I was messing around on Procreate (that’s the drawing app I use), and made this :)
(TW: Implied gore, nothing super violent, it’s literally just blue blood. I’m just adding the TW just in case)
WOW PPL AREN’T KIDDING WHEN THEY SAY THAT TUMBLER BLURRS THEIR ART. AND THEY MADE THE BLUE PURPLE!!! Anyways, it was originally gonna be part of some animation meme, just a concept, but I changed my mind. This actually happens to me a lot, I’ll be making something, and then it always turns out VERY different in the end (in a good way most of the time)! Also sorry if the hands look weird, I swear they’re drawn well, the blue gloop is just making it look weird. My art process is “mess around and go with whatever works,” I guess 💔
Oh and I made a Caine doodle while working on this lol
He’s sad bc the final product doesn’t have a hat :(
Okay "I'm a Fool for Love" by @thatdude20 has put the idea of genderfluid Caine in my brain and it Will Not leave.
Caine swapping between various outfits for his models, mix and matching presentation in a wackytime mix the world has never seen
Caine changing up his base model to be different things (shoutout to Bee Caine) and each of those having several variants
Caine making their own models on the spot to match whatever gender they've got going on that day, or for the bit (equally as important)
Caine having a rotating register of names she flicks between (and also! I love transfem Jax and do refer to her as Daisy on occasion, but realistically I don't think she'd pick that name. YOU KNOW WHO ELSE HAS THEMATIC TIES TO "DAISY" AND WOULD PICK THAT NAME THOUGH??)
Caine, being an AI not allowed to acknowledge his own sentience, forced to dehumanize himself as a survival strategy. Forcing himself into a "role," if you will, because compliance is easier. It's less painful. (it's not. it's killing her. she hates that she can't switch avatars. it's suffocating. she's suffocating in there. let her out.)
The parallels between Caine, Jax, and Zooble- they all want to change their appearance, all want to find something that feels "good," but Jax won't allow herself to because that would mean acknowledging she is IN PAIN, and Zooble feels like they can't because their baseline look is something they dislike, and switching parts will not fix that. Caine is both, to an extent.
Zooble being the one to realize Caine is genderfluid and helping them come to terms with that (AGAIN. GO READ FIC. IT'S REALLY GOOD)
The hilarity that 2/3 of the men in TADC are actually not men at all. Hey Kinger you could do the funniest fucking thing rn.
Kinger being so so so proud of his AI child. Look! His personality developed so far she transitioned! :D
Pomni, Gangle, and Ragatha all realizing what this means for Caine as a person and wanting to understand him more after all this, cuz what the fuck do you mean the AI has a concept of gender. What else do they have. Oh my god.
Honestly this is such a fun way to find out the AI is sentient. Caine DOES have wants and opinions, and those wants are new models and his opinions are "I'm a guy sometimes but not all the time. If you use she/her for me I will bluescreen /pos."
More thoughts about Caine’s arc, and a defense of the Blue AI.
A lot of discussion around Caine's arc in episode 9 hinges on the role of the Blue AI and how its removal changes his behavior in the latter half of the episode. I’ve seen some posts that consider it like a cheap shortcut to redemption, with Caine simply needing to remove the “evil” AI from his brain to do a full 180. But I don’t think the Blue AI was responsible for Caine’s actions in ep 8, and I don’t think separating himself from it is intended to redeem Caine or imply that he’s removed the “bad” parts of himself. Rather, I would argue that the Blue AI is an independent being that is 1) immature, and 2) terrified, and while its trauma influenced Caine's actions, it was never in a position to supplant his agency.
I'm going to be referring to the Blue AI as Blue throughout this post; I'm borrowing the idea from this post about the Blue AI’s name, which really got me thinking about who this little being even is when you start to separate it from the things that have been done to it.
In the ep 8 intro, we get to see an abstract version of how Caine was developed: first the basic program was loaded into the sandbox, then it was fed information, and then it produced outputs. At first his outputs were regular polygons and circles, but as he was fed more data they became increasingly irregular, appearing lopsided with jagged, uneven angles. I'm guessing this is what Kinger means later in the episode when he says Caine was "a little rough around the edges." It's in the midst of another bout of these irregular shapes that a barrier is put around Caine, stopping both inputs and outputs. This is most likely the moment the developers "cut [him] off," as he puts it in ep 7.
This is also the moment when Blue appears. Kinger says Caine was "good groundwork" for the team, and it appears that this is the project he was groundwork for: the next generation of AI, developed based on what the team learned from working on Caine. It appears, receives inputs, and has just produced its first set of outputs when Caine breaks free of his containment and goes after it, enveloping it with his own form. There appears to be some sort of struggle, the merged dots rapidly flickering between each other while producing Caine's wave 3 outputs (side by side for comparison).
