you know, I played Persona 3, and Kayla has a couple of Persona 4 alters, so she might've played 3 as well, and at the beginning of the game, you sign a contract that you are told states that "you are responsible for your own actions" and that game likes to be all vague and mystic and even I recognized that that was alluding to the "Social Contract." the irony of her failing to accept responsibility for actions that are hers and she undertook of her own volition is surpassed only by the fact that some of her alters are Characters from Persona 4, a game whose prevailing theme was coming to terms with the inconvenient truths about yourself, rather than telling yourself convenient lies and remaining ignorant of your own true nature.