Edfilho said:
Ever since his inception in WC2 the game-tolwyn was a Jerk. A high-and-mighty admiral who simply hated blair and blamed him for everything. He never really trusted Blair.
Beg to differ. WC2-Tolwyn was a jerk, yes.
To Blair. And remember, at this point, because of the Tiger's Claw, Chris Blair is a pariah; Tolwyn isn't just being a jerk for the hell of it, he thinks Blair betrayed the Claw and he's acting accordingly.
Remember what he said to Paladin: "You can’t depend on him. Ask anyone who served on the Tiger’s Claw. If you can find any of them. They’re rather scarce these days." and then later to Hobbes: "[To question Blair's courage] is standard procedure these days." But not only does Tolwyn show that he's willing to change his mind about Blair ("Maverick isn't the enemy." "He'll have to prove that to me, James.") he isn't a jerk to everyone:
Sparks on Tolwyn: "Darn fine commander. [...] You’re on his bad side, sure enough. He’s just trying to look out for his people. "
Tolwyn on Bear: "But if I could, Bondarevsky, I’d give you a medal and promotion, instead of this cell. You’re a fine officer, and I’m very proud of what you’ve done."
Bandit LOAF said:
Book Tolwyn = Tolwyn circa Special Operations 1 & 2, the last game to be released before End Run and Fleet Action were written.
Agreed completely. My opinion is that the only time we-as-gameplayers see the "real" Admiral Tolwyn, the one who rose through the ranks and gained such trust and loyalty from everyone, is during Special Ops 1 & 2. Before that, he considers Blair a traitor who should have resigned, if not fallen on his own sword, and the next time we see him, WC3, is after the Battle of Earth, during a truly desperate time in Confed history, when the weight of the galaxy is literally on his shoulders.
Edfilho said:
He didn't seem to hesitate for a second with the Behemoth, much to the contrary, he was flat out excited with it.
The end of war - which is what the Behemoth represented - is always something to be excited about, and Admiral Tolwyn saw the entire war; the whole, damn, decades-long thing, from McAuliffe (or was it Enyo?) in '34 all the way to the Temblor operation in '69, including losing several entire planets to Cat biological or nuclear attacks. One can't blame him for a little vindictive glee when the end looked in sight.
Edfilho said:
given that several other key personnel have endure the same things and did not turn into SelfGenocidal maniacs
Tolwyn was the only one who had the entire fleet and the entire war on his shoulders after Confed had been crippled by the false armistice.
HammerHead said:
in the books he acts alot more human while in WC3 (the game) I always saw him as a man on the brink of madness (a brink he cross, or jumped off, in WC4).
I wouldn't call it madness, more desperation. First Tolwyn has to save the Confederation from itself, then from the Kilrathi. Then, knowing how barely the Confed beat back the Cats, knowing how much luck and sacrifice was involved, he despairs, thinking of the next time the Confederation will meet a hostile alien race.
WC4-Tolwyn is to me, not an evil figure, but a tragic one. He's desperate. He's terrified. Yes, his methods were wrong, but they were done out of his drive to safeguard the Confederation at all costs.
I think his encyclopedia entry says it all, really: "He was convinced that humanity would now face extinction at the hands of the next enemy that came along." His desperation to prevent that led to his disgrace and death. Tragic? Yes. Ruthless? At the end. Evil? I really have to disagree.