Are you talking about the guy who manipulated an entire town to make her desperate so he could fuck her? That guy isn’t the antagonist? The one with the ominous music playing? The one people in town are losing their jobs to? That guy isn’t the villain? The pretentious old guy who cites cheap philosophy to sleep with a twenty-something girl and then forces her to become his personal prostitute? There is no way he isn't a bad guy.
Seymour had a delayed introduction where he effectively fucked everyone up, messed with people's jobs, blackmailed Lena's photographers into backing off and effectively 'forced' Lena's hand into meeting him. Every single character with morals in ORS lore described him as a scumbag. He is the closest thing to a goddamn moustache twirler.
Yes, because there were supposed to be concessions in dealing with him. He ain't supposed to be the mellow simp he turned out to be but here we are.
Hi guys, discussion running, target bullseyed!Eva confirmed he is the antagonist, even bad guy and villain. Sure, he is affable if Lena and Ian side with him, but that makes them assholes as well. No one demanded an antagonist to be mustache twirling, its common that they can have a caring side and be beneficial for a selected few.
Seymours state as an antagonist never changed, its consistent. What changed was the power dynamic between him and Lena, even though it shouldn't have.
First off: Pardon, but if you look through the thread and listen to a couple patrons what they whine about Seymour, it is pretty clear most expected a moustache twirler! Just remember the stupid discussion about Lena being sold to a sheik.
Terry, I am sorry to have to tell you there are paths in the game, where this does not happen. On the contrary, on some paths Seymour saves the Cafe, shoulders expensive medical bills he had no need to and was not even expected to do so, just for example. He can do good if he wants to.
Seymour is not a beaming hero, he is cunning, clever, likes to have his "personalised deck to play" and has few qualms about seizing his advantage, but that is hardly worse than an average businessman. On most paths he is that main antagonist, that is true, but not all evil (as seems many players believed) and on several paths he is hardly an antagonist.
Someone mentioned the mayor election. Yes, Seymour tries to get a candidate through he prefers for his business, being a grey eminence. To be cynical, that is not worse than what has become the norm in our democracies in the last years, that parties bring incompetent losers into cushy positions due to party membership. To be blunt, Perry for all his faults hints several times that his father is not a very successful mayor. Seymour jumping on the ship of the candidate which will probably win is opportunistic, but not dumb.