Talk:Marc Antony/@comment-36277500-20190318165241

There should be also note: "In chapter 9 you may choose to be intimate with him, however you would be interrupted" - it's worth mentioning. The more worthy mentioning is: "In chapter 17 you may choose to be intimate with him".

PS. I disagree he only "freed" Syphax with quotation marks. He saved him from certain death, which awaited Syphax after the trial - even if senators bought the story about self-defence, they would be so terrified by Rufus Glycia, that they would vote down death sentence for sure. On the other hand, Syphax was once a legionary and alligator's hunter (diamond choices), so he had more than a slight chance in arena.

And why Antony didn't interrupt selling Syphax away? For the first, there were different times with different rules, and Antony had no interest in breaking it - he was no charitable institution, but a (cold-blooded cruel bastard) typical Roman patrician.

For the second, told you from the start, baby, from the start: "I don't like to share". Even if Syphax is not our LI, Antony still considers him as a rival - being neither blind nor fool, he probably noticed, in one second, the latter one's feelings for Arin. He saved Syphax (to make Arin happy), but made him sent far away from her (to make himself happy). I somehow doubt that "saint" Cassius would behave differently, for the same reason (jealousy).