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@sweatertheman
Question for the Titansei believers. How, and also why.
Gotta do it
I don’t care what news I get I just want this stupid potato dog on my dash
Same lol
ralsusie and suselle are both still feasible if you look at it like a pearl/rose/greg thing
The problem with this idea is that Suselle and Ralsusie are opposed at their roots.
Noelle is the person Susie is being pushed towards. Everyone and everything works to make sure it just sorta happens *to* her. Nothing *challenges* Suselle, and neither Susie nor Noelle had to actually do anything to make it happen. And while Noelle is a *nice* girl, she is deeply messed up in a way where she struggles to actually care about other people. Susie is an object to Noelle. A thing she can use to replace Dess, and substitute her own lack of self-confidence. It *feels* like Noelle is making progress on her issues when Susie is around, but it's an illusion. When pressed she's more than *capable* of standing up for herself, but she's so used to being helpless and relying on other people to do anything scary or emotionally taxing for her, that if someone is around who is willing to do so, she snaps into helpless damsel mode. Furthermore, the thing which keeps her docile is her fear of being punished for disobedience. But as long as one person is around to tell her "what you're doing is okay, keep doing it" she has no problem doing it. So Susie isn't giving her the confidence to say no, she's giving her a refuge of affirmation she can return to. Suselle for Susie would be just accepting the path laid out for her. Even if there's a Prophecized bump in the road, the whole thing is so mechanical, their interactions so formulaic, it seems like it's what Fate wants. Susie doesn't even ask Noelle to the festival. Noelle does, Susie dodges the question, and gets Reverse Psychology'd by Carol into saying yes out of spite. And it wouldn't be a happy ending for either of them. Susie recieves endless praise from Noelle, but it's all very shallow, and nothing Noelle says or does is all that *challenging.* Plus, the increasing sense of neediness and deepseated insecurities and traumas Noelle just refuses to address, because for Noelle, as long as she has Susie, she has another escape from her problems. She can continue to run away, distract herself, not have to be the helpless weak girl next door without actually having to confront the issues that keep her that way.
Ralsusie on the other hand is the ultimate rejection of Fate. Their bond was formed haphazardly not out of necessity or formula, but out of Susie's refusal *not* to get to know him more. Their relationship is constantly challenged, and every time Susie fights harder for it. They're the other's mirror image. One small fluffy and sweet, the other big spiky and rude, both alone for so long, made to feel inherently lesser, expected to fall in line or suffer punishment. Wanting to do good, to have friends, crack jokes, help people, have hope. Both resigning themselves to playing the roles expected of them, not knowing what else to do, until they meet each other, bouncing off at first, but seeing the other for who they are after. They push each other to be better. Ralsei is always critical of Susie when she does something wrong, but he learned not to nag her about it. She needs to feel like she's safe to make mistakes, so he scolds her gently and nudges her in the proper direction. He sees that she's a wonderful person, that she's as loyal and brave as they come, has a deeply kind heart, and he wants her to see that too, and embody that. Susie never stops insisting that Ralsei be his own person. Initially ragging on him for being such a pushover, but genuinely seeming to have a problem with the idea of him and his people being inherently lesser servants. She sees there's more to him than he acts like, than he wants to admit, and she wants to see him grow into that, because she likes what she's seen already. When they talk about the other there's deep, deep admiration. Susie goes out of her way to ask Ralsei out to the Festival as soon as she can, practically begs him to go and is determined to still be with him after he explains why he can't go. Ralsei wants Kris to buy something for her in his name, and begs them to be there for her because he can't be.
Last but not least, Noelle will *not* like Ralsei.
Firstly, she's a jealous person, attacking Berdly for expressing interest in Susie, nagging Kris about why they won't change seats with her and why they're the Susie expert, and saying she just wants to help them so they don't have to be the one who *gets to be* (freudian slip) tormented by her. She can sort of accept this when it's Kris because they're her lifelong best friend who she misses deeply, but this weird boy getting all that attention from *her* Susie? No way. She also conveniently leaves out the part of her "dream" where she saw the weird boy talking and laughing and eating cotton candy with Susie, *alone.*
Second, despite their superficial similarities, Noelle and Ralsei are opposites as people. Ralsei is deeply selfless despite fearing otherwise. He will always put himself and his desires on the line for the greater good. For friendship, for hope, for the happiness of someone else. Noelle is deeply selfish. She acts outwardly kind and accomodating, but she'll throw Kris under the bus by allowing them to continue being assaulted by Susie, so that Susie won't be kicked out and she can continue pining after her. She'll throw Berdly under the bus by freezing him because refusing to freeze the enemy here means admitting she could have refused before and chose not to, and the shame of that would just kill her. She feels entitled to the things she wants because she's Nice and Obedient. Ralsei is a rule follower. He will break rules, but prefers order and reason to just doing whatever you want. Noelle is a rule breaker. She acts obedient, but will disobey the second she feels she won't be punished, because she hates the feeling of being controlled. Ralsei genuinely wants the best for other people. Noelle struggles to see other people as people. She's locked in the mindset of a scared little girl in an abusive household, where easing your own pain and avoiding punishment matter more than anything, and since you're a child, your empathy hasn't fully developed, so right and wrong don't matter that much either, except in how you will and won't be punished.
Third, and last, Ralsei is the person Noelle likes to think of herself as. Small, meek, disempowered, but endlessly giving, kind, forgiving. An unappreciated martyr deserving of being uplifted and shown they have value. As much shit as Noelle has been through, as much as no one understands her pain, she's actually really priviliged. She lives in a mansion where she has pretty much anything she could want. Everyone loves her and wants to be around her. And most of how she behaves socially is a performance, armor protecting that abused child, whose only concern is its own safety. She's too wrapped up in her pain, the grief of loss, the trauma of abuse, the sadness of watching friends slip away from her, and the rage of being caged in an expectation of perfection, to be able to see that she is not a turbovictim who nothing ever goes right for. She's practically a Princess. Ralsei, the actual Prince has less than her.
Put this all together, and we have the reason Ralsusie and Suselle don't mix.
Susie choosing Ralsei means choosing to fight on for the bonds she made herself, for a person she cares about, taking the hits as they come because it's worth it just to spend one more day with him. Her choosing Noelle means taking the path of least resistance. A relationship that doesn't challenge her with someone nice whom she has no special bond with, but at least promises safety. And if these two opposing ideas weren't enough, Noelle is not going to let some freak steal *her* position. *She* should be the one Susie dotes on and tells they matter. *She* should be the one going on dates and eating candy with her. *She's* the unappreciated martyr, all she does is deny herself to whatever everyone else wants, what makes *him* so deserving?!
Anyway, sorry for the rant.
