It would be more efficient if it was.
That makes so much more sense than what I was thinking.
Spoilers :vLooking at the history of each Persona's namesake, only Arsene Lupin and Zorro lived past their criminal exploits.
William Kidd, a real life privateer, was betrayed by his partners and financial backers and executed despite remaining loyal and not ratting out his comrades. Supposedly, this may or may not have spared his life if he had.
Carmen is killed by Jose, the man in love with her that she had strung along and rejected, in the final acts of the opera.
Ishikawa Goemon was boiled alive along with his son after a failed assassination attempt.
We know from the translations of the text blurbs put up in the recent site update that the MC moved to Tokyo for unknown reasons and that Ryoji's personality change is recent. I wonder how that ties into the backstories of their characters and the grudge they feel towards society.
It isn't much to go on, but it seems pretty clear you're not committing crime because you're just a bad person, which I think would be much more interesting.
I do, actually. I like it a lot.
Well I mean point taken, but that is overboard
he makes a mistake during fusion and is like "yo, i got Izanagi no Okami, just take it. it's yours. want a Hell Rider too? you can have it."
then the real Sho can begin.
Oh no not again
I don't know. The anti-adult and anti-society sentiments remind me a lot of what Holden Caufield thinks about in Catcher in the Rye. It seems like these teens all suffered at the hands of adults and are just lashing out against the society they feel shunned them. I think the twist will be that the mysterious person who talks to them over the app is responsible for some of the larger events that occur, like the subway accident seen in the first trailer and referenced in the third.
I know I'm probably alone with this but I dislike these storylines. A lot of the time they come across as too emo/"I hate the world" for me to enjoy them properly, not to mention that this is a bit overused now. Just look at the wording used in the story description- it is too over the top for me to take it seriously (and these storylines are already difficult enough to take seriously IMO, mostly because it seems so childish).I don't know. The anti-adult and anti-society sentiments remind me a lot of what Holden Caufield thinks about in Catcher in the Rye. It seems like these teens all suffered at the hands of adults and are just lashing out against the society they feel shunned them. I think the twist will be that the mysterious person who talks to them over the app is responsible for some of the larger events that occur, like the subway accident seen in the first trailer and referenced in the third.
I don't know about you, but my inner child died out a few years ago.