2013-12-03, 17:01 | Link #33541 | |
Dea ex Kakera
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Sea of Fragments
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Yasu was fairly taken with Maria's worldview that "different behavior = different person", which I think was probably a large factor in why she decided to treat Shannon and Kanon the way she did with the red truth in her writing. ED: Whoops, ninja'd by AuraTwilight.
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2013-12-03, 17:24 | Link #33542 | |
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It's easier to think of it as a role. If I play Hamlet in a production of the play, then at the end of the play (SPOILER ALERT) I-as-Hamlet "die." But I-as-the-actor-playing-Hamlet am not dead, and at the start of the next night's performance I-as-Hamlet am alive again because the play is being put on a second time. Beatrice seems to be able to refer to Shannon and Kanon as if they are Hamlet. The problem, such as it is, is when she's referring to Kanon's death as if he's Hamlet to somebody else's death as if they're the actual actor, like saying "after Hamlet died, Horatio died onstage" to refer to Horatio's actor dropping dead of a heart attack after Hamlet's stage death. My latest series of brainfarts was basically trying to reconcile that in a manner that provides the least stupid outcome.
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2013-12-03, 19:19 | Link #33543 |
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Join Date: Jan 2012
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This may sound far fetched, but this whole "role/name"-"body" thing is reminding me of a certain thing in programming.
It is "call by referrence". That means: You have an Object, let us say in Umineko's case the bodies. Then you have variables, which would be the names and roles in Umineko. It is possible that multiple variables refer to the same body. So Shannon, Kanon and Beatrice are variables that refer to "the body of the child from 19 years ago". You can then "kill" the variables without affecting the Object, i.e. the body, in any way, by setting a variable to "null": Code:
Kanon = null; Then later on you can "revive" Kanon, by making it a variable "the body of the child from 19 years ago" again, by referencing to another reference, like Shannon or Yasu: Code:
Kanon = Shannon; Code:
Kanon = Yasu; So applying this to EP3, the child from 19 years ago has 3 variables: Shannon, Kanon and Beatrice. Shannon and Kanon are "dead", but Beatrice was never declared in red to be dead, so the child from 19 years ago could have commited the murder of Nanjo, even though 2 of its variables are "dead". See, jTiKey, wasn't so hard, right?
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2013-12-03, 19:59 | Link #33544 | ||
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Join Date: Aug 2011
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Although it might seem weird they're considered just roles, during work there are cases of people feeling required to 'play a part' and acting in a certain way even if that's not how they would normally behave. As the... let's call it original vessel of Shannon and Kanon, didn't have friends at first and was even required by Natsuhi to act in a certain way with Jessica and likely with George and Battler, even if later on she managed to develop a relation with them, it's possible she felt as if she always had to put up a front and act in a certain way, as if she had to continue playing a role. And when she discovered the truth about herself but decided to continue being Shannon, this become even more marked. She was litterally playing servant when she could have been family head (Or so she was lead to believe. Actually I'm not sure her claim would have had any legal holding...). And trust me, the fairness of all this applied to the game has been discussed many, many times, as not everyone here liked this solution although it makes logical sense. |
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2013-12-03, 20:29 | Link #33545 |
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Join Date: Jun 2010
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You know, I think this "fantasy scenes represent people setting up the mystery" is a really, really good theory. Suddenly loads of scenes that previously just seemed like weirdly misleading white noise now have a lot of meaning. I'll try and state the basic premises of this theory. What I'm saying applies to the first four games, the other games basically twist this premise in order to reveal the truth.
