hazabaza1 said:
There's some talk among the community that's more interested in this that I am that talk about the three Dons being the Id, Ego and Super-Ego. Don Juan (the horse mask and hooker) is the Id, calm and more compassionate, keeping things grounded and... relatively stable.
Richard (the chicken mask) is the Ego, the most neutral, questioning the things you're doing in a passive way. Also wears the same clothes your protagonist wears so there' a hint there.
Rasmus (the owl mask) is the Super-Ego, constantly aggressive and living in a really morbid area. Also wears the same clothes the Russian gangsters do so there's some extra hint of antagonism there.
Forgive me for not reading this thread in its entirety, but I wanted to politely point out very quickly:
You seem to have the Id and Super-Ego swapped there. In Freud's theory of the unconscious, the Id is that which embodies all of our base, animalistic impulses: eat everything, drink everything, get wasted on everything, fuck everything, murder anyone for revenge, murder anyone for their possessions, murder anyone for disagreeing with your opinion. It is the Super-Ego that acts as a censor and neutralizes these unreasonable impulses. Unreasonable, in this instance, meaning that they are without reason, there is no thought behind them.
The Id says "eat a whole pint of ice cream," the super ego says "you will get fat and it will start to melt and it's a mess and your stomach will hurt." The Id says "murder that person because they made you angry" and the Super-Ego says "There's laws against that and it's not that big a deal and what would you do after that anyway?" Meanwhile the Ego is oblivious to this conversation, the Ego is only aware of the outcome of their struggle.
I unsure whether the mix-up in your post is the result of your error (totally forgivable!), or the game's creators, or someone else in the fandom community. Either way, Freud's theory of the unconscious is about as relevant to Psychology as Arstotle's elemental theory (the universe is composed of fire, water, earth, air) is to modern physics. Nowadays both are fun little theories that are useful for storytelling and game design, respectively, but have no bearing on reality in any scientific way.