It's not really something I ignore, but I like to pretend that Venat addressed G'raha Tia specifically for the whole saving The First, us and a whole lot of other people on the source thing.
It's not really something I ignore, but I like to pretend that Venat addressed G'raha Tia specifically for the whole saving The First, us and a whole lot of other people on the source thing.
Oh yeah I think that'd be cool. I think she shoulda had some words for each of them tbh. And also she should have started the fight in a muddy state like in the cutscene with the black "bile" covering her angelic body. And in the second phase shoulda swapped to the clean state. That's my headcanon cause it would just have been cooler imo.
Why would she thank him? She gave the Warriors of Light crystals knowing what would happen to their world. Ardbert was right to try to put an axe through her head. As Varis would say, "IT WAS BY DESIGN?!"
I can't speak for Landslide, but I'd presume that they'd want the scene for a bit of assurance of 'don't worry, there's a way to solve this and I'm on your side', possibly with some commiseration with having once been in a similar position. And possibly confirmation that Hydaelyn... y'know, is still alive at that point, which is still up in the air.
I don't really want this scene, because I think an important part of both Hydaelyn and the 8UC group is that they're not working from some predestined plan, but just working with what they have to try to make a better world, even if it's not one for them to live in. (Hydaelyn explicitly rejected sticking to the course of events we told her, because those events sucked, it's just that her options were limited.) But if what someone wants from that part of the story is aided by seeing it as 'god is on our side, even if nobody else is', they're welcome to see it like that.
Ardbert's immediately angry response is not universal--and I'd hope it wouldn't be, the man's a Warrior, having a short temper is literally his job. G'raha and the Ironworks are unlikely to respond in that way, especially because Ardbert was actually mad that she didn't talk to them at all until stepping in on our behalf, so to him she seemed both high-and-mighty and adversarial. To the 8UC crew, Hydaelyn's instead a known friendly entity that has stepped in in the past, so nothing to get mad at her about.
I don't really understand what that has to do with her thanking G'raha for what he did during Shadowbringers, but I'll try to clarify:
I should've maybe clarified that it's not while we meet Venat, but Hydaelyn. When we go to the Aetherial Sea together with the other Scions.
And my reason for why she'd thank him is because he basically saved the world. He did it together with the Sons of Saint Coinach and the Ironworks, of course, but those people weren't there when we met Hydaelyn. In a perfect story all the Scions would've been personally addressed for what they've done for the Star, but I think G'raha has really done the most considering how he travelled through time and space to prevent the 8th Umbral Calamity.
We don't know for sure if Hydaelyn would have "lost" if he hadn't done that, but we do know that she got a lot closer to "winning" by him doing it.
But he was predestined to do it. She set up the First to fall to light so that the WoL would die, so that the alternate timeline would figure out time travel, so that G'raha would come back to save the WoL, so that time travel is now available, so that the WoL can be sent back in time and tell her what she does so that she can do it. Thanking him would be like thanking a domino for falling over when pushed. Plus, I don't think she really cares about individuals. If she did she wouldn't have created seven worlds just to be smashed into the Source, not to mention what she allowed and/or instigated on the First and Thirteen.I don't really understand what that has to do with her thanking G'raha for what he did during Shadowbringers, but I'll try to clarify:
I should've maybe clarified that it's not while we meet Venat, but Hydaelyn. When we go to the Aetherial Sea together with the other Scions.
And my reason for why she'd thank him is because he basically saved the world. He did it together with the Sons of Saint Coinach and the Ironworks, of course, but those people weren't there when we met Hydaelyn. In a perfect story all the Scions would've been personally addressed for what they've done for the Star, but I think G'raha has really done the most considering how he travelled through time and space to prevent the 8th Umbral Calamity.
We don't know for sure if Hydaelyn would have "lost" if he hadn't done that, but we do know that she got a lot closer to "winning" by him doing it.
