Warhammer 40,000: Rogue Trader

Warhammer 40,000: Rogue Trader

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fenlander Feb 9, 2024 @ 2:07am
Planet Janus- After the Governor dies.
I killed the governor in my playthrough to stop the spread of chaos on the planet. Then Hendrix berates me for it because it now leaves the planet without a ruling structure. WFT? He is an Inquisitor, he then goes on to blame me for Heresy because I chose to allow Yrilet ro join my party.
The guy is a oxymoron in his own lunchtime.

So the main question is can you put into place another governor on the planet?
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Lucifer Feb 9, 2024 @ 3:19am 
I don`t sure, but I remember that some one come to me on the planet and talk about it. Or you should talk with someone by yourself.
reevestone Feb 9, 2024 @ 6:24am 
You always do, there's just not a bunch of attention drawn to it. The first Development project for Janus concerns what sort of ruling class should replace the old, which presumably includes the governor, where if I recall correctly you choose between entrusting the planet to the most chemically-skilled locals, xenos-specialists from the Kasballica, or genetic specialists from the Explorators. What exactly this means if you keep the Governor in power is not exactly clear, presumably it involves filling all the gaps created by the rebellion.

You go back to Janus at the start of Chapter 4, and it acknowledges the choice you made back in Chapter 2, either referring to the old governor if you kept her in power, a puppet governor if you made an alliance with the xenos, or a new governor if you got rid of the old governor and didn't ally with the xenos.
Originally posted by fenlander:
Then Hendrix berates me for it because it now leaves the planet without a ruling structure. WFT? He is an Inquisitor, he then goes on to blame me for Heresy because I chose to allow Yrilet ro join my party.
The guy is a oxymoron in his own lunchtime.
The Inquisition uses accusations of heresy and threats of reprisals to control people and gain power. They aren't particularly effective at detecting actual heresy or controlling the spread of it. That's why they are constantly trying to put out fires; if they had sensed what was coming they could have acted proactively instead of reactively. The Lord Inquisitor even goes so far as to tell you that he doesn't care what you do on your own time, as long as you jump when he says jump. So take Heinrix berating you as less of a sign that you've done something wrong and more as a sign that you are powerful enough for the Inquisition to want to control.
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Date Posted: Feb 9, 2024 @ 2:07am
Posts: 3