CulturalGeekGirl wrote...
What will you do if IT is never refuted, but there is never a continuation?
I think that this is the most likely result: the writers will structure the EC in such a way that IT adherents can still believe in IT if they wish, but there will never be a continuation that explicitly establishes it and has gameplay after the decision if (and only if) you pick destroy.
I'm inclined to agree. I really don't think they'll refute it, because it accomplishes nothing. They'll either stay ambiquous or confirm it with gameplay*. Consequently, I see the absence of confirmation as an implicit refutation.
Personally, if that happens, I'll adopt IT as my NCHC. Beyond that, I'll shake my fists at Bioware for screwing up such a brilliant franchise, and view any new BW titles with extreme skepticism.
*There's interpretations that allow for gameplay if you haven't picked destroy, though I don't abide by them.
CulturalGeekGirl wrote....
The problem is, I don't think most of its adherents feel the same way. I think the vast majority of them expect it to be officially canonized, rewarding them with continuation DLC that proves them right without a shadow of a doubt.
Well, for one thing, there is
a lot of evidence to support it. Much of it is circumstantial, some of it is unexplainable in any other light. I remain cautiously optimistic that it will be officially canonized, but I see the temptation that drives people into over-confidence. I've noticed that there are a lot of people who like IT, or would be fine with IT, but don't believe absolutely. They're the silent majority of IT adherents. They don't spam the boards with "IT is right, duh!" threads, so it looks like the pro-IT crowd are all overconfident and prone to gloating.
I think it's important to realize that adherents don't see it as fanfiction, they see it as an intended player-trolling-meta-experience. That's much of the appeal. Not that it adequately explains mistakes, but that there weren't mistakes in the first place. A huge chunk of the theory is predicated on it being intended, and as such the implication is that we
will get a continuation.
delta_vee wrote....
The latter is, I think, merely misguided - as CGG said earlier, using IT for the EC if it wasn't originally intended results in nothing but gloating, without the conscious construction which would make it at all useful.
[snip]
Which is why I'm so fiercely skeptical of IT, frankly. That the time hasassed for IT's epilogue to have the desired effect is obvious to me at least, so further insistence on its upcoming validation becomes religious.
I agree completely with the former. Again, its appeal relies on it being intentional. Being ambiguous and adopting the most popular* fan interpretation later is not an accomplishment.
I've always agreed with you that the
ideal time for such an epilogue was in April (announced at PAX), and I think most adherents would agree too. I
still think that messing up the reveal timeline is a smaller miscalculation than the endings as is, so if for some reason their timeline had always been mid-summer, I'll let it slide.
*I'm using this term liberally.
PS: Forgive my grammar, it's a mess tonight (Every Night!).
Modifié par Hawk227, 15 mai 2012 - 08:18 .