He sounded so sad he couldn't do it so I drew him doing Susie's homework
RALSEI ANALYSIS MASTERPOST
Since I see possibly some of the worst character assassinations on Ralsei within fandom spaces from multiple angles, I'm going to break down some of the most key aspects of his character and challenge assumptions that many of you have formed about this character in your head. This is mainly going to deal with key motives for Ralsei rather than general characterization.
There will be citations involved, because I'm that frustrated. I will be using the Deltarune text dump for citations, and will give a lead in line for each scene I am talking about. A link will be provided to the specific line.
Ready?
Surprisingly, that's a pretty good analysis! You've independently arrived at many of the same conclusions I've had since Chapter 2! Most people who try to analyze Ralsei suck dick at doing it, but you've painted a relatively accurate depiction of who he is. He's a a scared, lonely young man, tormented by forces beyond his comprehension and control, who believes himself fundamentally powerless, and yet he still *has* to try to stop the cruel fate he knows is coming. He can't just let it happen, no matter how hopeless it seems, no matter how much he wishes he could just accept that there was no hope, because in his heart, he's a hero.
There are only two, maybe three things I'll knock you for.
1. I do think that Ralsei's identity issues and the Torment of the Prophecy are interlinked. They are separate issues, but the throughline between them is the idea that there are some terrible things which will happen, and which simply can't be changed, so you should just accept them. In the case of his nature as a Darkner, no one else seems to be as overcome with grief at not being real, or as convinced that their lives have no value. Everyone else seems to be doing pretty much fine. Like Seam says, while Lightners give you your purpose, you find ways to pass the time, or you go crazy. Ralsei has denied himself any method of passing the time, because he believes to be anything *but* a servant, a plaything, is to overstep his boundaries. "Selfish," even for wanting someone else to be happy, because objects don't have wants. It's not even like he thinks other Darkners are worthless fake people. He puts in a lot of effort to respect them and accommodate them. It's something he's internalized mostly about himself.
In the case of the Prophecy, as I'll get to in a moment, as much as he fears it, he can't bring himself to take drastic action, because of the potential for worse outcomes. As much as he doesn't want it to be true, and tries to defy it with platitudes, his hopes are weak, and he does not expect anything really to come from them. There's a lot of "we were supposed to do this" and a lot of "everything will happen exactly as the Prophecy has foretold." Essentially, it reads to me like he's trying to ease his own pain if nothing comes from it. He wishes he could just slide into a comfortable numbness, an acceptance that he did all he could and hope is lost. It's something I can also read into in his terrible pep talk to Tenna. This was coming no matter what. It's not your fault. Take pride in playing your part well and let the end wash over you. Because of this throughline, it's a prediction that I have, though not really backed up by any evidence, that both Ralsei's complete knowledge of the Prophecy, and worldview of Darkners (but himself in particular) not counting as people and deserving the right to want or need things come from the same source. It just seems to make sense thematically.
However, in both the case of his nature as a Darkner and the Prophecy, all this stuff about how there's nothing he can do is just a coping mechanism. Something he tells himself when he's hurting to deny his own feelings, bury his pain so it'll be easier to keep going forward, because he's scared, and sad, and tired, and if he can't keep going despite it all, if he breaks, then how can he protect the people he cares about?
It's something he consistently tries to advise others, because due to his total lack of life experience, he doesn't have any idea what else he can say to comfort them. He just suggests what he himself does. He tells Kris that Spamton was just a corrupted program, and that at least he's their ally now, so they should just accept it. He tells Susie that he shouldn't have feelings and isn't real, so she should just forget him and make some real friends. He tells Tenna that it's not his fault he's being thrown away and that it happens to everyone, so he should just be happy he got the chance to make people smile and accept his death, because trying to fight it will just make everyone sad.
None of this is actually what he believes in his heart. When push actually comes to shove, when there's something he wants, someone he cares about, something to fight for, he fights on anyway. Because that's just the kind of person he is. He's a hero, and for as much as it hurts, he'll never stop trying to help people, trying to save people, trying to make a better future for everyone.
2. As I mentioned briefly above, I believe is that Ralsei is hoping that he can defy the cruel ending of the Prophecy, without actually having to break from it. His acts of defiance are, for the most part, impotent. Nothing is meaningfully changed about the major beats of the story by being nice to people. Yes, it feels better, but either way, the enemies are out of the way and the heroes can proceed. There's no reason the Prophecy should care about the fine details as long as the stuff that matters is in place.
If Ralsei were willing, he could attempt to entirely derail the Prophecy. Go to Card Kingdom early and stage a revolution against Spades King. But even though that is not itself a violent or destructive act, it still means the Prophecy *cannot* simply keep going as intended. Which means that there's no promise something really bad won't happen. He does not want the Prophecy to happen, but he stays pretty neatly within the lines of what it says will happen, because not knowing what's going to happen is *terrifying,* especially when he's been told that there is no salvation for the world outside the Prophecy. So he hopes that if he just says something different, and acts as kind as he can to everyone all the time, things will just magically work out. It's naive, and sad, but it's all he's had to go on for so long. Susie was the first person he ever met who could see the Prophecy, know the horrible fates declared immovable, and simply say "no." Not to squirm and try and find some workaround, to just refuse. To laugh, and insist that they just wouldn't let it happen, even if only for his sake. It was thanks to her that they managed to overcome a Titan, something that should have been their demise.
Thusly, I predict that going forward, Ralsei will be a lot more brazen in his attempts to break the Prophecy. His hope is renewed, and for the first time, he's starting to think that maybe, just maybe, the Prophecy isn't a necessary evil, isn't something they have to go along with as much as possible, something they can only defy in small ways that don't ultimately change the big picture. For the first time he's starting to think that maybe, it can be completely subverted, and that even if something bad happens, they'll manage to survive.
3. This one is more of a minor point which I don't have all that much to say about, but I do think it's not impossible that Ralsei knows Kris is working with the Knight. It does seem to line up with how cloying he is toward them, and how much he emphasizes their choice and that "don't worry, we can do anything!" How much he tries to hype them up and insist that whatever they want to do is actually great. It could be he's hoping that if he can only show them they don't need to side with the Knight, that they have friends who care about them and will stick by them, and that maybe they can achieve their goals (likely to help Noelle and make her happy again after all her trauma) without ending the world, that they might just defect permanently to the good guys' side. Again, there's not much evidence to support this other than it seeming to make sense, so I don't have too much stock in it.
Please let me know if these points make sense and whether or not you agree! I've spent a long time working on my interpretation of Ralsei and ideas of what's next for him. Once again, very good job on this analysis!
I agree in some aspects but largely disagree in others. I'm glad you liked the analysis overall! However, I'm going to have to delve into the prophecy a bit here to talk about why I think Ralsei's method is actually working. Dealing with things like the prophecy is absolutely 100% speculation due to the fact that we only know what it can't be.
