The timing on some of these quests versus the info they give are so weird sometimes. Like you get the in world explanation about the anti death tears only after doing Cait's slut temple/choosing not to build it. The tears had been available long before this point though. Also, Vivienne's whole thing about freaking the player out about how demon waste material (cum, milk, etc) is just raw transformation stuff is after you've already dealt with the imps and demons for a while. Plus demon codex not unlocking until the end of act 1. Pacing is weird, yo.
So true, especially for Viviane stuff, lemme put it down :
To have this explanation, you need to get at least 10 Succubus Milk (1 to unlock the quest, then she asks for 9 more)
But to get Succubus Milk, you need to either (according to wiki, which is the main source of information for any player) :
- Grind A LOT of cultists/imps, relying on 3.33% drop rates (the only way you could get this dialog without ever progressing the main story)
- Grind Goblin Succubus, relying on 33.3% drop rates (Only appears after the whole Winter City thing, so at this point you should know quite a bit about demons, and is probably the most "common" way to grab 10 of them)
- Grind Painted Demons, relying on 3.33% drop rates (Only appears after the whole Winter City thing, but why would you grind them when Goblin Succubus are a much better alternative)
- Buy it from Farrah (which is in the Wayfort, and only appears also after the Winter City thing, but is a bit costly for early game (at least for me it was, unless you grind Painted Demons for money, or wait to have access to the minotaur city or whatever) )
So honestly, I don't know why the fuck would the PC be that surprised, unless you're a pure unga bunga Champion who never asks questions to other characters, and never fucks demons either
It would've been more interesting if she discovered something else about demons, for example why they do "steal" your soul (and by why I mean why they have the power to do that, and why they do it), or why losing your soul changes you that much