PSYCHOPOMP 2 IS COMING.
IN DEVELOPMENT NOW.
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One Nice Bug Per Day
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Today's Document

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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

blake kathryn

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Mike Driver
RMH

Janaina Medeiros

JBB: An Artblog!
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almost home

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Jules of Nature

Origami Around
DEAR READER
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@karbonicc
PSYCHOPOMP 2 IS COMING.
IN DEVELOPMENT NOW.
WISHLIST ON STEAM HERE
Check out my new game!
idk i finish this game a few weeks agos and decided to make some fanart
OFF: The Guardians' Manipulation of Hugo
I'm writing another quick post on a topic I feel isn't discussed enough when it comes to OFF. I touched upon this briefly in my previous post on the Batter, but I felt it deserved to be looked at in more depth.
There is a common idea in the OFF fan base about the Guardians, more specifically:
"The Guardians used to be good and kind, but they have since become corrupt and evil."
This understanding of the Guardians is pretty common, and is fairly understandable given what we are shown. You can look up any of these characters and find many nice drawings and depictions showing them in a kindly and friendly light. However, I feel this image is almost completely false.
To tell the truth, The Guardians are corrupt and abusive from the very start, and only showed their true colors as time went on.
Let's take a look at this.
Our first chronological introduction to the Guardians is shown to us in the final area of the game, The Room. In it, we play through a flashback to the past, where a child (who is quite clearly Hugo) meets three men in the ruins of the world. These men would become The Guardians of the new world. They are Dedan, Japhet, and Enoch. Hugo helps each of the Guardians out, and they promise to be his friends. Hugo runs along back to The Room, excitedly telling the Queen about his new friends.
Many players take this sequence of events at face value, and see the kindly way that the Guardians speak to Hugo as honest and earnest, thus leading to the understanding that the Guardians only became cruel and corrupt with time.
However, if you stop and look at what is being said to Hugo, and take a step back to look at the entire situation, many red flags begin to appear.
As soon as Hugo is done helping the three men, they immediately begin to pitch their ideas of a new world to him. Specifically, a world in which the three of them are rulers. They sugarcoat this world to him, laying on thick the idealism of this new paradise they have planned.
They shower Hugo with praise, and invite him to stay and listen more to their ideas.
How convenient it is then, that Hugo is the one person with the power to give these three exactly what they want?
These three men, lost in the ashes of the world, see their chance and take it. Even in the state of devastation the world has found itself in, these three crave for power. It is not simply enough to find a new world of peace, but to control it and own it.
The conveniences do not end there. How likely is it that the three men have exactly what the other needs? How likely is it that Dedan has the book that Japhet wants? How likely is it that Japhet is directly capable of helping Enoch out of his problem? This is an exercise in manipulation and control, they are testing if Hugo can be reasoned with and pushed in the direction of their desires, to form a connection with him and solidify their place in his mind has his friends.
Even if we are to take their little runaround quest as a coincidence, their spiel about their desired world is certainly intentional, and notably, the way they interact with Hugo is very transactional. "You do this for me, and I will do that." From the outset, they will not help Hugo unless he does something for them. This is a very dangerous dynamic for any child to find themselves in, and eventually, the other shoe would drop on Hugo.
Once Hugo followed the Guardian's desires, granting them their world to rule over, they immediately betrayed him, casting him away as if he were trash. They left him to rot in the ruins of the old world, happy to have unlimited access to the playground he gave to them. A playground that, notably, is created of Hugo's body and mind. They ingratiated themselves to him, convinced him they were his friends, and convinced him to let them in.
The Guardians are fascinating characters, and it's very interesting and quite revealing to see the massive difference in their behaviors when they do not have power, and then when they do have their desired power. I don't think they are figures to be trusted in the slightest, and ultimately, the fate of Hugo is one of tragedy, and a testament to how a child can fall victim to manipulation and abuse at the hands of those willing to take advantage of them.
I hope you've enjoyed reading, I've been thinking a lot about OFF lately, and I think it is a wonderful and multi-faceted game. It is truly worth reading into and exploring, and I hope to hear your own thoughts as well!
The Batter's Goals in OFF
Doing a quick write-up here because OFF is a game I am very passionate about, and I wanted to talk about it.
[This will contain spoilers, and assumes you know the world of OFF]
I personally feel like The Batter is one of the most commonly misunderstood and misrepresented characters in modern games. Take one look at tags related to this character, and you will find tons of fan art portraying him as a sadistic and maniacally evil character. I want to talk about why that is, why I feel it is incorrect, and what I feel the truth of this character is.
Why do People see The Batter that way?
The first reason is easy. Throughout the game, the Batter basically destroys the world, and does so in a fairly violent way. He destroys anything that gets in his way with an air of fervor and indifference. At the end of the game, he kills a small child and ends the world. Usually this would indeed be the mark of a very evil character, and these actions would be unforgivable, but the world of OFF is quite unique and misshapen in its own way.
The second reason is not talked about as much, The Judge. The Judge appears at the end of the game, accusing the Batter of being a dark evil incarnation, and attempts to stop the Batter from ending the world. The Judge is a rather eloquent character, and people mostly take his word at face value here. They see what the Judge says and say "Oh yeah, I guess the Batter was truly evil all along!" However, I feel that this misses something important about the Judge, something I rarely see people point out.