1. Yasu was planning a murder mystery night. The first two episodes are some plans Yasu had for how it was going to go. The first two games can be solved purely in terms of Yasu's intended mystery. 2. All of meta-Beatrice's red truths refer to the mystery she set up. That is, if a character died in Yasu's story, she can declare them to be dead. There is no personality death, instead there is "script death". 3. However, people who die according to Yasu's script are not actually dead. They can go "backstage" and help Yasu to create her mystery. 4. The fantasy scenes effectively give us a glimpse behind the scenes of the mystery. It may be hidden under a layer of metaphor, but every fantasy scene contains information as to what is really happening on the island. 5. Episodes 3 and 4 start similarly, but are derailed. Real murders begin to occur, throwing everything into chaos and making it so that the mystery Yasu wrote and the unfolding situation "behind the scenes" can no longer be treated as two distinct stories. I think that the fantasy scenes make a lot more sense when interpreted in this way. I don't really have time to completely "solve" the fantasy scenes of episodes 3 and 4, but I can provide some general interpretations that I think work well: - The stakes represent the parents, when they're willingly playing along with Yasu's plan. They're around in episode 2 because all the parents are "dead" and thus available to help. If a stake is shown killing someone, that means they convinced the person to join the mystery night (if necessary) and also helped them with their makeup. - Virgilia and Ronove represent Kumasawa and Genji respectively. The fact that they kept appearing in episode 3 in spite of their vessels being dead was previously perplexing, but under this interpretation it makes perfect sense. - All of the Goats are any miscellaneous additional helpers Yasu picks up. They're probably usually Gohda - The Chiesters are a bit different. They do not represent anyone in particular - they are a mask that hides the actual culprit's identity. A kill by a Chiester is an actual, real murder on the backstage level. Note that Beatrice herself never uses the Chiesters. It's possible that Eva-Beatrice also has this property. - Yasu plays the parts of both Shannon and Kanon, who are separate people in her stories. Shannon and Kanon are the main clues Battler has towards working out the real truth behind the mystery night. Neither personality death nor Shkannon are required to solve the first two episodes on the "Yasu's mystery" level. I think that Shannon is the main culprit in Yasu's mystery, with Kanon trying to stop her. With this framework, I'll now briefly look at some "solutions" to fantasy scenes. Properly solving episodes 3 and 4 would probably take a lot of time since their fantasy scenes are pretty complex. Episode 2: Most of this is fairly easy. Yasu's plan goes basically perfectly, which is why none of Beatrice's minions meet any real resistance. The backstage story of episode 2 is mostly just the "dead" parents setting up crimescenes. The one thing that requires some explanation is the testimony stating that Kanon is alive. I think the "Yasu's mystery" solution was that Shannon coerced people into testifying that Kanon was the culprit (Kanon actually died with Jessica, but had to disappear in order to prevent a "logic error"). Backstage, however, Yasu really did appear to those people dressed as Kanon - that's what the fantasy scene is telling us. Episode 3: I can't really run through a full solution, but my general thoughts: - The first twilight represents an argument between the people planning the mystery. In the end Yasu is forced to agree to have both of her characters killed off right at the start. - Eva decides she can do better than Yasu, and starts messing with her script and trying to create her own story. She starts making threats with actual guns, and from there things escalate into actual murders. - I'm still kindof fuzzy on the later parts. Under my "Chiesters = real murders" theory, the people who are actually killed are Rudolf, Kyrie, Krauss, Natsuhi, George and Shannon (Yasu?). If we include Eva-Beatrice then Rosa, Maria, Hideyoshi and Nanjo are also dead for real. It's possible that Eva accidentally shot someone and thus violence broke out, or that she killed people out of revenge for the deaths of her son and husband. I could probably solve this if I could remember the exact content of the fantasy scenes - In any case, Eva-Beatrice creates her final riddle by selectively making red truths that apply to the mystery level and the real-world level, thus making it appear that everyone else is dead. However, on the "backstage" level most of the first twilight victims are still alive, and able to kill Nanjo. The motive would be a suspicion that he's been working with the real killer to cover up the fact that murders are actually happening. |
2013-12-03, 23:35 | Link #33547 | |
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Interpreting the Chiesters as murder in itself is a little farfetched I'd say, especially since we already know what they are, they are the Winchester guns themselves. But that actually leads me to something. What is the reason behind Beatrice herself actually never summoning the Chiesters? Well, if we take it literally it simply means that the person who is Beatrice does not use the guns, at least not as a killing device. Them being summoned by Eva-Beato in EP3 is I think a fairly important part in comparison to the stakes. The stakes, from the very beginning, are described as being almost impossible to use as an actual weapon and also within fantasy scenes they are often comparably incompetent, having to rely on sneak-attacks to actually do damage. The Chiesters are described as unstoppable and killing with almost 100% certainty. We know from the EP8 manga that Natsuhi's gun in EP1 was loaded with blanks, likely the same was the case for Rosa in EP2, AND considering that Eva's gun did in fact only blind Jessica, isn't it possible to assume that her's was filled with blanks as well? So yes, in a way the Chiesters are the intent to kill, but it also points to the owner of their vessel, the Winch(i)esters. I agree that EP3 is a wild hot mess, but it's not impossible to at least get an idea of what might have went down. We can clearly solve all Episodes with Shkannontrice, and I think that is intent and likely because the stories are mimicking the framework of Yasu's original narrative, but they also hint towards the game being highjacked in between. What for example I wonder about individual EP3 interpretations. Was Yasu actually doing the killings and was simply equally hollowed out in Battler's interpretation as Lambda's EP5, or was somebody (Eva) actually murdering those people and Yasu desperately tried to keep up her game. Eva would have no reason to continue using the stakes, like Eva-Beato said, she is not interested in the ritual (the game to reach Battler). |
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2013-12-04, 10:09 | Link #33548 |
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Join Date: Jun 2010
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Yeah, how much Tohya actually knew when he wrote episodes 3 and 4 is an open question. He certainly seemed to be aware of Kinzo and Shkannon-the-culprit. I think the fantasy scenes in them imply that he's aware of the fake mystery game aspect though, since he basically has "dead" people running around and doing things in them.
