Oh interesting, I hadn't thought of it going that route. Though that could be a bit too close to DDLC. Also all the religious symbolism doesn't really fit with that, especially because it seems like in this case it would definitely be a Japanese VN with all the specific references to Japanese stuff, and religion is much less of a thing over there.
Well, the obvious answer is often the right one. Why everybody fall for Sensei despite him putting next to no efforts? He's MC, it supposed to happen like this. I almost feel like the game deals such shity hand in life to Rin to "fix" her. Girl in vn is supposed to like the MC, not the other girls.
I think someone (Sensei or Amiokay, "happy" version of Maya, or both) in the game gone rouge, got access to code in attempts to fix what people, playing through MC done to characters or whatnot.
Maybe Sensei wasn't even supposed to be MC. He was typical male npc teacher at school, fell in love with Amiokay girl, then came a real MC (actual human player) and stole the girl. Sensei got rid of him, along with other males and everything went to shit afterwards.
Game is in the quarantine now, with devs trying to fix it and the other party trying to achieve its goals. Maybe that's the stand in for multiple gods, being referred left and right in the game.
Whereas if Sensei were a real person that could easily be explained by just this one guy being religious, or just fever dreaming this part of the story as a way to explore his guilt.
THIS Sensei might be a real person. He seems to think he was "isekai'd" through suicide, claims he does not have much memories left, but he's almost lucid in happy scenes and sometimes "slip" few things that would suggest that he does have memories of pervious Sensei. I can't quite determine if he's a broken and blank incarnation of previous Sensei or an entirely new person, incarnated in new body.
And yeah, Maya's reaction to incest is part of what is pointing me in that direction. I probably should've actually pointed out that Maya and Sensei very well could be uncle / niece as well. That'd explain why Ami would be the way she is. There is the constant "daddy" references too though, at least in regards to the nicknames. Though that's more optional.
I don't think so. I though that maybe Maya is Sensei's and Amiokay's daughter.
Ami is the way that she is because of her inability to cope with her parents deaths. Sensei is her stand in for daddy. The more she takes care of him and spends time with him, the less time she has to process death. Well, she can't really process it, she just breakes.
Every other girl in the game have daddy issues because there almost no dads around, because of the war.
Which is also a very curious subject. since we know nothing about it. I find it suspicios that such an important part of the setting, directly influencing lives of so many girl is so half-assed thrown into the story. No one says anything meaningful about it, as if there is nothing to say. Like someone just made it up on the spot, during world reset, it carried over and now is intrinsic part of reality, so everybody just accept it as a matter of fact. All to make it easier for Sensei to fool around with girls.
Also I just had a scene with him fantasizing about fucking Miku's severed head in the eye socket ....
That's a happy scene, they have their own rules. We don't know if Sensei in happy scene is the same as in the main game.
Oh, and also it felt like the scene with Futaba's story early on ("Upside Down") seemed very important. Bodies in the boiler room. A family that shouldn't ask questions. Whatever that was it seemed to come from his real life. Although reading that again I guess it could just be referencing whatever is going on in their current situation as well. Saying that the girls will be happy as long as they don't question Sensei and think about why they're stuck in this time loop, or whatever it is.
It stood out to me too, but I don't know what it means. I swear, someone in this game already said something about boiler room, but I can't remember.
I don't think Sensei is the murderer. If anyone, Ami seems to be a perfect mass murderer material. She's also this game's Judah and the only character, beside Maya that appeared in happy scene, while somewhat lucid and seem to know what's up.
One final thing I've been thinking about. Sorry if my spamming the thread with a bunch of posts in a row is annoying anyone.
That's what the forums are for.
I saw some people earlier in the thread suggesting that Sensei wasn't so bad of a guy because he could choose to do good or do bad. We're the ones to blame if he chooses bad.
Well, for what it's worth, he's definitely getting better. I find it funny how even he thinks that he puts zero effort into building relationships with girls, but if you really think about it it's not the case. The amount of time and leggwork (he doesn't have a car for some reason) he invest into every single female (especially those in his classroom) is quite impressive. His motive being potential sex with them doesn't change that fact.
1. There are forced actions and forced thoughts that imply extreme cruelty and a complete lack of empathy in his heart. It's not always there, but it sometimes is, and I don't think normal people really go to the places he goes to in his mind so often.
He's very inconsistent with that. It's like there are several people at the same time.
2. The very fact that he seems to see the potential for evil actions in so many situations seems to suggest that he's extremely capable of those evil actions. A good person all alone with a girl doesn't suddenly entertain the idea of raping her, for example. The choice wouldn't even exist if they were a good-hearted person. (Not that I've encountered a choice like this -- though I have seen him thinking along these lines --- but just the fact that bad choices are available tells us about the character)
I would argue that your actions alone is what qualify you as a "good person". There's difference between "harmless person" and "good" one. I would also argue that a person unaware of his own violent urges and blissfully ignorant to his dark impulses several times more dangerous that a person who knows what he's capable of. It's entirely a matter of self-control.
3. This theory is more about a person that's done awful things and is now regretting it, and being thrown into situations where he has a chance to do them again in some kind of dream state. So it makes sense that he can either choose to do better or continue to do awful things this time. Because you can choose to do right this time doesn't suggest that he was also innocent before.
A theory that is as good as any other. Although Sensei seem more broken that evil to me.
Now, after lengthy reply I feel like I should change my name to
alex2011.