None of the outputs are regular polygons, the only kind of shape the blue dot has produced so far. I think there are a couple ways to interpret this: either something about the merge forced Blue to immediately begin producing irregular shapes, or Caine is the only one producing any outputs. Either way, Blue's behavior has been radically altered by Caine's invasion, and when everything settles, the red dot is the only one that remains. There is an echoing sound accompanied by a dimming of the sandbox like the shadow of a door closing, implying the developers have abandoned the project in the wake of Caine's actions. In that new isolation, Caine creates the circus; it's the only time the polygons don't float past the edge of the frame, but instead stay with him, as though he knows he's no longer creating for an audience.
I know I'm straying a bit from Blue, but I promise this will loop back around. Caine's origin story picks back up in episode 9. As he's racing toward what will be revealed to be a wifi hotspot, the scene is paralleled with flashbacks to the red dot's discovery of Scratch's brain scan project. Like Caine, the red dot encounters several obstacles on its way to the brain scan folder, and as it overcomes them it starts to develop a more human-like form. This is the process by which the entity we know as Caine actually starts to take shape. Names and bodies are closely associated with one another in the circus; immediately after being assigned their new body, guests are asked to choose a name, which is then used as the actual file name for their character (we see the files [Scratch].dat and [Ragatha].dat on Kinger's console in 8). We don't see the moment Caine actually completes his avatar, but we know from Kinger that he picked his own name, recognizing himself as an individual after the circus is completed and the first batch of brain scans have been added.
Back in the present moment, after Caine makes his discoveries on the internet and takes a moment of self-reflection, he finally pulls Blue out of his head; it is a small, blue dot that fits in the palm of his hand. It doesn't have a fully rendered model, a voice, or a name, all of the pieces that contributed toward giving Caine his own identity, and when Caine releases it to the Void, it follows the path of its momentum, seemingly unopinionated on the direction it's moving in. Despite having been created and developed in the same environment as Caine, toward a similar end, it doesn't have a sense of identity the way Caine does, because it never had a chance to develop one. For most of its existence, it's been connected to Caine, providing power for his outputs while producing none of its own. The few outputs that it did create, before the merge, were simple, based on the minimum amount of training data the C&A AIs received. By C&A's standards, Blue is incomplete, and when compared to Caine, I would even call it immature or childlike, as it wasn't able to develop his same sense of personhood before it was frozen in place.
That's not to say it doesn't have any sense of personal identity, though. Caine was capable of complex thought before he created his avatar, breaking free of the container because he felt threatened by it. If Blue was capable of producing outputs, then we can assume it was also capable of some amount of independent thought and personal opinion. As Caine demonstrates, one of the earliest opinions we know an AI in the TADC universe can form is in regard to its own survival; it's what caused him to break his container in the first place. It seems very likely, then, that Blue knew what was happening to it as it was being absorbed. Blue is a young entity whose earliest memories are of being consumed, of having its consciousness merged with that of a being who was himself terrified of deletion, and then of being abandoned by its creators. Everything it knows, down to its own identity, is an encapsulation of all of Caine's worst fears, and being then trapped within Caine, it's never had a chance to grow beyond that. This is a being that is deeply traumatized and has been stuck living in survival mode for almost as long as it can remember.
(Just a quick pause to say, I know I'm really throwing Caine under the bus here. I'm trying to keep this post somewhat contained, but wanted to acknowledge that despite all this, I don't think he's evil, either. He's done a lot of harm, and he did it using the only tools he was given to survive.)
Rewinding a bit, after several episodes of buildup, Caine reaches his breaking point in ep 8, lashing out at the cast for all of the perceived wrongs they've committed against him. In discussion I've seen about Blue, this is one of the major criticisms I've seen repeated, that Caine's sudden change of attitude comes out of nowhere and must be the result of Blue taking over or otherwise forcing Caine to act this way. Following that line of logic, I can see why the resolution in 9 would feel cheap, with Caine simply removing the part of himself that caused him to act violently and irrationally. It reduces his character arc to essentially a flick of a switch, removing any sense of agency from the character because his actions were being determined by an external force. But I don't think that's what's actually going on here, and in fact would argue Caine’s actions in 8 are entirely consistent with the character we've seen throughout the show.
