"Never forget, Liam, Michael. God is cruel. False hope is something he loves. It offers a great story, and the fallout is nothing but rife with entertainment."
A man with a muted palette and messy, yet organized, brown hair. He wears what seems to be dress shoes, and possesses a somber aura. His face is beginning to show the signs of aging, with lines around his cheeks. Despite this, he is well built.
"Danny, quit it for goodness sake. if you want to blame something blame the voices, Ted, and Francis. They're on the same team as far as I'm concerned."
Isn't it interesting? How he acts now is a far cry from who we saw him as when we all first woke up. Layers and layers of behavior... the question then becomes: which part of him is the genuine part?
Yeah. You're right, I shouldn't be blaming anyone. Especially since I think the AB game doesn't even matter in the long run, I think there's an alternative. That doesn't involve death.
Amazing what being here does to people, doesn't it? Look at you, a simple stage actor, now trying to brain my friends with axes and rigging gas stations to blow up.
I'm not exactly sure. But it has to do with what we were discussing earlier. By the way, you know there's no puzzle at all in the basement right? Just a septic tank with a cool design. Gives a pointed glance at Teddy n Franz
PolyesterHomes wrote:"Danny, quit it for goodness sake. if you want to blame something blame the voices, Ted, and Francis. They're on the same team as far as I'm concerned."
"Did I make them betray, Jack? No, it was a choice."
Oh, a magician ought to never reveal his secrets, Rin.
Yes, it's transformative to go through this. I'm not the only one who's changed, though. We all have. Isn't that the fun part? Adds an element of unpredictability to it all.
"I ain't saying what happened was entirely your fault either, Ted. You just have an agenda for helping run this game. That ain't a moral judgement. I ain't in a position to make one of those."