So what would she be thanking him for? "Thank you for doing exactly what I set you up to do." If so, should she also thank the Ascians for destroying all the worlds she set them up to destroy right on schedule? Because literally everyone was unknowingly acting on her agenda. The WoL included.
You're blurring two things here: someone having knowledge of the future, and what causes people to act.
If there's some higher-level embodiment of Fate in this story's universe that drives people to act in a certain way, then Venat is as much a puppet as the rest. She is not the controller of fates and doesn't have influence over what other people will do; she's simply relying on the sequence of events in which things will happen as she has been told they will.
And if there is no driving force of fate, then there is only a world shaped moment-by-moment by the decisions of the people living in it, and those people are in control of their own path at the time they are taking it, no matter whether someone from the past has knowledge that they will do it in future, and no matter whether someone in the future knows that it happened in history.
G'raha did not somehow magically decide to save the world because Venat knew he would; he made that decision for himself, and Venat has learned about it as "future history". That is all.
But without knowledge of "future history" you don't really have the choice to do anything differently. The only person that can choose to act differently is someone who knows what they did before and the results of their actions making Venat the only person with true agency in the FF14 universe. Everyone else is just following a script. We do what we do because it's what we've always done.You're blurring two things here: someone having knowledge of the future, and what causes people to act.
If there's some higher-level embodiment of Fate in this story's universe that drives people to act in a certain way, then Venat is as much a puppet as the rest. She is not the controller of fates and doesn't have influence over what other people will do; she's simply relying on the sequence of events in which things will happen as she has been told they will.
And if there is no driving force of fate, then there is only a world shaped moment-by-moment by the decisions of the people living in it, and those people are in control of their own path at the time they are taking it, no matter whether someone from the past has knowledge that they will do it in future, and no matter whether someone in the future knows that it happened in history.
G'raha did not somehow magically decide to save the world because Venat knew he would; he made that decision for himself, and Venat has learned about it as "future history". That is all.
ETA: Actually that's not true. The WoL could also choose to act differently and chance the course of events because they also have knowledge of the future.
Last edited by Lady_Silvermoon; 01-04-2024 at 07:12 AM.
There is no need to do things "differently" though – that implies that something is happening a second time. There is only one moment in all of spacetime where G'raha makes his choice, and he chooses it for his own reasons, not because some distant observer is already aware of what he chose to do.
Venat is no mastermind of fates; she simply considers the future that you describe to her and accepts to take her part in it. If anything, she is the one who has lost agency of her own future and can now only play the part that has been told to her.
...or perhaps she did struggle against her dictated fate, and she was able to act differently and split off a timeline that we will never see but the ancients are saved ultimately due to the warning we gave to Venat – but that can't happen without the original timeline still happening as well.
I'm kind of late with my reaction, seeing how much debate this has sparked, but I still felt like I should reply.But he was predestined to do it. She set up the First to fall to light so that the WoL would die, so that the alternate timeline would figure out time travel, so that G'raha would come back to save the WoL, so that time travel is now available, so that the WoL can be sent back in time and tell her what she does so that she can do it. Thanking him would be like thanking a domino for falling over when pushed. Plus, I don't think she really cares about individuals. If she did she wouldn't have created seven worlds just to be smashed into the Source, not to mention what she allowed and/or instigated on the First and Thirteen.
So what would she be thanking him for? "Thank you for doing exactly what I set you up to do." If so, should she also thank the Ascians for destroying all the worlds she set them up to destroy right on schedule? Because literally everyone was unknowingly acting on her agenda. The WoL included.
I personally think you're giving Venat too much credit. She was a fighter and a friend, not a genius. She was the person who sundered the world on, what the cutscene made out to be, an impulse, with seemingly no further plans besides waiting for us to be born. She of course did know that we were going to be saved, but I don't think we told her every second of what we experienced/read/heard or that she was able to perfectly lay out a plan that would result in the Calamity being stopped. G'raha and his pals made a clever plan which Hydaelyn knew would happen, but did she, herself, personally make that happen? I personally do not think so.
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