The vessels of the WinChiesters are clearly the guns, but I think they may also represent an escalation to lethal force more generally. They're shown as responsible for the deaths of Krauss and Natsuhi in episode 3, afterall. My general interpretation of the Chiester summoning sequence/episode 3: Kyrie and Rudolf refused to play along with the game any further (shown by killing their respective fantasy characters) so Eva threatened them with a gun to continue. This could be because Eva had been entrusted with the role that Natsuhi and Rosa fulfilled successfully in previous episodes - Yasu would pay her if she made the murder mystery night run smoothly. Anyway, something goes badly wrong and the two of them end up dead, along with Hideyoshi who they may have been holding as a hostage. Eva sticks stakes in them because she wants to trick people into thinking the mystery game is still running smoothly. Her motive for killing Krauss and Natsuhi isn't obvious, but it may be that she suspected them of killing George or having a hand in her husband's death. I'm also not 100% clear on Nanjo - it could be that the mystery game culprit still wasn't aware murders were happening, or it could be any piece of furniture wiping him out in retaliation for not warning them that actual murders were happening. For episode 4 I'd largely stick to my previous interpretation - Kyrie (it doesn't have to be her, but I think it fits best motive-wise considering the question of Battler's maternity is raised in this episode) began murdering people after the first twilight, and was able to wipe out almost everyone. Yasu stops her, but is horrified by the carnage all over the island. She tries to make it look like a witch following the ritual, rather than Battler's true mother, was responsible before killing herself. A more detailed reading would be possible if I could remember what actually happened in the ep4 fantasy scenes. I know it's possible that Yasu did all the murders in both episodes 3 and 4, but it just doesn't seem to fit. The "ritual" seems way more sloppy and chaotic in both of them, compared to the tightly controlled first two episodes. |
2013-12-04, 18:06 | Link #33549 | |
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Join Date: Aug 2011
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The use of the Chiesters might also mean Tohya's memory is starting to remember more and more things.
If we take the meta as a battle having place in his fantasy only by EP 2 he might have 'personified' the stakes but when he started EP 3 he might have either solved EP 1&2 and realized it wasn't the stakes who killed people or even better remembered the Winchiesters were involved and that it wasn't Yasu who used them but the adults. While in EP 1 & 2 the adults are suspicious but not overly so in EP 3 Eva even shot Battler and in EP 4 Kinzo was apparently the culprit. And they both used the Chiesters. So is this a hint of the fact that in truth it wasn't Yasu the one who used winchiesters in Prime, although technically they're the weapons she often uses to kill in the forgery? Quote:
As in Ep 3 the epitaph had apparently been solved Beato should have stopped killing instead murders went on. It was speculated that Rosa, instead than keeping silent, tattled things out to Rudolf or Kyrie, who caught their chance to kill her and then Hideyoshi... I can't remember it perfectly though... In Ep 4, due to the game structure in which we don't know what's going on as we don't have a reliable observer... well everyone could be the culprit so Kyrie was a choice as good as the others... Damn, my memory is fuzzy on the details but I remember theorizing to be done... someone else remembers things better? |
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2013-12-04, 23:53 | Link #33550 |
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What's interesting about Kyrie in ep3 is that we have, for the first and quite possibly the last time in the entire series, red text specifically discounting a particular mental state. That is, we're told that Kyrie would not think and behave in a particular fashion. We're told why she wouldn't do something, then shown she did it anyway.
Kind of an interesting segment in general, especially because it's a trick that nobody else would attempt to use.
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2013-12-05, 02:44 | Link #33551 |
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Join Date: Jul 2013
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Reading over this last page has truly been interesting, if I may ask one question, how many pages compass this latest theory? Last page? I want to read the theory from the beginning in order to get a full grasp of it.
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2013-12-05, 11:02 | Link #33553 |
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Well it contradicts it inasmuch as Our Confession implies the board killer is engaging in the fakery with specific intent to commit real murder. However, it's questionable whether that's Yasu-as-author-of-message-bottles or Beatrice-the-meta-creator, since it sort of implies a continuity of creatorship from ep1-4 which isn't technically true.
My argument is basically that the message bottle stories - assuming they are Legend and Turn - could be entirely deathless despite red suggesting otherwise, if red is interepreted in line with how we're told "death" works (that is, that "dead" kills the "character" and says nothing specifically about the actual human body). Using this argument only one definition for "dead" needs to exist. It can mean the person actually died, it just doesn't have to, and it suggests that the game is molded around how the mystery "should" turn out and not necessarily that every board Fragment actually contains a mystery in its sequence of "real" events (at least, an actual murder mystery with actual murders).