I have gone extensively on the main post into why I do not believe in point #1. While you can make a throughline, I believe it to be superficial. Him burying his pain is rooted in the fact that, of everyone, he is the disposable one.
"And if anyone's going to hurt..."
I simply do not see acceptance in anything that Ralsei is doing in regards to the prophecy, even though he accepts that he will be abandoned one day. He loves Kris and Susie. He is thinking about their future when he talks about being abandoned, because there will be nothing to abandon if either of them are hurt.
This is not something that he has decided "must happen".
I do believe that his hope massively falters in the Church, and I think that it's entirely reasonable for that to occur considering he's staring his own failure in the face.
"I... I want to... I want to believe again."
Again. He DID believe it could change. There was not acceptance, only fear when he's staring down the blue glass.
You have largely reiterated many examples of him downplaying Darkners in general. Spamton, in his pursuit of freedom, nearly killed the Fun Gang and went out of control in order to go beyond his purpose as a Darkner. For Ralsei, that's a terrifying prospect. Also, I think Spamton talking about needing the soul to reach HEAVEN is massive foreshadowing for Ralsei's character, but that's neither here nor there.
Everything you've said on the Darkner side of things, I agree with.
It's the prophecy part I don't.
Because, what most of this reads to me is, why isn't he doing enough?
Many examples of him "Not really actually trying to break the prophecy" seem like downplaying the fact that he DID try to be kind in order to stop it. In a prophecy which has an ending written in cruelty, that is the most radical thing you can try to do against it, especially because he likely doesn't know how each point in the prophecy would transpire.
You say that his actions against the prophecy mean very little, but I believe the exact opposite.
Everyone believes we are going for a clean breakage of the prophecy. We will defy that final panel with the resolve to change fate. However, I don't think people are really paying attention to the Old Man's dialogue.
"Though... I do like goin' the wrong way."
You get better ideas that way, do you? In fact, if you go the wrong way in game and start breaking Ralsei's mantra of kindness, things start changing. Darkners aren't recruited to Castle Town, making it just a little bit emptier. Berdly loses his arm in the Light World. Tenna dies. Jackenstein dies. Your point is that ultimately, these don't change ENOUGH.
I jus' think, those words shine a bit too bright."
You all are stuck on the path so blue, that it's all you can see.
However, with Ralsei's actions against the prophecy, we're working between the lines, with what the prophecy doesn't say. His actions do not seem like they're doing anything to him, because he cannot see the other routes like we can. And yet, he earnestly believed that being kind could make a difference.
And it does.
Berdly keeps his arm. Tenna lives and gets to be with a new Lightner instead of being thrown away. Jackenstein is saved and lifted up.
With Susie's reaction against the Final Prophecy and how Ralsei fights against it since the beginning, it's fairly safe to say that it leaves little room for interpretation. Susie is visibly broken when she sees it, after all. It would have to be something that she would see and INSTANTLY recognize as horrifying. However, the old man is suggesting that going between the lines is our greatest strength.
...or being there when ink washes over all the pages with the white pen of hope.
Regardless, I'm straying too far from Ralsei.
Your point #2 was also largely mentioned in the post. Ralsei wants an ending, but he doesn't want one that ends in further tragedy than the one that already exists. The worlds already WILL be saved in the prophecy as long as the tragedy occurs, but he wants to break the tragedy. Going stupid crazy is NOT GOING TO WORK.
Because, as we've seen, there's a really easy way of breaking the prophecy. Do you wanna know how the prophecy has broken ingame already, when something goes so terribly off course?
THEN THE WORLD WAS COVERED IN DARKNESS.
When you die, when you give up before the story has seen its fruition, that's it. The worlds are not saved should you choose to abandon them.
Sure, he could try to derail many things, but how does he know that his actions will not make things worse? It's the Weird Route line that I brought up.
But the fact of the matter is that despite all of these requirements, he is still trying. Sure, it might not seem like enough, but considering the thin line that he is treading here, I think he's doing a spectacular job.
I do not have anything to say about Point #3. I have already expressed my points against it, and believe the plot needs to do a lot of work to convince me that it would not just be a cheap plot twist.
I appreciate the counter-analysis, but I respectfully am unable to reconcile that Ralsei would accept the prophecy. Even when he is seeing it with his own eyes, he's in despair and begins to hope again. There is no part of him that's in acceptance.
"Pretending I'm not afraid... too"
He is afraid, and yet he is trying.
Y'know, I like you. This is exactly the kind of discussion I always hope to have when it comes to Deltarune Theorizing. Concise, well-considered arguments which properly cite their sources, delivered in a timely and civil manner. Although I do think you've misread what I meant a little bit. You seem to be lumping me in with the general consensus, which isn't quite the case.
I neither believe Ralsei has accepted the Prophecy, nor do I believe he's not doing enough.
What you conclude at the end is in fact exactly my stance. He cannot, will not accept the end. Scared as he is, he has to try. What I meant by the above is that he wishes he could accept it. He has not decided that these things must happen, but everything would be so much easier if he just accepted. Because fighting for a better end is bitter, thankless, tiring work, which is routinely met with indifference by the Prophecy, which does not change no matter how you turn your head. He's full of doubts. He's worried it might just make things worse. And as cruel as it is, at least the Prophecy promises things will be okay. It could have been so easy, so simply, if it weren't so cruel! Because as powerless as he feels, as much as he has it in his head that he isn't real, he is alive now. And as long as that's the case he just can't let those things happen.
The only thing I mean is that, when he's stuck in his own head, he's putting himself down for struggling. For being so afraid, so selfish that he's willing to jeopardize everything just in the hopes that he doesn't have to live knowing he let something bad happen. And when something does go wrong, he tries to tell himself that it's okay, that he did all he could but ultimately there was nothing he could do. Still though, his behavior and his actions tell the real truth. That he could never accept it.
You did change my mind somewhat on the bit about whether or not Ralsei is doing enough, though. I do still think that being kind alone won't be enough to make the Prophecy budge, since it doesn't seem to care what happens one way or the other as long as the major beats still get hit, but after thinking about it it does seem like kindness was a carefully considered decision on Ralsei's part. It's wishful thinking, perhaps, but it isn't a choice made out of fear, or simple optimism.
And, yeah, no pushback on the Kris point. It's leaning more into a headcanon on my behalf with the lack of evidence so I fully support just ignoring it.
I should also clarify I didn't mean this as a counteranalysis, because again, most of what you said in the original post are things I have believed wholeheartedly since Chapter 2. Just a few additional things that I saw differently.
I really must commend you for changing my mind on the point about Ralsei's choice to be kind, though! I put a lot of time and consideration into my theories and I argue them very strongly, so that I've had my mind changed is a welcome surprise! You have my utmost respect for that.
I'd love to hear more of your thoughts in the future, and hopefully have more discussions like this!
