chrominance
Member
It's Bit that says to Kat she needs to singularity with the ocean though, so unless we think Bit and the Beast have some kind of conspirancy to mess with. Kat it doesn't make much sense IMO.
The "I can't .. but" can show Kat having thoughts about the deal, of course, but then people around Hekseville singing her song gives her inner strenght to fight the beast.
It sounds anime as fuck but the game is anime as fuck. The latest chapters are the kind of convolupted story that japanese devs an anime writters love.
So my thoughts here are the same as Strings:
I'm not sure what you mean? The way I interpret it, no one other than the player would even remember the offer. It's just as if Kat won to everyone else and her.
Basically, if we assume Kat took the deal, we have to assume that everything that happens after the scene where Kat blacks out and is shown lying on the ground is potentially no longer "objective reality" but the new reality where Kat gets to keep Hekseville and Jirga Para Lhao intact. There is some question as to WHEN Bit talks to Kat; that part of the story happens so quickly that I don't know if it's ever made clear when that conversation occurs. But if it happens after she defeats the beast/demon/whatever we're calling it, then it could be as much a fabrication as everything else. Even if Bit tells her before the defeat, the strategy Bit tells Kat could be true but her execution of that strategy could be a fantasy.
The only part where I think it falls apart is where the fabricated reality still involves her jumping into the abyss and disappearing for a year, because at best it means some of the demon's promises are false (namely all the bits about not remembering the demon or, as I think is implied, the destruction of Hekseville and the climactic battle). So the other option would be that fabricated reality doesn't start until she jumps into the abyss for some weird reason, but that doesn't really make a lot of sense to me either. And neither of these options answers the question of why the world seems to go on without Kat for a year when that doesn't seem to be part of the deal.
I think of this the same way I think of the Indoctrination Theory in Mass Effect 3: fun to consider the implications of, potentially true, but very likely not.