But one person who might know is Laura Rodriguez, astrobiologist at NASA. But could other planets host life? And if so, what would it look like? I don’t know, I’m just a podcast man. Hence the term "Earth-clan".Look outside at earth’s life. As for humans, they only began settling worlds outside the solar system 30 years before the saga, so basically almost all humans still originate from the only life-supporting planet on Sol System, and that is Earth. This might be because although the Asari are from Thessia, they have settled dozens of other worlds, each fully developed, so it stands to reason that when encountering one she may not be from Thessia. The Volus see the Turians as real allies and protectors, so I imagine they don't go treating them just like they treat any other creature (though nothing is present in the game).Īs for other races, you don't see them saying "Thessia-clan". They protect them but grant them no real standing on the Turian Hierarchy. Dogs and cats have said appendage as well, only in a smaller scale.Īs for relations between volus and turians, the Turians see the Volus as a client race. As for the appendages, likely they are there for balance issues or to determine just how much they can bend the leg. Impossible to know why the collars exist, most likely there is no reason and it is just part of the exoskeleton. You have Garrus that is a Turian Agent and master sniper (requires Dex for that) and you have Victus' son clearly showing he is quite agile. These last situations aren't exactly representative, no one would have dodged them no matter how agile.Īnd throughout the games you see they are clearly as agile as any other race, at the very least. Other than that, all I recall are the videos of turian civilians not dodging a car or a point-blank bullet.
In this videos you have Praetor Gavon showing clearly what it means to be stealthy and agile, capable of attacking and hiding before the enemy knows you are there. All of this tying together suggests that Turian's are simply more stable and have a bonus to attack rolls with ranged weapons. They maintain higher control of the weapon by keeping it from jerking around and is capable of firing more shots and being more accurate. Using ME3 as a reference for what the stereotypical Turian is trained in, they have a unique amount of stability when firing a weapon. In fact, it promotes more of a bonus to strength and carrying capacity as well as areas of expertise depending on the part of the military you are part of. Military background in actuality does not promote a bonus to dexterity either. Perhaps they should just have higher movement speed instead of the racial Dex bonus? Flight has its own speed and should be compared to land rather than the ability to avoid being hit in melee or ranged combat.
#WHAT DO VOLUS LOOK LIKE SKIN#
Birds don't share the mandible-like jaw structure their faces have or the exoskeleton appearing skin that they have, though what it actually feels like could be contradictory to how it looks.ĭexterity is the ability to evade and maneuver and does not dictate the ability to move across a distance quickly (hence dexterity not affecting movement speed). I haven't read the codex entries in quite some time but for them to be compared to birds is odd to me. While Dexterity is tied with firing ranged weaponry it also ties in the ability to avoid being hit, which Turian's have yet to display in any of the games, since the first one. In most of these, Turians displayed the capability of taking hits and not being evasive. To argue my point of the Shadow Broker ship DLC, there was no codex just several videos that would periodically change that you could view of NPCs across the universe.
This is a general look at insects as a condensed specie, not at any particular insect. Insects mainly are just quick at moving across land or air, not actually being agile.