Fed-Kun's army
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2019
- Messages
- 112
@Petrichormus @Ghetsis
Yeah, I get what you guys are saying. And to be fair, the general issue I take might just be a preference thing.
I suppose I'm just not the biggest fan of Arata coming off like this nebulous figure, above everyone else. I mean, I said that the narrative felt as if it was trying to equate Arata to the likes of Baku and such, but honestly speaking, it seems to be a much higher pedestal than that. I get that Protoporos is his domain, and him presiding over everyone falls in line with that "God" characterization, but at the end of the day he's still just some dude with lots of money and resources. Assuming his philosophy truly is that social darwinism thing, then it just seems hypocritical of him to sit back and not participate in what he's espousing. The story doesn't frame it negatively either; he simply accomplishes his goal. Again, that's one of the reasons I was satisfied with the fake, because he was essentially owning up. He was willing to sacrifice his safety to prove that point. And yeah, at the end of the day, Arata was never really "just an observer" too. He still had to be actively participating, even if it was through a surrogate (or by other means). So I don't necessarily think it would undermine his role if he was actually in said position of the fake.
Also, one of my biggest criticisms of this arc is that it emphasizes sacrifice. We're told achieving one's goals during this whole escapade requires it (or at least the willingness to), but by the end Baku loses very little, and Arata loses nothing at all. Meanwhile Lalo gives everything and has seemingly nothing to show for it. It's just an aside, but I'm a little confused as to what message is being conveyed here. Is someone like Arata not applicable to this? I could be interpreting everything wrong though.
Yeah, I get what you guys are saying. And to be fair, the general issue I take might just be a preference thing.
I suppose I'm just not the biggest fan of Arata coming off like this nebulous figure, above everyone else. I mean, I said that the narrative felt as if it was trying to equate Arata to the likes of Baku and such, but honestly speaking, it seems to be a much higher pedestal than that. I get that Protoporos is his domain, and him presiding over everyone falls in line with that "God" characterization, but at the end of the day he's still just some dude with lots of money and resources. Assuming his philosophy truly is that social darwinism thing, then it just seems hypocritical of him to sit back and not participate in what he's espousing. The story doesn't frame it negatively either; he simply accomplishes his goal. Again, that's one of the reasons I was satisfied with the fake, because he was essentially owning up. He was willing to sacrifice his safety to prove that point. And yeah, at the end of the day, Arata was never really "just an observer" too. He still had to be actively participating, even if it was through a surrogate (or by other means). So I don't necessarily think it would undermine his role if he was actually in said position of the fake.
Also, one of my biggest criticisms of this arc is that it emphasizes sacrifice. We're told achieving one's goals during this whole escapade requires it (or at least the willingness to), but by the end Baku loses very little, and Arata loses nothing at all. Meanwhile Lalo gives everything and has seemingly nothing to show for it. It's just an aside, but I'm a little confused as to what message is being conveyed here. Is someone like Arata not applicable to this? I could be interpreting everything wrong though.