Quote Originally Posted by kpxmanifesto View Post
You're free to believe whatever you like when it comes to this.

There's a difference, but is it a moral issue to commit suicide when their lifespans are infinite? So they live as long as they like and then they end their lives when they want to live no more, or they just keep living. They have a choice. That seems completely sensible to me, and I don't see any moral issues with that. To me, if they didn't have a choice in that, then that would be encroaching on morally grey territory.
Yet again, I'm not here to debate with you on this. But it is a fact that the intention of END as a story to paint this logic as wrong, or, at the very least "scary".


Quote Originally Posted by kpxmanifesto View Post
It says in that interview that it was indeed intended, but they were unable to actually have that effect: "Most people came away with thinking they were just "good people" instead." And this is precisely why I don't see this morally grey area you keep bringing up.
My entire point, from the beginning was that this was the moral grey that the story intended, but failed to provide. They wanted the Ancients to become morally-grey, but their narrative choices did not convey that well. I don't know how many times I can tell you that this is NOT my interpretation NOR my moral standing. But it IS in the story, as per the writer's intention. Players, like you, me or anyone here, can decide that they failed.

Thank you for finally agreeing with what I've been trying to tell you from the beginning.