The Judge is a Fool.
I don't mean this as an insult, but as a direct demonstrable fact. The Judge is consistently unaware of the workings of this world, and is usually blissfully unaware of what is even going on in front of him.
In the new OF comic by Mortis Ghost, we see a scene in which The Judge speaks to his brother Valerie about the Queen and her Guardians. The Judge is immediately sold by the Queen's promises and immediately charmed by the world she envisions. Valerie, on the other hand, is less convinced. He identifies the Queen and her followers as a cult, and decides to stay away.
Valerie is completely correct in his assessment, and it is tragic to think he would eventually meet his end at the hands of one of the Queen's followers he warned his brother about.
Here we see the Judge is easily convinced of what people want him to see, and is ironically, not very apt in his Judgments. It would not surprise me if he was given the title of "The Judge" by the Queen herself.
Hell, at the beginning of the game, The Judge thinks that The Batter is simply a figment of his own imagination for like five minutes before realizing he is actually real. He is later unable to identify Japhet puppeting his brother's corpse, and only realizes what has happened after Japhet literally explodes out of his brother.
Simply put, the Judge is a rube. He is not very perceptive, he has very little understanding of the workings of the world, and he quickly convinced by people who want to manipulate him. Frankly, I do not find it surprising in the slightest that he would have no idea what is happening at the end of the game. His speech he gives to the Batter is simply his own opinion given what little he knows, and should be taken that way.
Why did Hugo create The Batter?
The Batter, like the Queen, is a sort of tulpa, created by the powerful child Hugo. Hugo, as stated by Mortis Ghost, is a psionic child who was experimented on in a lab after some sort of apocalypse ended the world. He has the ability to create physical material from his thoughts, and acts as a living engine to the new world. Hugo had a strained relationship with his Mother and Father, often not seeing his mother, and feeling afraid of his stern and cold Father. Hugo is responsible for creating the world that OFF exists in. So why would he create The Batter, a being whose sole purpose appears to be destroying this world he created?
Before the new world, Hugo lost track of his parents. They are most likely dead, but this left Hugo completely alone. In his loneliness, Hugo created the Queen, a tulpa inspired by his Mother, to take care of him. Hugo also met three individuals, Dedan, Japhet, and Enoch, three men who would eventually become the Guardians of the new world. The three men speak to Hugo about their vision of a new world, one where they all rule together. Hugo sees these three as his friends, and their vision of Utopia is implanted into his mind.
Almost immediately, the Queen leaves to start creating the new world, in the vision of the three Guardians. To create the world, the Queen and the Guardians harness the powers of Hugo's body and mind, stretching him to his absolute limits. Once the world is finished, Hugo is left to languish, left alone in a small room as the new world subsists upon and parasitizes his brain.
It would be no exaggeration to say that the Guardians, and perhaps the Queen as well, only ever saw Hugo as a means to an end. As soon as he had given them their world to rule, he was discarded and promptly forgotten. Even the Judge, who promised to be Hugo's friend, has all but forgotten about him by the time of OFF.
Left again to suffer in his illness and sadness, Hugo has reached his breaking point. He has been betrayed by all those who said they would care for him, all of his heroes. His vision of his mother has been twisted. In this moment of darkness, Hugo can no longer believe a hero will come to save him, and so he creates a Villain.
Chapter 0: The Batter
The Batter is born, created from the memories of Hugo's father, and a villain who appeared in a comic book that Hugo's father gave to him. A dark savior who will stop at nothing to put an end to Hugo's suffering, who will punish those who have betrayed him, and who will destroy the false world they have created within him.
When The Batter finally reaches Hugo's Room, he simply says "I'm here." A bitter bit of reassurance. Hugo has been expecting him. In the final act of Hugo's Wish, the Batter kills him. Before Hugo dies, he confesses to the Batter that he is still afraid to die.
"I am afraid of the Dark."
The Batter replies, reassuring him.
"From now on, there will be no more darkness."
This is rare for the Batter. He almost never reassures any of those destroyed along the way. He doesn't care at all for the death of Valerie or any of the plight of the many clones of Elsen. It's quite clear that Hugo is the only character in this world that the Batter cares for. He tears into the Queen for her treatment of Hugo, and is disgusted by the world that has been created through Hugo's abuse. Yet at the end, he can never save Hugo, only destroy him, as that is Hugo's final wish. As the Batter puts it:
"Escaping from your purpose is impossible."
The Batter ends the world, shutting down the machine that feasts on Hugo's body, finally giving peace to the child that brought him into this world.
The Switch is now on OFF
Ultimately, the Batter's actions are up for you to interpret. Was it the right thing to do? Maybe. Maybe there was another way.
However, the Batter was not Sadistic. He did not take any pleasure in this mission. Whether you think the Batter was right or wrong, there's no doubt that he is far more in depth and intentional than the raving evil lunatic he is so often portrayed as.
Side note: the Queen and the Batter
I'm putting this here because it didn't fit neatly up above. Another common misconception with the Batter is caused by the interactions between the Queen and the Batter in their final confrontation. The Queen's speech seems to imply some familiarity or home life with the Batter, which people have also taken at face value. Simply put, I do not think the Batter existed before you pressed new game. The interactions with the Queen having a familiarity is caused by bother characters being tulpas based on Hugo's parents, leading to those residual memories surfacing as the Queen dies. In truth, I do not believe the Queen and the Batter have ever met before the moment of their confrontation.
Insane how accurate this turned out to be by the end of the game lol
pay no mind to the man behind the curtain
a goofy scribble of my newest Dashbored OC:
Saveson
what if a Shop 'n Save could also be your Son?
ps3 didn’t need games. It had swag
A doodle and a draw of my Somnosprite OC Kaia for DREAMWILD by @fadingclub Also Gub @sketchesandnonesense