So the post that supports your love of the end is fucking smart and the others aren't?DigitalAtlas said:SEE ASITA? THIS IS A SMART ****ING POST! THIS POST MAKES MY BRAIN ROCK-HARD!Ordinaryundone said:A). Even if the current cycle wouldn't end in destruction, the Reapers had already mobilized and begun their cleansing. They couldn't be called off, regardless of how much evidence Shepard had to convince them otherwise. The Star Child says as much. Thats why he gives you the big choice: Dominate the Reapers at the cost of your own life, wipe them out at the cost of synthetics, or merge the two with unknown consequences. If you played a Paragon Shep who spared the Geth because "Synths are people too!", then destroying the Reapers would be hypocritical. You'd be wiping out an ancient sentient race because they threatened you; aka exactly what the Star Child was talking about. Synths and Organics work on entirely different levels.Zhukov said:No.
a) "Organics vs synthetics" was arguably a present theme, but the inevitable destruction of organics by their own synthetics was most certainly not. It was made abundantly clear in ME2 and most of ME3 that the organic-synthetic situation was not a simple case of us-vs-them and did not have one inevitable outcome.
b) The Geth were a secondary subplot to the Reapers threat. A subplot that was entirely resolved in ME3. In fact, that resolution potentially makes the Catalyst's bullshit even more nonsensical. You do not supplant the central conflict with an already resolved subplot in the final ten minutes of a story.
c) "Being destroyed by reaching too far"? That's not relevant to the catalyst space-child garbage.
B.) They are a subplot, but indicative of a much larger whole. EDI is part of it too; that the AIs in Mass Effect are beginning to gain true sentience. Its all foreshadowing to the revelation that the Reapers are also sentient beings, and the moral question of "is it ok to genocide them just because we are fighting? Especially if there is another option? What if they can be persuaded to be good, like the Geth or EDI?"
C.) It's exactly what the Star Child is talking about. Every cycle has it's examples of civilizations who grasp too far with technology and end up shooting themselves in the foot. It's in the nature of organics to keep pushing like that. The inevitable Synth war is simply the climax of these actions, which is what the Reapers are trying to prevent by blasting all galactic civilization back to the stone age. The Quarians, Krogan, Salarians, and even Humans are all examples of civilizations who have gone hog wild with their tech and caused galatic level crisis as a result. Can any of them be trusted with sentient AI?
Honestly, this, this, this, and all of this. I think we disagreed earlier or you were one of the ones I ignored, don't care. This post is exceptional. It's actually a SOLID defense of Catalyst and how the choices did matter. Point "A" pretty much states "you had to make them matter" which is perfect because if you don't care or expect the game to spell it all out for you, that's not how life works.
A) Bolded part - If "the star child said so" was considered reliable, we wouldn't be in this mess. I am more prone to believe he could call it off but won't no matter how much proof you give him.
B) The star child basically says that synthetics will kill organics because it is in their nature. (paraphrasing) As it is in organic's nature to push against them. (Your implied sentiment not the star child's) How the hell do we know this? This "part of nature" was directly contradicted with the geth-quarian war being able to be resolved peacefully AND as the war beginning over the geth trying to save their organic creators. Further contradiction comes when EDI shows up and decides to help Shepard for no other reason than compassion for organics from an AI. To top it off, none of the end choices solve this "inevitable crisis". Being given the Destroy option contradicts it even further by allowing organics to wipe out the system of cycles, all synthetics and many organics. This ultimately leads us to an "inevitable doom" in ~60,000 years. Synthesis could be seen as a genocide of organics or at least a slow genocide as we begin to "upgrade" towards immortality. Control pretty much allows everything to go on the way it was but now the reapers are friendly synthetics. (Basically, he "called them off" See A) However, under control synthetics still exist so the will inevitably wipe us out at some point.
C) Bolded part - Says the Star Child. Again, not evidence. As well, the star child does say that AI has never turned on organics and as Jim Sterling would say, "Thank God for him". The synth war isn't necessarily inevitable nor is the victor. To claim it is, is nonsense. Especially on the grounds that "the star child said so".
As for the last two sentences: So the answer is a re-occuring galactic crisis? What happens if a cycle doesn't have any AI when the reapers come next time? What constitutes AI? Technically AI is just algorithms used for processing a logical programmed outcome. Maybe the next cycle the organics have alarm clocks as the only AI in existence and they get wiped out because the reapers are afraid that alarm clocks will destroy humanity. Or what if the robot revolution happens early by 20k years due to a breakthrough? The whole idea of the cycle is convoluted. Simply harvesting organic material for survival as the supreme synthetics who planted life on other planets to harvest would have made them a much more epic monster. Hell, just simply they eat peple would have been better. This cycle to save organics nonsense is just stupid.
I am not saying this to be mean. The end is junk and it stings a bit more because it had WAY more potential than this. This ending didn't deliver a quarter of the potential the trilogy held. That isn't mean, its just the way it is. Take my word on it, I am probably older than you and that is all you guys needed to hear believe the star child. (JK, couldn't resist)