TheMarshal wrote...
Oh lordy... after a week of reading (Darn work and school getting in the way of my Mass Effectin'!) I've finally got through the entirety of this thread! It's all amazing stuff, and I wish I had the background to contribute to the literary analysis. Alas, I'm just an engineer playing at being a writer...
I really want the option to argue with the ReaperChild, to point out the flaws in its arguments and just show it how broken it is. I mean, thinking that you can control chaos, that you can somehow stamp it out completely. That such a thing is even desirable. We've got the ReaperChild, who presumably has reached the "pinnacle" of evolution, and for billions of years has been stuck like that because they've tried to stamp out chaos. Whereas we, organics, have slowly but surely been beating it, been proving it wrong by ensuring our thoughts survive between cycles through the Crucible plans. We don't know how homogenous the cycles which predate the Protheans were, but I find it telling that this cycle, with so many various forms of advanced life, was the one which managed to complete the Crucible and reach the ReaperChild. We made the ReaperChild realize that it made a mistake (omg, did you just learn something?) and it's new solution is...
More of the same.
Stamp out chaos by trying to dominate it. Stamp out chaos by trying to destroy it. Or stamp out chaos by trying to eliminate the source of it and homogenize the galaxy (don't even get me started on how ridiculous that notion is). Where's the fourth option? To let it be? To accept that chaos is going to be a part of life? If you're so advanced, if you've reached the pinnacle of evolution, then surely you have the power to call off the Reapers. The power to tell them the war is over, and we have earned our right to live our lives as we choose. No? Don't have that power? It's impossible, you say? Bull... I don't have enough fingers on my hands to count the number of impossible things that I had to do to get here. Maybe you're not as done evolving as you think you are if you're okay with "impossible." Maybe you need something like a little chaos in your life, poking and prodding you, egging you on, urging you to make yourself more than you were yesterday. Maybe you need that fourth option.
But you don't have it, because billions of years ago you decided you were done evolving, and that rather than taking on the difficulties that beset your life and trying to overcome them you decided to try and attack reality itself and prevent the very thing that introduced chaos into the universe. And yet here I am. You've lost. You're broken. You can't be fixed because you don't have the capacity to fix yourself. And if you're not going to call the Reapers off, if you can't call the Reapers off, then I'm done with you.
Whew... Sorry. That was cathartic.
Welcome to the party, I think its sort of BYOB but I'm sure people probably wouldn't mind sharing.
I agree with the arguing. I really wanted an option to challenge what we had just been told.
I had thought it might have been interesting to somehow work our past choices into our defiance, that perhaps the more we had done, the more we'd saved and sacrificed, the more we'd won and lost, would fuel Shepards argumentative fury at this thing that dares dictate terms to us.
I mean my Shepard challenged Sovereign, stared down Harbinger on a hurtling asteroid, demanded answers from a dying reaper on Rannoch, but now facing the Reapers master he can only muster a "Maybe".
That's not the Shepard I thought I knew.





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