- Joined
- May 12, 2020
I'm not disagreeing with you that Alexandrians are largely coddled retards, but in their defence they basically did have solutions for most of those problems. The current settlements like the Outskirts apparently revived traditional farming practices out of a sense of tradition rather than necessity; the people in Solution Nine eat a completely synthetic diet and have advanced robotics, and appear to have existed just fine before absorbing Yyasulani for the generations it must've taken to build a city of that size. Why would they need lightning proof suits to go hunting if they don't eat real meat anyway? They can literally just get robots to do it.But you're telling me Alexandrians can't find a way to use it in more beneficial ways like creating dome shields for their settlements outside or using it for special suits for their hunters to protect them from stray lightning bolts or maybe even using it to combat the aforementioned lightning sickness? A civilization run by retards is doomed to fail.
Of course this leaves the question of why regulators are so important to the general public of Solution Nine anyway. My reading was that the average person genuinely is in almost no danger at any given time, and they just hold on to them to have a sense of safety, like maybe it's just cultural inertia from the days of the Storm Surge before Everkeep became the metropolis it is today.
Again it's a potentially interesting conflict; the people of Alexandria are completely fine with their robotic army and electrope to convert lightning into clean energy, but they've been so coddled by Sphene being a digital mommy for every single citizen that they've functionally turned into Eulmore 2.0, hence why a single retarded lizard could waltz in and conquer them without any resistance. I *think* this is more or less what the writers are going for; that the Alexandrians have been so sheltered by generations of Sphene's obsessive caretaking that the thought of life without their perfect princess waifu chatbot is making them suicidal; but it's so boring and poorly focused that it's hard to tell what angle they're going for.
edit: also, I will defend them on the whole soul supply issue: the Everkeep system and Sphene appear to run pretty much separately from the general public. The average citizen has little to no understanding of death and no knowledge of the previous generation, so do they even really know what Living Memory is outside of "people who grow old are sent to the cloud", let alone have any way of confronting the omnipresent algorithm that runs their society? The more I think on it, the more I think Sphene could've been a great villain if they had just emphasised the horror of what she'd already built, a Neverland of children who couldn't grow up, rather than "anime villain of the week with a paper-thin motivation to kill everyone but she's really sad so feel bad for her please!!"
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