RALSEI ANALYSIS MASTERPOST
Since I see possibly some of the worst character assassinations on Ralsei within fandom spaces from multiple angles, I'm going to break down some of the most key aspects of his character and challenge assumptions that many of you have formed about this character in your head. This is mainly going to deal with key motives for Ralsei rather than general characterization.
There will be citations involved, because I'm that frustrated. I will be using the Deltarune text dump for citations, and will give a lead in line for each scene I am talking about. A link will be provided to the specific line.
Ready?
Surprisingly, that's a pretty good analysis! You've independently arrived at many of the same conclusions I've had since Chapter 2! Most people who try to analyze Ralsei suck dick at doing it, but you've painted a relatively accurate depiction of who he is. He's a a scared, lonely young man, tormented by forces beyond his comprehension and control, who believes himself fundamentally powerless, and yet he still *has* to try to stop the cruel fate he knows is coming. He can't just let it happen, no matter how hopeless it seems, no matter how much he wishes he could just accept that there was no hope, because in his heart, he's a hero.
There are only two, maybe three things I'll knock you for.
1. I do think that Ralsei's identity issues and the Torment of the Prophecy are interlinked. They are separate issues, but the throughline between them is the idea that there are some terrible things which will happen, and which simply can't be changed, so you should just accept them. In the case of his nature as a Darkner, no one else seems to be as overcome with grief at not being real, or as convinced that their lives have no value. Everyone else seems to be doing pretty much fine. Like Seam says, while Lightners give you your purpose, you find ways to pass the time, or you go crazy. Ralsei has denied himself any method of passing the time, because he believes to be anything *but* a servant, a plaything, is to overstep his boundaries. "Selfish," even for wanting someone else to be happy, because objects don't have wants. It's not even like he thinks other Darkners are worthless fake people. He puts in a lot of effort to respect them and accommodate them. It's something he's internalized mostly about himself.
In the case of the Prophecy, as I'll get to in a moment, as much as he fears it, he can't bring himself to take drastic action, because of the potential for worse outcomes. As much as he doesn't want it to be true, and tries to defy it with platitudes, his hopes are weak, and he does not expect anything really to come from them. There's a lot of "we were supposed to do this" and a lot of "everything will happen exactly as the Prophecy has foretold." Essentially, it reads to me like he's trying to ease his own pain if nothing comes from it. He wishes he could just slide into a comfortable numbness, an acceptance that he did all he could and hope is lost. It's something I can also read into in his terrible pep talk to Tenna. This was coming no matter what. It's not your fault. Take pride in playing your part well and let the end wash over you. Because of this throughline, it's a prediction that I have, though not really backed up by any evidence, that both Ralsei's complete knowledge of the Prophecy, and worldview of Darkners (but himself in particular) not counting as people and deserving the right to want or need things come from the same source. It just seems to make sense thematically.
However, in both the case of his nature as a Darkner and the Prophecy, all this stuff about how there's nothing he can do is just a coping mechanism. Something he tells himself when he's hurting to deny his own feelings, bury his pain so it'll be easier to keep going forward, because he's scared, and sad, and tired, and if he can't keep going despite it all, if he breaks, then how can he protect the people he cares about?
It's something he consistently tries to advise others, because due to his total lack of life experience, he doesn't have any idea what else he can say to comfort them. He just suggests what he himself does. He tells Kris that Spamton was just a corrupted program, and that at least he's their ally now, so they should just accept it. He tells Susie that he shouldn't have feelings and isn't real, so she should just forget him and make some real friends. He tells Tenna that it's not his fault he's being thrown away and that it happens to everyone, so he should just be happy he got the chance to make people smile and accept his death, because trying to fight it will just make everyone sad.
None of this is actually what he believes in his heart. When push actually comes to shove, when there's something he wants, someone he cares about, something to fight for, he fights on anyway. Because that's just the kind of person he is. He's a hero, and for as much as it hurts, he'll never stop trying to help people, trying to save people, trying to make a better future for everyone.
2. As I mentioned briefly above, I believe is that Ralsei is hoping that he can defy the cruel ending of the Prophecy, without actually having to break from it. His acts of defiance are, for the most part, impotent. Nothing is meaningfully changed about the major beats of the story by being nice to people. Yes, it feels better, but either way, the enemies are out of the way and the heroes can proceed. There's no reason the Prophecy should care about the fine details as long as the stuff that matters is in place.
If Ralsei were willing, he could attempt to entirely derail the Prophecy. Go to Card Kingdom early and stage a revolution against Spades King. But even though that is not itself a violent or destructive act, it still means the Prophecy *cannot* simply keep going as intended. Which means that there's no promise something really bad won't happen. He does not want the Prophecy to happen, but he stays pretty neatly within the lines of what it says will happen, because not knowing what's going to happen is *terrifying,* especially when he's been told that there is no salvation for the world outside the Prophecy. So he hopes that if he just says something different, and acts as kind as he can to everyone all the time, things will just magically work out. It's naive, and sad, but it's all he's had to go on for so long. Susie was the first person he ever met who could see the Prophecy, know the horrible fates declared immovable, and simply say "no." Not to squirm and try and find some workaround, to just refuse. To laugh, and insist that they just wouldn't let it happen, even if only for his sake. It was thanks to her that they managed to overcome a Titan, something that should have been their demise.
Thusly, I predict that going forward, Ralsei will be a lot more brazen in his attempts to break the Prophecy. His hope is renewed, and for the first time, he's starting to think that maybe, just maybe, the Prophecy isn't a necessary evil, isn't something they have to go along with as much as possible, something they can only defy in small ways that don't ultimately change the big picture. For the first time he's starting to think that maybe, it can be completely subverted, and that even if something bad happens, they'll manage to survive.
3. This one is more of a minor point which I don't have all that much to say about, but I do think it's not impossible that Ralsei knows Kris is working with the Knight. It does seem to line up with how cloying he is toward them, and how much he emphasizes their choice and that "don't worry, we can do anything!" How much he tries to hype them up and insist that whatever they want to do is actually great. It could be he's hoping that if he can only show them they don't need to side with the Knight, that they have friends who care about them and will stick by them, and that maybe they can achieve their goals (likely to help Noelle and make her happy again after all her trauma) without ending the world, that they might just defect permanently to the good guys' side. Again, there's not much evidence to support this other than it seeming to make sense, so I don't have too much stock in it.
Please let me know if these points make sense and whether or not you agree! I've spent a long time working on my interpretation of Ralsei and ideas of what's next for him. Once again, very good job on this analysis!
Prev anon again, to elaborate on what I mean by my theory so I look (slightly less?) insane re: asriel is what causes ralsei's outburst. (Will be long, feel free not to answer if you don't want lol)
Firstly, I don't think azzy replaces ralsei, that'd be ridiculous and invalidate all the character development up til now and place too much importance on a character who's already had plenty of elaboration. I just think that the mere existence of another person who CAN fit the same role as ralsei would be a huge blow to his ego. I don't think asriel will actually do much in this story outside of elaborating on other characters' themes in chapter 5.
