If you don't like exposition, I think you're playing the wrong game.
If you don't like exposition, I think you're playing the wrong game.
Exposition is fine. Having hour long blocks of cutscenes where your character gets talked at is not.


What I'm referring to is when the god-like entity themselves are held up within the story as the embodiment of how that story's morals do not work. For example, Bhunivelze sought a "perfect" world where he was in complete control forever and there would be no death or suffering. He kills his mother Mwynn because of this obsession with control, and then he obsesses over finding her in the Unseen World because he thinks she's the one that created Death. The moral lesson of the FFXIII trilogy is similar to that of FFXIV: death is inevitable and free will is more powerful than control. Bhunivelze was wrong, but his ignorance of how the universe works (by FFXIII's narrative logic) is what makes him an obstacle and a threat.
That ignorance is what Hydaelyn lacks. We can gnash our teeth about how ridiculous the notion of "you need suffering to overcome despair" is, but in the end, Hydaelyn's belief is the correct one as far as the story is concerned. What I "liked" (well, more like didn't ruin the story more for me) is that we aren't suddenly treated to an 11th Hour realization where everything Hydaelyn believes is revealed to either be a lie, a delusion, or arrogance. I liked the fact that the story committed to Hydaelyn being the entity with the closest understanding of the universe's morality, even if I personally find that morality fallacious and the actions she took to prove it horrific.
Again, I'm just tired of the end of Japanese Fantasy plots being "FU God(s)! We mortals who have only lived for 0.000000000001% of your lifespans know way more than you and thus through the sheer force of hope and willpower, we can undo everything you've been planning since the dawn of creation!"
But sure, when we look at the meta-narrative and think critically about the story's message, Hydaelyn is pretty similar to most "God was the villain all along stories".
Venat/Hydaeyln turned out to be much worse than I had anticipated and I went into EW figuring she was going to be an antagonist similar to Emet, as you said. "Matter of perspective" and all that. I thought the sundering of more than just Zodiark was going to turn out to be accidental. Instead, it was not only intentional but with knowledge of the future!
Her "love" for mankind is shallow. She doesn't care that her actions result in the destruction of souls and there's little evidence she cared about the life on the shards beyond every rejoining making her task of keeping Zodiark imprisoned more difficult. Going through Thavnair a second time I was outraged because all of those people who were turned into blasphemies were permanently destroyed and that was the fault of the sundering having made mankind fatally susceptible to dynamis. As Vrtra said, "they are undeserving of such condemnation."
Venat is a co-conspirator with Hermes, who is framed as a villain (sympathetic or not). The only difference is the copious amount of narrative gaslighting regarding her character. She is practically the walking definition of "the road to Hell is paved with good intentions". This is the same woman who ended the WoL's first incarnation, more than likely without consent, and would have no qualms whatsoever with doing it again if she thought it would produce her desired result. Venat is ruthless AF on a Biblical scale.
I saved a screenshot of him saying that too. Neither the WoL or the Scions had any reason to trust Hydaelyn given what they knew of her, yet do so implicitly and with unprecedented amounts of hypocrisy based on statements such as that one. Another exchange in ShB that sticks out to me is this one:Alphinaud once said in Shadowbringers that living in a Rejoined world would be against his beliefs, saying, "But what value is there in surviving when all our history, all our struggles will be erased? I cannot conscience such an act." I'm sure the irony of that statement is not lost on just me. That he had no words for Venat on that front astounded me.
Y'shtola: From a purely Ascian standpoint, it could be said that what you seek to do is only logical. But that would be to ignore the immeasurable destruction wrought with each Rejoining. You have murdered millions. And this we cannot condone.
Emet-Selch: By your fragmented existence, you continue to give rise to tragedies far crueler than any calamity.
He's not wrong and the Scions never once bring up this same point to Hydaelyn. The irony is that it's the sundering that has resulted in all of mankind's woes, not the Final Days. Those were averted by Zodiark. Everything that's happened since falls squarely on Venat's shoulders. She is, in my mind, the main antagonist of the series, bane to both unsundered and sundered, who despite being gifted with omniscience by the WoL uses it not for the betterment of anyone, but to the detriment of all.
But, you know, she's pretty, and has a nice voice, and thinks the WoL is cool, so it's whatever.





Ordinarily I would side on the "enough with the alphirants" side of the debate, but if they're going to rake everyone else through the coals with long-winded speeches, she may as well get one too, especially when her own actions are at the root of all this, and for once I might even agree with the brat.
Agreed.
Last edited by Lauront; 04-03-2022 at 08:26 AM.
When the game's story becomes self-aware:




For a blessing, it seems the twins are largely absent from 6.1's MSQ despite that meaning that Garlemald will not resurface in the main story again till August or September at the earliest. In any case, there was little opportunity for dialogue with Venat after she quite literally committed "the original sin" of FFXIV's world by sundering all life, instead we got 2 cutscenes pre and post-trial that felt quite rushed. The one to even remotely attempt to address the issue was Y'shtola, even then those lines were delivered quite weakly and Hydaelyn's response wasn't a sufficiently genuine acknowledgement of the wrong she did.
If there was any moment for her to cry, it should have been then and there when she talked about the sundering, possibly remembering the lives and people she destroyed in pursuit of her messianic dream.
Авейонд-сны
Felt the need to add that, also ironically, the unsundered passed Hermes' test, the sundered did not. Hermes said, "If he can learn to value all life and retain his will to live, even should his end be justified, he will surely find a way to avert his demise." The sundered failed spectacularly at all of those things.
She doesn't think it was wrong, it was a necessary evil and she'd do it all again too. This is the same woman who after we told the future decided that was the best course of action and didn't change a thing.
I think the most irksome part of EW is not only that she never gets called out, but she dies on her own terms. She wanted the WoL to defeat her. There's some small karmic justice in the fact that she expended her soul in the process, but even that had to be confirmed in the LL as the game makes it appear she's happily going to the aetherial sea with the others in the credits.


I find this to be incredibly unfair.
Hermes and Meteion are the unquestionably the villains here. I can go for Hydaelyn being a secondary "evil", given that she effectively played by Hermes' rules and did not choose to inform her fellow Ancients of what happened, but I will never see her as the "main" villain. The society of the Ancients is gone because of Hermes. Zodiark was, at best, a band-aid that would not last (and, it seems, was actually making things worse, in terms of the Ancients becoming more delusional about their "paradise").
I will never agree with Hydaelyn's arguments or her methods, but saying she's the main villain is, in my opinion, just not true. At best, I can agree that she shares blame and culpability with the other players across the chessboard: Hermes and Meteion.
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