Quote Originally Posted by Lady_Silvermoon View Post
Oh how I wish my problem with Endwalker was that it had a lame saccharin sweet moral. Because see, the moral I got wasn't the power of feelings, but that for the strong to survive, the weak must be culled. And the weak are any ethnic group sitting on land we want and the mentally ill. Hermes, Meteion and the blasphemies are all dangers to society due to an inability to handle trauma. So much of a danger that the entire universe might end if these weaklings are allowed to roam free. They must be put down for the good of all. It's the kind of mentality that gets mentally ill people choked to death on subways because the passengers are afraid of their strange behavior.

How they gave our beloved mommy the same worldview as Zenos without noticing is beyond me. "Meaningless? Men die that others may live. Those who survive are stronger for it." How do you accidentally make an argument for fascism?! How did no one see what was being implied by Endwalker?

So by the time we get to the 6.1 content and they are sticking with morals as benign as the importance teamwork, you get no complaints from me because at least it's not about who we should exterminate for the good of all. But then based on comments here it hit me that Golbez has been working with others the entire time. Both before and after their world fell to darkness, so the argument that their world fell to darkness because they fought alone falls flat. They came out on a tricycle with training wheels and still messed up their themes. I am afraid for Dawntrail. I just don't trust these writers to not have us do a colonialism at this point.

I'm already getting my arguments ready as to why it's wrong to go to a foreign land, conquer them and install a government that serves our interests because at this point we didn't defeat the Garleans--we became them.

Well, it's gonna be a romp around fantasy Brazil. Which Japan has strong ties with due to sending a lot of people to live there and exchange in culture since the 1800s/early 1900s.

I'm not exactly sure what that means, but it's also shaping up to be full of FFIX references. FFIX was a game all about a dying planet come to consume a not dying one, and have its inhabitants whose souls were in stasis take new bodies and live on the new planet, once their old planet had merged with/consumed it.

I guess it COULD be interesting, but then the Scions are in the trailer, and they have a knack for impressing Sharlayan customs onto everywhere they go, albeit slightly more aggressive Sharlayan customs.