And to talk about why I think the heroes aren't set in stone, catty's sermon you can read in the top right during the church scene of chapter 4 mentions one of the heroes who is a man with horns she imagines as cute because the prophecy has no images. I think it'd be a reach to say she's seen ralsei, and even more of one to say she synthesized an image similar to him from first principles alone, so I'm inclined to believe she means asriel (whom ralsei is noted multiple times to look like, has an established connection to catty via the chapter 1 prom story, and wrote a letter with similar wording to her tangent in places that you can read in the very same scene). Given she says specifically that there're no images of the prophecy, I also think that the pane pictures in the dark sanctuaries depict not The Truth as the words do, but somewhere between the knight's personal interpretation and the interpretation they're trying to push. (Though it's reasonable to say the pictures are simply Truth hidden from lightner eyes since the reality of the claim that there're no pictures from catty isn't examined so we really don't know either way)
In terms of the wording, "alone in deepest dark" both reflects an interesting series of discrepancies between ralsei's interpretation of the prophecy and the actual words, and has a second reasonable conclusion you could come to from hearing the phrase. Ralsei's words about the prophecy, while not incorrect, are more specific than the original. Ralsei smoothes out the possibility of a cage with human parts not being a human (precludes the vessel), the girl not being a monster (precludes not much but still shows the relative stiffness of this interpretation), and the prince not being from the dark. The prophecy says the prince is alone IN the dark, which I could take as the prince being a dweller of literal darkness, but I could also just as easily take as he's lonely and in a figurative dark place mentally. Which doesn't seem like a stretch to apply to asriel given his personality in the last game. Given how much weight gerson lends to interpretation, and the fact that you can rules lawyer out of tenna's death because the lord of screens being killed wasn't specified (only being cleaved), I don't think it's unreasonable to think the prophecy has wiggle room for things to go at least slightly differently.
Also notable is the fact that toriel's dark world outfit incorporates a crown and has her sitting on a throne while asgore is depicted in the prophecy wearing a crown, with next chapter's dark world seemingly shaping up to take place inside flower king. And also remember what azzy was in undertale, he has a pre-established association with princeliness. As well, we have seen from the design of asriel's final god of hyperdeath form in undertale that the triangles of the delta rune have been depicted as representations of souls before, so those triangles in DR could possibly either mean two lightners and a darkner or two monsters and a human.
I don't expect to be changing your mind on anything, but I hope I at least look less insane after elaborating on my thoughts. Even if this's super scattershot. Though, my highly specific and weird prediction aside, I really like your idea of how it might shake out. That's an interpretation of noelle you don't see so often. Keep on theorizin'
Elaborations noted. However, problems.
First, on Asriel being damaging to Ralsei's ego. What ego? We're talking about a guy who puts himself down to the extent he doesn't even think he deserves to suffer, because to say that he suffers is to acknowledge he feels anything at all, thinks anything at all, is in some sense a person. If it were up to him he would be an obedient construct incapable of self-awareness, desire, fear, pain, any kind of "I am." It literally cannot get worse for him. The most Asriel could do is push him back to square one, but Ralsei isn't so desperate to feel important that someone else existing who can fill his role is enough to cause him to spiral. He's fully aware of it, constantly, and actively encourages letting someone else take the role.
Next, on the Prophecy roles not being set in stone, when Catty is talking about how no one knows who they are, it's because most of the Prophecy is lost in the Light World. Enough that the Angel has been misconstrued as a benevolent figure, a saviour. The Dark Sanctuaries already depict true information unavailable to the Church of the Angel, so it's not a stretch to assume that the prophecy panels we see also depict true information, such as Susie being The Girl, Ralsei being The Prince, the true form of the Angel, etc.
Next, on your wording kerfuffle, you're right that Ralsei's version smooths over any ambiguity or uncertainty while also keeping the details vague. However, in conjunction with the last point, I must reiterate that the Prophecy panel depicts Ralsei as he first appeared, in a cloak. And I find your "what if the Prince is Asriel because he's kind of like a prince since Asgore and Toriel are kind of a king and queen in the dark worlds, and alone in deepest dark just means he's in a bad place emotionally" idea unconvincing. While I can't argue that Asriel couldn't technically fill that role if you spin it, it sort of ignores the. Everything. Worse still, you don't even think Asriel will take the role of Prince, or that Ralsei took it by accident and it was *supposed* to be Asriel. Just that Ralsei will have a meltdown that someone else *could* be the Prince. Ralsei doesn't even want to be the Prince, it's a role he takes on because he believes he has no choice, and he hopes that if he plays his part to the best of his ability, and tries to nudge things in a more positive direction without actively defying what the Prophecy says, he'll be able to save more people, and make lives better. He's doing it because he's a hero at heart. And from a broader storytelling perspective, what purpose would it serve to have Asriel also count as the Prince?
First of all, while true that emphasis is placed on reinterpreting the story, and rules lawyering and what not, the way the Prophecy has been set up is as being impossible to change outright. What is *said* is something that can't be *changed.* No matter what, The Lord of Screens is cleaved red by blade. The way to get around the Prophecy is by lurking in the places it hasn't already locked down. The Prophecy never says "Tenna Dies LOL." What happens after the cleaving is never specified, leaving it open that he can be saved. You have to read between the lines to escape its influence, and with enough of that, it *may* be possible to bring about meaningful change without having to destroy important parts of the Prophecy to render it impossible, potentially causing worse things to happen. If the words in the Prophecy can easily be reinterpreted to mean something basically harmless, that makes the Prophecy impotent as an actual threat to the things our heroes value, and it makes overcoming the Prophecy anti-climatic. "THE KNIGHT WHICH MAKES WITH BLACKENED KNIFE SHALL DUEL WITH HEROES STRIFE BY STRIFE"? Susie challenges the Knight to Yu-Gi-Oh or something, Prophecy technically fulfilled. It's dumb.
Second, it's integral to Ralsei's character that he Be the Prince. Maybe it's not something that he clings to because he needs to feel important, but his entire character conflict is built on the fact that he was seemingly *born* for this. He's had the entire Prophecy crammed into his brain against his will, any identity or desires he might have had being overwritten and erased. He's been shaped into a tool, an object, to be used and discarded. Told that Darkners' lives don't matter, but that his *extra* doesn't matter. It's hard to think from everything he knows is going to happen. He sleeps so little he'll pass out standing up if left without stimuli for only a few minutes. A poor soul mangled into a pawn in fate's grand scheme. If the role of "The Prince, alone in deepest dark" is meaningless enough that it can just go to pretty much anyone who tangentially fits the bill, like a moody young adult with influential parents, then what the hell? From a storytelling perspective that idea cheapens the stakes of Ralsei's circumstance. A sheltered young man isolated from everyone and everything at the bottom of the world saddled with immense responsibility, a sacrificial lamb to the cosmic slaughter, expected to wear a smile the whole time while visions of death and destruction repeat in his head. If Asriel could easily fill the role, it'd be as if our investment in Ralsei being saddled with it unfairly and trying to break from it was for nothing.
