Quote Originally Posted by EaraGrace View Post
I don’t think that Emet would disagree with that line, in fact I think he said something similar in Raktika but I’d have to find the quote.
In Rak'tika Emet describes Zodiark with terms like "His grace", "A savior mighty and magnificent", and Hydaelyn as just "Hydaelyn" or very derisively as "your Mother". Hardly descriptors like "dark god", "dark deity", or "brighter god" and "the Light of the future". In particular here the narrator, when speaking, describes Zodiark in almost ominous tones but Hydaelyn in almost reverent tones. None of this really matches with an Emet perspective.

And once again those malformed souls we see are later human like with no indication that it’s a different scene.
Between the two slides showing them going from twisted and malformed to more fully shaped, the narrator literally says "Decades, centuries, millennia pass. As he works tirelessly, the wretched creatures begin to learn. They speak in new tongues, worship new gods, and forge new histories." We're jumping thousands of years between that shift, I don't really see how it can be said that there is "no indication" that the scene is changing.

In one of the battles you see human-esque entities with big sundering symbols all over, clearly meant to imply their Sundered Humans,
What are you referring to?

And while Krile can’t understand animals we can, so long as they’re intelligent
There are instances where WoL can seem to "understand" animals, but I think the game usually makes it clear that this is simply due to a lot of experience and intuition, not the Echo.


Given those Sundered beings are us and we aren’t any less intelligent than the Ancients (imo) I think they could be understood by someone with the echo.
The sundered then and the sundered now are probably nowhere near equivalent. I mean Emet outright says that intelligence and physicality is halved with each sundering, I don't see how the full 13/14ths sundering could possibly leave them with anything similar in terms of intellect and physicality, as this very narrative seems to outline.