Agent (Xbox 360 Ubisoft Shanghai), Double Agent (Xbox Original Ubisoft Montreal), Conviction Montreal, Blacklist Montreal. Because there literally was an A and a B team.