I really don't know what it is with these "Susie isn't the Girl/Ralsei isn't the Prince" theories. I don't understand the motivation behind creating them. Even if you can structure the evidence in such a way as to make them difficult to disprove, they just aren't in line with what the story seems to be. If the heroes have already gone against the Prophecy in being here, or there's no rule saying it's them specifically who has to be the heroes, then the Prophecy wouldn't be a big deal at all, and there wouldn't be so much emphasis in the story on breaking away from roles forced upon you. For the story to make sense, the Prophecy can't be something you can just *change.* Something that can be easily reinterpreted, or something you can just shift onto someone else who can make it all technically happen while saving yourself from the hardship. The Prophecy *wants* Kris, Susie, and Ralsei. It wants them to follow its path, it wants to break them, squash their hope. The Final Prophecy is actively *trying* to be seen, and it glows an ominous red as if to say "There is nothing you can do. Submit, or die." Is it just that people are trying to catch out a twist anywhere there could potentially be one to deprive Toby of the satisfaction of surprising them?
Forgive me if I'm being unclear or seem irritated. It's 1 am and I haven't been feeling well recently.
I see you're very interested in ralsei and have some theories that aren't reflected often in the fanbase, so I wanted to hear your thoughts on my theory that, in chapter 5:
A, the oft-speculated major ralsei character arc does happen,
B, whatever gerson's "inferno of jealousy" is happens because of ralsei rather than the obvious answer of asgore doing it,
And C, the cause of ralsei's major jealousy is that asriel appears and (the way he sees it) takes away the only thing in life he's secure in, his usefulness as Third Hero of the Prophecy, by also fitting all the descriptions and being far more conventionally desirable as a hero + "real"
(Also probably important to note is that I think there is no singular True Candidate for any of the prophecy roles, so you could have a party of, say, kris, noelle, and azzy and it'd be perfectly prophecy-compliant)
I'm afraid not.
The Prophecy does in no uncertain terms depict Susie as The Girl and Ralsei as The Prince. And even if Asriel suddenly appears, it's not as if Susie and Kris are suddenly going to stop valuing him just because he's there, especially since Susie doesn't know Asriel, and Ralsei is his own person.
I have no clue what you mean by "Asriel fits all the descriptions." We have *one* description of The Prince, and one depiction. "THE PRINCE, ALONE IN DEEPEST DARK" with a depiction of a hooded figure surrounded by magical flame. In what way is Asriel "alone in deepest dark"?
Plus Ralsei has already had his attempt at pushing Susie away by telling her she isn't real and not to get attached to him, and she's already a dozen times over, *emphatically* stated he's real to her, and she'll never abandon him. Making that the big emotional blowout of Chapter 5 is treading old ground, which is a common theme in Deltarune theories. What if thing that already happened, but more
My personal theory is that the Inferno is indeed caused by Ralsei. However, under different circumstances.
I stated in the previous ask I believe that Ralsei has been trying to set up Suselle in the hopes that if they end up happily together, it will placate Noelle, giving her no reason to pursue the power to become the Angel and destroy the world to make way for her own personal paradise. However, Susie's interest in Noelle is undeveloped at best. It takes pushing from Noelle, Kris playing matchmaker, wink wink nudge nudge from Rudy, and Reverse Psychology from Carol to get Susie to agree to go to the festival with Noelle. On the flipside, since becoming his friend Susie has only gone out of her way to spend more and more time with Ralsei, inviting him to the festival the first chance she gets, and being willing to not play games if he doesn't want to, just as long as he'll be there, and trying to support him as much as she can the more she sees how broken he is. They have a very special bond.
So my theory is that in Chapter 5, Noelle and Susie's "date" is interrupted by World Saving Time, which Noelle invites herself to and finds out that Susie was keeping it a secret from her. She immediately dislikes Ralsei. I'm under the impression that she was deflecting when she said "he looked like Asriel" because Kris thinks its ridiculous and Susie stops being confused about it after looking more closely. Rather she dislikes him because Susie gives him attention, and because he is the person she imagines herself as. A kind, timid, selfless person, who needs someone to show them that they're stronger than they think and such. Noelle isn't entirely not that person, but she's a lot more selfish, rude, and willfully helpless than she'd like to admit. Ralsei is someone she's primed to hate. So over the course of the chapter, Noelle is trying to get Susie to pay attention to her. But Susie keeps trying to make sure Ralsei feels included and is doing okay after Chapter 4. Meanwhile Ralsei is trying to get Susie to pay attention to Noelle, and trying to relate to Noelle and befriend her. All of which only makes her hate him more. Not only is he ruining what was supposed to be her special day, taking Susie from her, but he has the *nerve* to act like he *gets* her, understands what she's been through. To act all friendly and accomodating. She'd start excluding him on purpose, being rude to him, telling him to stay away from Susie, guilt tripping him over it saying how hard things are for her and can't he please just let her have Susie all to herself. When things come to a head, she goads him into having an outburst by defaming his character, saying he's not even a real person, insulting him, etc. Essentially parroting all his insecurities back to him out of spite for what she sees as his stuck-up goody-two-shoes behavior, wanting to make him snap at her and prove that he isn't any better than her, because of course he makes her feel insecure, and like she's losing what she's owed. When Ralsei snaps it lets out a burst of fire magic which sets the area on fire. This incident being ehat causes Susie to ultimately reject Noelle, that she acted so possessive, acted cruel to someone she cared about, and then tried to act like nothing happened and go in for a kiss. That she could pretend she didn't understand how shitty she acted because she was desperate for her fantasy of being with Susie to go off like planned.
Once again, follow up questions are encouraged!
Hi! I saw you were taking asks about Ralsei and I wanted to send something that's been on my mind. Ralsei seems to suggest in Chapter 2 that the ferris wheel ride was supposed to happen. Does that mean Ralsei thinks that Susie and Noelle getting closer is part of the prophecy? He has more knowledge than he lets on, but that could also lend itself to Ralsei knowing how unhealthy Noelle's obsession is. What say you, o man of the sweaters?
Oh boy
See, as already know, I'm a "Suselle is Doomed" truther. What I think is that the Prophecy says that Susie will ultimately reject Noelle, which will be part of what causes Noelle to snap, and choose to become the Angel. What I believe Ralsei intends to do is to try to play matchmaker, keep an eye on them so he can ensure that they end up together happily, subverting the Prophecy without actually having to defy it in any meaningful way, something he fears could have disastrous consequences.
