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View Poll Results: Danganronpa 3: Future Arc - Episode 10 Rating | |||
Perfect 10 | 1 | 14.29% | |
9 out of 10 : Excellent | 2 | 28.57% | |
8 out of 10 : Very Good | 2 | 28.57% | |
7 out of 10 : Good | 0 | 0% | |
6 out of 10 : Average | 1 | 14.29% | |
5 out of 10 : Below Average | 0 | 0% | |
4 out of 10 : Poor | 0 | 0% | |
3 out of 10 : Bad | 1 | 14.29% | |
2 out of 10 : Very Bad | 0 | 0% | |
1 out of 10 : Painful | 0 | 0% | |
Voters: 7. You may not vote on this poll |
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2016-09-12, 16:09 | Link #21 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2014
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I would point out that we actually still don't know if Hiro is counted on that counter (and I would assume he is until conclusively proven otherwise) -- if he is, that would mean it's counting Makoto, Munakata, Hina, Mitarai, Hiro, and one more.
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2016-09-12, 16:57 | Link #22 | |
Detective
Join Date: Aug 2010
Age: 36
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The way it appears to me the brainwashing worked on her pretty much half heartedly. Mabe she developed a 2nd personality or is aware of what she does while still being sorry about it. OR she is just a good actress and no longer gives a damn after the brainwashing
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2016-09-12, 17:11 | Link #23 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
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Not want to sound captain obvious, but...
While Tengan worded it in a way that throws anyone of us out, he actually answered Munakata's question with the truth. He actually told him who was the killer. Quote:
Munakata didn't know Chisa had become a despair. Why do you think he had that shock in his face when Tengan told him? Why do you think he was despairing on that table while holding on those photos he had found? Why do you think he said "when did that happen". He didn't know anything, and that's why he stabbed Juzo, who wanted to confess his guilt for not telling him. The Chisa Munakata knew ceased to be her long ago. This is why the last shot shows current Chisa changing back to the appearance she had in the Despair arc, the time she was the upbeat and sweet woman Munakata knew. That Chisa no longer exists. The realization broke Munakata with good reason. |
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2016-09-12, 18:27 | Link #24 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
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2016-09-12, 18:33 | Link #25 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
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Instead what you should be asking yourself is if those photos were always there. Kirigiri examined the body way before Munakata returned there. Plus Asahina realized who was the killer by looking at the anotations Kirigiri had written in her notebook. Anotations that contain info about the NG... and the victims murdered by the killer. I can already see how's this game going to end. The fact the episode ended with Asahina about to drop the bomb and with 2 episodes still left means we are in for more surprises. |
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2016-09-12, 19:58 | Link #29 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2014
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EDIT: On an unrelated note, I watched Tengan's answer to Munakata again, and it's -- interesting? You can take it in one of two ways, I think. Either: a) He's being literal (or to put it another way, he's using the context-specific form of 'attacker' as 'person designated as the murderer by the game') and saying that something has happened to them which compels them all to commit murder. Given that Monokuma appeared to them via an animation (and has strangely not been seen again), and we know that both Chisa and Mitarai are aware of how Mitarai's animations can be used to brainwash people, this is not necessarily all that implausible. Or b) He's being figurative (or to put it another way, he's using the broader form of 'attacker' as 'one who attacks'), and saying that everybody in the game has the capacity for violence against the others -- which is provably true. In this interpretation of his answer, he isn't lying (his statement is true, after all, it's just not an answer to the question Munakata asked -- Tengan's NG is 'answer a question with a lie', but all that means is that he must answer a question with a true statement. If somebody asked 'What's the weather like outside?' and he replied 'Munakata has white hair,' he'd still be obeying his NG), but he's being intentionally misleading, functionally subverting Munakata's question both to make a point and as an excuse to set him on the path to finding out about Chisa. In which case, the question really becomes why he would do that. Tengan is not obliged to only tell the truth when asked, after all, so if he really wanted Munakata to know that about Chisa, he could have told him any time, so it stands to reason that he's using that information to deliberately send Munakata down a particular path, and to cut off a line of questioning that might force him to reveal something he doesn't want Munakata to know.
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Last edited by DMurphy; 2016-09-12 at 20:12. |
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2016-09-12, 20:27 | Link #30 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
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Tengan was obviously talking figuratively. Afterall, this is what the whole game is all about: mutual killing.
But... at the same time, and probably without being that what he intended, he actually answered to Munakata's question with the truth. Asahina, yes, Asahina, who is no dumb but also not the smarterst, figured out all by herself the idenity of the killer just by looking at Kirigiri's notebook. This means whatever it contains, it has to be something ONLY Asahina would be able to figure out. |
2016-09-13, 01:36 | Link #34 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2014
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Quote:
Now, what to say about the episode? I don't think Kirigiri will wake up, but I'm also sure the bottle will play some role, and soon. If it's not the antidote for the bracelet poison, what could be inside it? One thing that comes to mind is a drug that prevents you from falling asleep. Basically, there will be another sleeping time interval, but someone will take this drug, stay awake and try to stop the attacker. If they succeed and nobody dies, it's game over and they win. Shouldn't be too hard with so few people left. But that still leaves the question of who caused this entire mess, and for what purpose. Was it Chisa? Was it Tengan who knew about Chisa's despair, but did nothing to stop her? Or maybe someone else entirely? The number of survivors doesn't match the number of people we see, after all. |
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2016-09-13, 02:24 | Link #36 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2011
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If you're talking about Kyoko then that's pointless. Taking a drug to counteract the sleeping agent wouldn't stop her from being poisoned, meaning she'd die anyway and wouldn't wake up regardless. Unless you're talking about having that drug by mistake instead of the antidote because she couldn't tell the difference from the bottles being labelled the same or something. In which case things still end up the same way.
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2016-09-13, 02:52 | Link #37 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
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Anyone that knows Kirigiri should know better. That she isn't the type who would wait patiently and allow herself to die and not think out a plan.
Besides, this game isn't like the previous ones. Figuring out who is the killer isn't going to end it. Because the killer never intended to play fair. The fake secret trollish door and the fact they are deep underground, in the ocean no less, shows what the killer's real intentions are: That no one is to make it out of this facility alive. This level of cruelty is far beyond anything Junko did in the past. Leaving false hope and rejoycing in everybody helplessness, that is something a true Remnant of Despair would come up with. |
2016-09-13, 07:32 | Link #38 | |
Professional Hikkikomori
Join Date: Feb 2009
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2016-09-13, 08:42 | Link #39 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
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But it doesn't matter either way, because with 2 episodes to go there's going to be a twist for sure. And as I said above, identifying the killer isn't going to end the game this time around. Because that person planned out to kill everybody from the very beggining. They are not trapped in the school, or a virtual resort. They are trapped deep underground and in the ocean. |
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2016-09-13, 12:20 | Link #40 |
Detective
Join Date: Aug 2010
Age: 36
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I have another theory as to what Tengan referred to:
It is a common setting in anime that being around talented people is rather despairing for non-talented hard working people who just can't beat them despite working way harder towards their goal then said taleneted people. If you take it that way - each one of them is indeed deapair rather than hope. And if we think about it too - the main course is always portrayed colorful whie the reserve course is being portrayed dull, grey and colorless as if there was no hope there to begin with.
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