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Who was in the wrong?
Nicholas Gray
Leo Rodriguez
The potion seller.
The knight knew he would die, and knowing so, was pleading the potion seller to grant him his final wish to die triumphant in battle.
The potion seller was a scoundrel, too attached to playing games.
Hudson Cooper
nice try fag OP
if the knight dies, everyone will blame the potion seller for irresponsibly selling their strongest potion
it's in his best interest to only sell to competent customers who will keep coming back to restock
Benjamin Adams
>muh dividends
Andrew Phillips
...I am going into battle
David Nelson
As a business owner, the Potion Seller has a right to decide who he sells his product to. "Weakness" is not a class protected by discrimination. You cannot become a firefighter if you do not meet certain physical requirements or sue if you get kicked out of a gym for endangering yourself and others at the squat rack.
The Potion Seller cannot be compelled to sell dangerous potions he has deemed unfit for consumption by the customer. You (hopefully) cannot walk up to a doctor and demand he prescribe you an easily lethal amount of morphine, even if you are a soldier.
The Potion Seller is interested in the financial security and reputation of his business. Willingly selling a lethal potion, or trying to deceive a customer by watering it down, has a potentially grievous impact his ability to provide for himself.
The Potion Seller is clearly an expert in his field, selling to only the most elite clientèle. He determines at a glance that the traveler is far too weak for his potions, and makes a judgment as a renown professional.
It is morally wrong to sell an item to someone who, beyond a reasonable doubt, has informed you that they plan to kill themselves with said item in a clear disregard for the intended purpose and reason for sale. The Potion Seller is in the business of crafting powerful potions, not assisted suicide, and does not wish for the death of innocent travelers to weigh on his conscious even if he is ultimately not responsible for their arrogant idiocy.
His insults, while demeaning to the traveler, is obviously born from tough love. You cannot rely on potions to win your battles. If the Knight survives and becomes strong enough, he can always return and purchase some of the strongest potions.
By all coherent arguments and reason, the traveler is initially in the wrong until he coincides with the wishes of the Potion Seller and seeks a different seller.
Jose Clark
Ok but i'm going into battle and i need your strongest potion.
Jack Bell
Nice try retard, potions have a giant warning disclaimer that specifically prevents anyone from blaming the potion seller.
William Ramirez
The first lesson they teach you in medieval school is appearances can be deceiving. The potion seller has no idea of the knight's true strength and thus is simply being petty.
Ryder James
Not a single one of the potion seller's potions was consumable by humans, he was literally bragging about how they could all kill humans. Who on earth is his target market?
Benjamin Bell
Really strong dragons.
His clientele is mostly powerful female dragons.
They pay him in sex, then give him their eggs that he uses to make more potions, and also sell for money.
Blake Garcia
dragons don't use potions, you silly gamer
Aiden Rogers
>"Weakness" is not a class protected by discrimination. You cannot become a firefighter if you do not meet certain physical requirements
>WASHINGTON -- More than half of female Marines in boot camp can't do three pullups, the minimum standard that was supposed to take effect with the new year, prompting the Marine Corps to delay the requirement.
Ethan Bennett
This. Traveler should have just asked for the strongest potion he could handle.
Dylan Campbell
No, the seller specifically says his strongest potions aren't fit for consumption. He's simply angry at the knight for pompously asking for his strongest potions, and so he refuses to sell him any.
Chase Young
At what point did the knight say what he intended to use the potions for? He never once implied that he planned to consume the potions, he simply requested his strongest potions. Perhaps is purchasing the potions for someone who is strong enough to use them, or perhaps he plans to weaponize them as poisons. The potion seller made no attempt to gather any information on these possibilities, instead simply rejecting the knight with no thought. Potion seller was in the wrong.
Jordan Cook
i see you, mobile poster
i see you, you underaged fuck
visiting me-me and downloading shitty compressed images with meaningless shitty captions
i see you downloading images trying to make the twitter funnies
stop wasting bandwidth with your garbage quality images and post the originals
anyway the potion seller was right
Cooper Lopez
>The potion seller has no idea of the knight's true strength
Obviously if the knight has to lean on the strongest potions to go to battle, it just shows that he isn't capable of doing it himself. Him insisting on it means that the knight truly cannot complete whatever mission he has without the potion. If the knight was truly strong enough, he would've smiled and walked away, knowing that his reputation and skill does not depend on outside factors. Sure the potion can be of use, but it isn't paramount, or at least shouldn't.
The knight was petty and childish. Like a child asking for a cookie from his mother. The Potion Seller saw his weakness and rightfully withheld his produce from the customer.
Carter Murphy
The customer is always right.
Jace Anderson
>Knight can't get potion
>instead of just moving on he whines about it proving he truly is too weak for the potion
I'd say the Knight was wrong. The seller was testing the knight and the knight failed to prove he was strong enough.
Isaiah Butler
>
Easton White
It's very rare for a store to still use that policy. Customers are quite often idiots.
Jack Fisher
That saying has been butchered and memed into meaning something entirely different from the context of its original statement, namely that the customer has valid complaints. Anyone who unironically backs the statement in its current form is either arguing in bad faith or is short a few fries for a Happy Meal.
Lucas Mitchell
Exactly, also the knight waltzes in and asks for the strongest stuff meaning he himself doesn't have any idea if he can even handle it. If he knew he could, he would name the potion e.g "Fireweed Potion", but no, he just demands for the strongest stuff. Imagine a customer today walking to a gunshop and demanding for the most powerful weapon. Would the owner actually sell it? Of course not, because only truly experienced people know how to operate and use it. The knight also at one point exclaims
>why won't you trust me with your potions? I need them if I am to be successful in the battle.
He blatantly says he can't do it without them, is this a sign of a strong knight who can handle the strongest potions?
Austin Bennett
What kind of business is he running if none of his potions can be fit for consumption? He says his potions could kill beasts and dragons. He sounds more like a deadly poison seller using his potion store as a front for selling his illegal wares.
Connor Ward
that was the slogan made up by sears
they went bankrupt
Leo Lee
>Imagine a customer today walking to a gunshop and demanding for the most powerful weapon. Would the owner actually sell it?
He would sell him a pen.
Xavier Baker