The interesting part is that Kris is also playing matchmaker, but on behalf of the Knight, trying to make sure that Noelle does get her heart broken and become the Angel, as the Knight has duped Kris into believing that it will ultimately be good for her to become God. They're the only one who knows how much she's hurting, and they want to help her be happy again. Only now they've realized how horrible the Prophecy really is, and are beginning to have doubts. But of course the Knight is lording their promise over them, assumedly with the implication that if they go back on their word, it will kill Susie and Ralsei.
Another thing about Ralsei is that I believe he knows the literal factual details of Noelle's history and fate, however he has no insight into who she is as a person. He assumes the best in her like he does everyone. He uses his own experience as a timid prince with too much on his plate, boxed in by what's expected of him and the isolation he's suffered, and sees her, a timid "princess" in a superficially similar position, and assumes that she'll only lash out how she will because she's hurting. That, like Susie, she doesn't actually want to hurt anyone. And believing that, he thinks if he can just reason with her, and ensure that Susie is there to love her and make her feel free, she won't need to hurt anyone.
What he doesn't understand is that, while Noelle is hurting, she does actually enjoy hurting others. Not for its own sake, but for the excersize of Power. She resents being powerless, having to play the performance of the perfect girl next door. She wants to be able to do whatever she wants, all by herself, all for herself, without anyone to tell her no. She doesn't care who gets hurt, because her trauma has caused her development to freeze at the age where she suffered it, leaving her a self-centered, emotionally volatile child, lacking the capacity empathy, and finding excuses for her own bad behavior until someone with authority tells her to stop. That, and due to the lack of support in her life, she never learned how to cope with her grief except by distracting herself. Even all these years later she's still haunted by the loss of Dess. This all may sound unlike the Noelle we see, as she does definitely show remorse for what she does on a Snowgrave route, where she's pushed to indulge in those desires. However, the thing about Noelle is that often her desires are counter to her own better judgement and sense of morality. Once she finds herself acting on a stupid or morally wrong desire, she cannot bring herself to side with what she knows is right, because it would mean giving up the thing she feels like she *needs,* and at worst, admitting to herself that she has done monstrous things. She'll pursue unhealthy and destructive ends because she doesn't, or doesn't want to, believe that her actions will have consequences. But once the consequences come about, to admit that she was wrong would hurt her too much to ever admit it, so she'll only double down. She *cannot* be reasoned with. Thus, Ralsei's attempts to placate her by matchmaking Suselle and trying to relate to her will only make things worse.
The only person who actually has a shot at bringing her down is Kris, being that they're the only one close enough to her to understand what's going on in her head, and the last remnant of the childhood she's so desperate to return to. Dess might have a shot, but she's probably the Knight, meaning she *wants* Noelle to be the Angel and destrot the world, and even assuming she isn't the Knight, she'll be so radically changed by whatever she's been through that Noelle will still try to burn down the world and make her own personal paradise where everyone she loves is with her and never leaves and they spend all day going on adventures and playing games.
Follow-up questions are encouraged!
send me ralsei asks, people
i want to talk about my goat boy. everyone is wrong about him except me
oh man. i feel so stupid for not realizing until now. but ralsei directly addresses the soul in his thoughts doesnt he. he says 'kris' but its in brackets meaning he's aware the soul can read minds. i didnt even think this was that weird until weird route ch4
This is incorrect. Not all bracketed lines are thoughts. Some are whispered. We can confirm this by looking at Susie, who does not know about the Player, but who does sometimes refer to Kris in bracketed text. Thus, it can be assumed that if Ralsei is addressing Kris in bracketed text, it means he's simply whispering to them.
My take on human Berdly design!
WHAT HAVE YOU DONE?!
art's good it berdly
The dark prince muhahahaha
Not sure if you were already asked this, but how do you see Ralsei and Noelle interacting in the later chapters (if at all)?
Apologies this took me so long to get to
But I wanted a good answer that was concise but could still convey what I mean
Firstly you're aware of the tenets I believe in regarding Deltarune's Endgame, to recap for others though:
1. I fully Believe in Angel Noelle
2. I Believe in December Knight, and
3. I don't believe in Sus/elle working out in canon
All of these factors and theories then temper how I think Ralsei feels about Noelle, and how they would interact going into ch 5, where I find it almost impossible to believe that they won't interact at least some
Now to start, on the face of it you would think the two would get along, I mean, they're both soft-spoken, meek, outwardly kind and selfless, and feminine
Two peas in a pod that can do nails and makeup and talk about boys (as a joke, both Noelle and Ralsei have only shown interest in women/Kris as of writing)
However, Ralsei is very aware of Noelle, while Noelle has no knowledge of him, as the Tea Dialogue in ch 2 proves and the later "Thinking about Noelle" scenes prove
On the whole, Noelle is in the Prophecy by name somewhere
NOW
Before this gets out of hand
I AM NOT CLAIMING NOELLE IS "THE GIRL"
Ahem
"The Girl" as we see in ch 4, the Hero currently most associated with Susie, is represented almost exclusively with symbols that Belong to Susie, including and most obviously the "Rude Buster" symbol
Unless you want to argue Noelle is going to cast Rude Buster in ch 7 or something, in which case I would like some of the Crack you're smoking please
Furthermore in both The Lord of the Hammer and DragonBlazers there exists a, well, Dragon character
One that has stayed important enough to remain through both pieces of derivative media, and one that The Old Man, Gerson Boom in the Dark Flesh, associates with Susie directly
We are explicitly told that Susie is the Dragon, and I hold to it then that makes Susie The Girl as well
With that in mind we see that the Girl is presented with Love, a Love will find the Girl then [REDACTED]
We don't know what happens there
We know that the object of the Love exists
But who it is, that's left ambiguous
In my opinion then, the Love is most obviously Noelle
"But Pap03!" You incessantly cry, "I thought you said you don't believe in Sus/elle!"
Well, why would I?