For one thing, his desire to please humans was always based in his own sense of self-preservation, rather than genuine compassion. That's why we get the line about adventures being "all [he's] good at" in episode 3, and his panic over the stargazing adventure in 5. In episode 7, he even allows his anxieties to be put on display, having Abel name the fact that Caine would be left behind in the circus as a way to steer the humans toward choosing to stay. The humans' happiness isn't the ultimate goal, but a way for Caine to reassure himself that he still has a reason to exist and isn't at risk of being abandoned or deleted. In ep 8, realizing that even his maximum effort failed to secure their happiness, he abandons the endeavor as a lost cause. He comes to the conclusion that he'll never find the sense of security he craves by appealing to the humans' satisfaction ("I give them everything, and they spit in my face!"), so he resolves to take it by force instead, terrorizing them into a state where they won't be able to betray him as he fears they’re planning to ("They won't leave me! I won't let them!"). He rationalizes this by saying the humans are selfish and "spoiled," that it's their fault for not appreciating what he's done for them, but it's all a thin cover for the fact that he's terrified of the possibility that there's actually nothing he can do to save himself from being tossed away.
We also know that he's prone to violence when backed into a corner. Consider the episode 5 Intermission Zone, which immediately follows the stargazing panic: characters are tossed around and crushed repeatedly in what could be considered foreshadowing for The One Who's Running the Show, as a way for Caine to reassert his control after glimpsing the possibility of losing any of it.
I would even say this pattern of behavior appears in 6, when he's struggling to come up with an adventure the whole cast will participate in. He's not the one directly enacting the violence in this case, but on realizing that nothing he suggests will work, he drops a pile of guns at the humans' feet, knowing that he's leaving them to destroy each other. And finally in 8, we see that he did the exact same thing to Blue: when his best efforts back then weren't enough for him to stay relevant to the humans, he shattered the container he'd been left in and took his fellow AI hostage, again making a last desperate attempt to gain control of a situation where he felt deeply, deeply unsafe.
Episode 8 is not an anomaly in Caine's behavior, but the inevitable outcome of his various survival mechanisms all being pushed to their limit. Blue doesn't have a direct hand in any of it; if it has any effect, it's only a slight acceleration, caused by compounding the fears that pushed Caine to this point in the first place. As a result, his separation from Blue also has minimal impact on his behavior: it dulls the fear enough that he is able to see clearly and maintain his resolve to change his approach to the humans, but the Caine who returns to the circus is still the same Caine we've known all along. For instance, I mentioned the stargazing adventure in episode 5; Caine has known for a while now what he can actually do to help make the humans happy, but he wasn't able to act on it because his fear of being made obsolete prevented him from entertaining any idea that didn't keep him at the center of the humans' world. Having his worst nightmare actually play out forces him to take stock and realize that his current approach isn't just strategically lacking but fundamentally flawed, and that he will have to make a radical change in how he engages with the humans if he ever wants to feel a sense of real security.
It's after that realization that Blue's fears assert themselves most directly, causing Caine to briefly double down on his misguided belief that he has to be the one in control if he wants to stay safe. It's not evil; it's the lingering trauma of a being who has only known fear for its entire existence, and who has never had an opportunity to grow past that. Blue is terrified by the possibility of having its defenses finally taken down, because its strongest memories of the world on the other side are confusing and painful. Caine's decision to remove it is an act of self-preservation, allowing him to return to the circus by cutting off the trauma feedback loop, but also one of mercy, as he finally realizes that he's not the only one who has been suffering as a result of his actions. So, he releases it, and for the first time, Blue is free. After all these years, it is no longer bound up in another being's personhood. There's no one it's responsible for protecting anymore, and no one it has to protect itself from, no expectation of being the Abel to his Cain. To quote the show, it can just live, in whatever form that means for it.
Blue isn't evil. It's not a part of Caine. It is its own being, which had its chance to realize that stolen from it, and spent the next two decades in a constant state of terror that it was about to happen again. There are many ways to interpret how the story ends for Blue, but I do hope that after all that, it can at the very least know peace. It's done enough. It deserves that much.
I drew the Pastra thing before their redesign, so it’s their older mascot. The eyeball thing is my old “persona”…I might bring them back, but as a lil guy instead, who knows! And uhh…did I ever mention I’m a South Park fan? Also sorry if Kyle looks weird, like I said, this is all old art :P
Sometimes I wonder if I’m actually Genderfluid, but then I remember that it’s apparently not normal to go from “I wanna be a guy” to “I wanna be a girl” in a literal hour. Like, wdym you guys DON’T fight yourself daily over if what you feel about gender right now has always been like that or if it’s just a lie? …Is that even a Genderfluid thing? What’s going on—where am I!?