So, during the quest 'Fade to White', Minfilia explains to us why she can't use the Echo herself on members of the Path of the Twelve who have followed the path to its end, to find out what lies there - since of the few who manage it, all refuse to say. According to her:
However.. now we come to the launch of the Grand Companies, and the quest 'Disorganized Crime'. Here, we have the player character with no choice but to use the Echo to force themselves on Raya-O-Senna's memories (and supposedly soul) - an act that she notices and responds negatively to - in order to complete the quest.Were I to condone such an act of violation, we would be no better than the monsters people think us already.
So.. I've two questions:
If nothing else, that scene seems a wasted chance to confront the player with a moral dilemma by giving them the option to not use the Echo and still complete the quest, with something more than passing curiosity at stake for not doing so. Although admittedly, there is at least a means to abort the quest.. but that does feel a bit of a cop-out, and the only option being such a meta-game-y one does rather suggest it's an issue that nobody in charge bothered to consider.
- Are the writers aware of this moral dissonance and the way it interacts with the quest system? I won't ask if there will be consequences (much as I'd like there to be really hefty ones), that would be demanding to know the story after all.. but while Raya-O-Senna did get annoyed, it would be nice to know that the incident wasn't just laziness with regard to continuity, and that violating someone so has not been trivialised, as the childish way Raya-O's behaviour is portrayed seems to suggest.
- If yes to the former, does.. that really mean it was the intent of the writers that in order to see the whole plot, we have to accept that our characters are the sort of people who would commit an act that not only reasonably would be, but has been said, by a fairly significant and knowledgeable character to be, somewhat comparable to rape? For a trivial reason, no less?
Sorry, I realise this is a somewhat nit-picky one but.. it's been bothering me. 'Had to ask at least.