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7/20/2025, 2:09:36 AM
>>531820784
it sticks out to me how the forces of law and chaos use people's biggest desires to manipulate them. or rather, it's easy for people to become radicalized when their biggest desires are promised to them.
all law hero wanted to do was help people and it's fitting that's how he dies. he saves you from count black but he has to sacrifice himself to do so. then he later gets revived and manipulated into thinking he's a messiah. and it is straight up manipulation with how the forces of law dangle the thing he wanted most right in front him, they promise that he'll be able to save people.
it's also ironic how in becoming a messiah, law hero just ends up as a sacrifice, and he even says that before he dies in the neutral route, which is also a callback to the dream sequence at the beginning where the hooded figure says "this is the man who was sacrificed to god."
it's the same for the chaos hero, he just wanted power so people would stop messing with him for no reason. the thing he wanted was dangled in front of him by the forces of chaos so he falls further into that ideology.
and it's fitting how his lust for power kills him in the chaos route with a powerful ring or something. the neutral route has him make a callback to the dream sequence at the beginning by saying he was having a good dream.
it sticks out to me how the forces of law and chaos use people's biggest desires to manipulate them. or rather, it's easy for people to become radicalized when their biggest desires are promised to them.
all law hero wanted to do was help people and it's fitting that's how he dies. he saves you from count black but he has to sacrifice himself to do so. then he later gets revived and manipulated into thinking he's a messiah. and it is straight up manipulation with how the forces of law dangle the thing he wanted most right in front him, they promise that he'll be able to save people.
it's also ironic how in becoming a messiah, law hero just ends up as a sacrifice, and he even says that before he dies in the neutral route, which is also a callback to the dream sequence at the beginning where the hooded figure says "this is the man who was sacrificed to god."
it's the same for the chaos hero, he just wanted power so people would stop messing with him for no reason. the thing he wanted was dangled in front of him by the forces of chaos so he falls further into that ideology.
and it's fitting how his lust for power kills him in the chaos route with a powerful ring or something. the neutral route has him make a callback to the dream sequence at the beginning by saying he was having a good dream.
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