Quote:
Originally Posted by Vainamoinen
Dashing, I think you have an interesting angle in arguing that by building the Crucible, Shepard's active Heros role is preserved. I am very willing to discuss the idea, but I don't think it's really necessary for you to openly deny the information the actual game gives you. Please note in the following original final conversation:
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Thanks for providing the conversation. I couldn't find a video of it, and I didn't want to transcribe the entire thing, so this makes the structure of the conversation a lot easier to go through.
However, you are dealing with only half of the equation. For comparison, we must go back to the original virtual being infodump ending:
Vigil in Mass Effect 1..
Vigil describes his own actions and competences("I" began to shut down life support) , and identifies with his creators(This is why "we" sent "our" warning through the beacons).
Vigil refers to the past, present, and future within his experience. "This is what happened to the Protheans, this is what I think the Reapers do, if you get to the Conduit you can stop the one you call Saren, etc").
Vigil showed control over pieces of technology.
Vigil advocated certain actions, as though he had an opinion on the matter.
Vigil had his own independent thoughts and theories.
The child seems to be a better-maintained VI, an expression of the will of the Reapers' creators, much the same way Vigil was an expression of the Prothean's will. The child doesn't identify with the Reapers in the sense that you say.
C "I am the Catalyst."
C "Perhaps. I control the Reapers. They are my solution."
Every use of "we" can be interpreted as being said from the perspective of Reapers' creators. "This is why [the VI that follows the will of the Reaper Creator species; 'we'] continue to do this thing through our plan and instruments(the Reapers)." On the other hand, the references to the Reapers as separate entities cannot be so interpreted, nor does that view have the in-universe precedent(Vigil). The idea that the child "is" the Reapers simply isn't supportable.
C "The Crucible changed me. Created new... possibilities. But I can't make them happen.
The Child VI doesn't grant Shepard power, Shepard grants the VI power.
Before the child shows up, we expect that Shepard will build a machine that can destroy or control the Reapers.
This is what we build.
In ME1, we spend the whole game assuming that the Conduit is a weapon(or at least, the in-game characters assume as much). Instead, it is a miniature Mass Relay that can send people to the Citadel's main control room.
In ME3, we spend the whole game assuming the Crucible is a weapon. The Illusive Man believes he can use it to control the Reapers. It is, and is not, these things. The Crucible is a means of "reprogramming" the Catalyst, adding options to its programming. The Crucible isn't a gun, it's a means of changing the mental core of the Reaper cycle.
Just like the Conduit in Mass Effect 1, Mass Effect 3 ends on an important device that has been the center of the narrative up to that point, and that both is and isn't what was expected. There's a really nice parallel there.
Quote:
Originally Posted by KuroShiro
This still doesn't address how what the reapers do is in any way different from what synthetics would do otherwise. They wipe out all organic life advanced enough to potentially be capable of wiping themselves out. Low-tech civilizations would be spared either way, and the cycle would continue in the same way regardless of whether the reapers were there or not.
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Synthetics would not preserve organic DNA.
Synthetics wouldn't create a cycle. Instead, they'd represent an endpoint. Wipe out life before they create synthetic intelligence, and you can allow new life to grow in the same place.
Synthetic apocalypse has a lot of unknown factors. The synthetics CAN roam the galaxy, wiping out organic life and replacing them entirely. They don't need to breathe, they don't have lifespans. It would take them a LONG TIME to travel the galaxy, but the Reapers and their creators work on very large timescales anyway. It has been thousands of years since they last showed up. Even with sublight travel, roaming synthetics from various start points could overwhelm a galaxy.