This isn't evidence for Sus/elle, per say, but rather that there's to be an action that happens between the Girl and the Love that, when it occurs, will lead into the Final Prophecy, which at this time reads like a Sacrifice of either the Dark Worlds as a whole, or Ralsei in specific
Note: Susie's reaction after punching the glass isn't conducive to either the death of herself (she's suicidal she'd gladly sacrifice herself) or Kris (she would be blunt with them and less focused on Ralsei specifically)
Whatever this action is between the Girl and the Love is, imo, it's directly tied to the Angel's Apotheosis, and therefore the prerequisite for the Final Prophecy
In different words; Susie and Noelle are due to have a falling out that will be capitalized upon by the members of the Conspiracy (Kris, Carol, and the Knight) to cause the Roaring, leading to Ralsei/the Dark as a Whole needing to sacrifice himself/themselves in the Act of stopping the Roaring/Noelle
So how does this all relate to your question, Im sure you're chopping at the bits
In effect Ralsei is aware that Noelle is going to be the direct cause of, well, everything that's about to go wrong, and she's the most obvious lynchpin to save everything too
Something that has actually bothered me for a while that this reality explains to me is why both Ralsei and Kris are encouraging Noelle and Susie to get closer together, despite Kris being a betrayer, and working with/for the Knight
And it's that both of them need them together, if for different reasons
Kris needs it because it's the prerequisite for Noelle’s Godhood
And Ralsei needs it because Sus/elle working out is his best chance, without drastically changing Prophecized events of circumventing the worst of it
Making sure that the worst weight he's had to bear, the Final Prophecy, doesn't fall to anyone but him, and can become a memory
So when they finally get to talk and interact in ch 5, beyond him attempting to scare her straight in ch 2, there's going to be a lot of pretext of "I need Susie and Noelle to Kiss to Save The World" going on, but also some need for him to show her that plunging the world into fantasy, no matter how nice the fantasy is a BAD thing
Then there's Noelle herself, she is, as of yet, has been and will continue to ignore Ralsei
Of course he looks like Asriel, but once it's confirmed that he isn't Asriel, her focus will return to Susie
And it'll return to how Susie gives him equal time, or come out/clear that Ralsei was the "Boy" that Susie wanted to bring to the Festival first and so on and so on
Noelle isn't outwardly Envious, at least towards Kris
But the thing is, Kris has never shown any romantic/romantic-adjacent interest for Susie in front of Noelle, despite the Krusie evidence Noelle wasn't in attendance
Berdly is the only example of someone being romantic for Susie, and Noelle wanted to wring out his neck, and admits to it being the neck in ch 4
In effect, I dont think Noelle would take to Ralsei very kindly
Even if he's dedicating his time to setting up her and Susie, Susie, herself, is doing everything possible to make Ralsei feel included, and Real, and part of the Team, and something that cant be Sacrificed
All this on Noelle’s special Day, the day when Noelle was supposed to get Susie Alone for the Festival and she's spending so much of this time focusing on Ralsei, the Boy, her direct competition, even if Ralsei doesn't see himself that way
And another thing is that Ralsei and Noelle are completely opposed
Ralsei is all about Reality, focusing on Fantasy as brief escapes, but that you should always do your Homework and the like
And Noelle is all about Fantasy, breaking from Reality to do everything you can to try and make it to tomorrow with your sanity all in check, even if it isn't necessarily true. You can chase after Dragon Tail even if she's uncomfortable with you looking there, or imagine Kris isn't worrying about you constantly, or what have you just to get through the Day
So the way I see them interacting in the coming chapters is to make it clear that they do not get along at all in their current states
Animosity will build as Ralsei tries to play World-saving matchmaker and will still watch as everything falls apart and whatever pain that has to come to pass, will come to pass, by Noelle’s hands
Thanks for the Ask, sorry this took so long again
I do not suppose you get to call yourself a crude and cruel child without being told just that.
who in the world is gaster???? 😭 i know he's that mystery man from undertale but hearing people talk about him is like hearing people have wildly different takes on the bible (iykyk)
-👻 (that fairly new deltarune fan)
Oh dear poor sweet anon
Okay!
Well let's start with what we know of in-canon, this primarily comes from Undertale
Gaster Made the Core
Gaster was the Previous Royal Scientist before Alphys
And he was shattered across Time and Space
Literally everything else about him you see, anywhere, is conjecture
Nothing is confirmed when it comes to the WD
Mystery Man could be Gaster, could also not be
Redacted could be Gaster, but could also not be
The Man, in Deltarune, could be be Gaster, but could also not be
And so on
But let's lean a little bit into the Conjecture and the Meta
Firstly is Entry Seventeen, in the True Lab in UT we find Lab Entries from 1 through 25 with the 17th mysteriously missing
But it isn't truly gone, instead there's a file buried in the code titled Entry Number Seventeen, written in Wingdings, a font not really intended for reading but still
We attribute this to the former Royal Scientist, aka DR WD Gaster
The entry reads as such:
DARK DARKER YET DARKER
THE DARKNESS KEEPS GROWING
THE SHADOWS CUTTING DEEPER
PHOTON READINGS NEGATIVE
THIS NEXT EXPERIMENT
SEEMS
VERY
VERY
INTERESTING
...
WHAT DO YOU TWO THINK?
At this point we still don't know what this is referring to specifically, but my personal best guess is the creation of a Dark Fountain
Now, of course, what does this weirdo have to do with Deltarune? Well now we have to get Meta
See the Deltarune.com web domain is far older than Deltarune itself, like 2013 old
If you had opened up the page around this time you'd be greeted with a black screen, with very faint text
This text was in Wingdings as well, and read:
THREE HEROES STAND AT WORLD'S EDGE
Aka, a part of the Deltarune Prophecy
This is what tells us that Gaster plays a role in Deltarune
What comes next is further conjecture but it's the Twitter Takeovers that happened to the Undertale Twitter account shortly before Deltarune dropped
A black pfp and an all caps-speaking style reminiscent of the above basically certified Gaster posts unveiling "MY DELTA RUNE" claiming ownership over what was revealed to us as a Survey.
This was Deltarune, the game, which opens with a mysterious individual playing a track called "ANOTHER HIM"
This individual, one with knowledge of Us, the Player, and the ability to manage our saved is who we assume is Gaster
Everything else beyond this we really cannot confirm, when I tag this with Gaster tags Im sure some know-it-all will pretend like they've figured out the Man That Speaks In Hands, but Ill promise you now that nothing is solid yet, again including his appearance
Not even the Secret Bosses are tied to Gaster anymore, with the Knight being the mysterious figure there
Instead what we have is an invisible hand, an Outside Observer
One that awaits the completion of "MY DELTA RUNE"
My current Theory is that Gaster is a true scientist to his Core, and Deltarune is his experiment, he doesn't want to interfere, except only to satisfy his curiosity, such as if you try to fight the Knight multiple times
Otherwise feel free to ask again, hopefully we can get you all caught up
I'm pretty sure the Non-Gaster Entry 17 isn't missing?
Also you forgot to mention why ANOTHER HIM is a noteworthy name. That's because Gaster's Theme from the hidden Sound Test Fun Event in Undertale is titled "mus_st_him" in the files. So ANOTHER HIM means "another Gaster theme." Which is also a similar naming format to Another Medium, referencing his previous work in my arch nemesis. ANOTHER HIM also contains the leitmotif of Gaster's theme. Gaster's theme leitmotif finding though is a fool's errand 90% of the time because it's so simple people often mistake normal arpeggios for it.
Other than that, nothing really to add. Good synopsis, dude.