
Originally Posted by
Lepus_Aetherius
......
吉田: Although we were trying to give players more of a taste of the horrors of the Ancients, we didn't expect many people to think they were good. "It's a beautiful and wonderful thing to return to aetherial sea at the end of the duty....or to be able to create beings with souls at your own discretion and just destroy them if they're slightly problematic and bring them back to the idea." We depict a lot of this kind of difficulty in judging right from wrong, but if you think about it dispassionately, I think it's actually very scary. I would have liked to have seen a few more perspectives on this, but it's also possible that Emet, Hythlodaeus, and Venat shine too brightly.
Hermes' statement "I will judge mankind in the name of Hermes." This statement is, in a sense, extremely fair. In fact, in the 5.0 version of the story, Emet has carried out this so-called "judge" several times, being betrayed many times and killing countless people each time, and Emet, wanting to redeem his divided companions and loved ones, makes his final judge with straightforward emotion. From this point of view, Hermes' judge is relatively objective. So it was surprising to me that Emet's 'judge' was accepted by everyone, while Hermes' 'judge' was resented by everyone.
石川: Hermes is fair, but he's not driven by emotion like Emet is ...... It's probably hard for players to relate to him.
吉田: Yes, for us Emet is much easier to empathize with.
石川: After all, wanting to get your companion back is the most direct human emotion