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2013-12-05, 17:20 | Link #33554 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2013
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What's interesting is if we remember in the 3rd game, Eva and Rosa confronted each other in Kuwadorian. (Which we're also shown by Bernkastel in its more gruesome form in the 7th game). If the 3rd/4th games resemble a clue as to what really happened, can we take this as evidence that at least in the way Ryukishi wrote it, Eva/Rosa's confrontation really did happen in Prime? The only question is, do we have evidence outside of Bernkastel's testimony for a Kyrie Culprit theory? |
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2013-12-05, 19:45 | Link #33555 | |
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Join Date: Jun 2010
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What we have for a Kyrie culprit theory outside of her being the culprit in ep7 and Eva's silence is circumstantial.
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I don't think episodes 3 and 4 are written by Yasu because I don't think she anticipated the actions of Eva or Kyrie. They make more sense to me as reactions to the disaster after it happened. |
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2013-12-05, 20:42 | Link #33556 |
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Join Date: Aug 2011
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Well, Ep 3 & 4 are likely written by Tohya/Battler with Ikuko as they're credited to them during the game.
The only chance Yasu had to write them as well is if she were to be Ikuko. Alternatively though she could have showed them to Battler who subconsciously rewrote them. However, as Tohya was involved in writing them, he might have placed in Ep 3, 4 and the followings, hints to what really happened. Well, still I think wiping out the whole family is a bit too much for Kyrie as well... though I prefer her as culprit than Rosa if I've to pick up an adult... |
2013-12-05, 22:24 | Link #33557 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2013
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What you posted reminded me of something. Someone once theorized about Furudo Erika's character. Namely, that Erika is the characterization of Ange. There was a debate about that for quite a few pages. I bring that up in connection to this, to postulate a new truth. Erika isn't the characterization of Ange but Kyrie I mean think about it Kyrie: Betrayed by Asumu and Rudolf Erika: Betrayed by her lover Erika: Consequently doesn't believe in love Kyrie: Has rage, envy and hatred deep down in her psyche. And can it really be said she loves Rudolf? After all, we do know she felt being "nice" to Battler was the right thing. She also said she didn't view Ange as a daughter after committing the murders. That she viewed Rudolf as nothing but a drag holding her down. |
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2013-12-06, 07:46 | Link #33558 |
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Join Date: Jun 2010
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I think Kyrie does love her husband and daughter, from what we see in the series. She's prepared to kill for Rudolf, afterall.
I think we might be kindof overthinking Prime, actually. The ep7 Tea Party is probably the contents of Eva's diary. The story is heartless because Eva doesn't know the reasons behind Kyrie's or Yasu's actions, but what we are shown there is broadly true. If you just fill in a few blanks (Kyrie lost it when Rudolf told her the secret, Kyrie told Battler to go to the boat, Eva decided to blow it all up and cover up her wound to shield Ange from the truth) it makes a lot of sense. I'd explain Kyrie's speech to Eva thusly - she was out of ammo and knew she'd lose the shootout. She therefore tried to distance herself from her daughter so that Eva might take pity on her. I do think Erika as a Kyrie proxy sortof makes sense too. |
2013-12-06, 10:29 | Link #33559 |
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I'd also like to add that I find it more and more likely that something happened between the cousins, largely George and Jessica as well.
The love duel is all romantic and sweet as long as it's a fantasized ideal about rejoining a fractured soul, mending the rift, yadayadayada, but if you think about it in a complexer fashion, it also implies confronting those two young, emotionally not exactly stable people with the reality that it is up to their resolve who wins Yasu's heart. It is also interesting how in the love-duel it was said that there was almost no chance for Kanon to win in any scenario, that Shannon always had the upper-hand. If we look at Shannon's characterization throughout the series, it actually paints a pretty horrifying light. Shannon, especially in EP1-3 (in 4 there is no real time to address that point) she welcomes the opening of the doors to the Golden Land - which we now know means the explosion of the bomb - with open arms. It is Kanon who tries to fight that future, but Shannon insists that her purpose in life is fulfilled by accepting George's ring. In other words, Shannon always winning basically tells us that Yasu would equally rarely reach the decision to survive past October 6th. AND I still am incredibly fascinated by the ending of EP5 and what that tells us about what happened between Battler and Yasu/Beato. Spoiler for For Size:
This kind of makes me wonder whether this doesn't also reflect a direct mindset of what happened on the island...especially considering that it is the plot that makes Toya actually remember stuff. Especially in connection with how he later mourns Beato's loss after the finally realizes that she isn't around anymore when he solved her riddle. |
2013-12-06, 11:23 | Link #33560 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2013
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The Manga depictions are more awesome than the Visual Novels. I mean you can just feel Beato's pain when she's basically like: "You lied all those years ago!" |
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