Entry tags:
New Chapter of Resurrection III
(Crossposted on
aulu)
New chapter up! This one plays with all the characters a bit.
Title: Resurrection III: Stolen Fayth
Chapter 16: Sacred Stone
Word Count: 2338
Rating for this chapter: G
Summary: Yuna and her Guardians reach the Ronso village and a much-needed haven before the last leg of their journey. Lulu makes a poignant discovery.
New chapter up! This one plays with all the characters a bit.
Title: Resurrection III: Stolen Fayth
Chapter 16: Sacred Stone
Word Count: 2338
Rating for this chapter: G
Summary: Yuna and her Guardians reach the Ronso village and a much-needed haven before the last leg of their journey. Lulu makes a poignant discovery.
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If you're on at the moment, can you post it here also?
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It's back. Off to read now. :)
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I think that Square meant for Anima to be Seymour's final Aeon, but I'm not 100% sure. Yuna was stunned by how powerful it was in Luca stadium.
*digs out game script (file:///Users/ellen/Desktop/January%20desktop/Final%20Fantasy%20X%20Game%20Script.webarchive) for evidence*
Young Seymour: No! Mother, no! I don't want you to become a fayth!
Seymour's Mother: There is no other way. Use me and defeat Sin. Only then will the people accept you.
Young Seymour: I don't care about them! I need you, mother! No one else!
Seymour's Mother: I don't have much time left.
In another flashback, Jecht says about the same thing to Auron when exiting -- EXITING -- Yunalesca's chambers -- that he doesn't have much time left. From that I conclude that somehow, whoever's being turned into Final Aeon gets a countdown stuck on their heads by Yunalesca, and they rapidly become a Fayth.
If you use a Walkthrough or you're brilliant, you'll eventually talk to the Fayth of Seymour's mom in Baaj temple, to acquire Anima.
So, putting all the puzzle pieces together, it looks like Seymour's Mom died, became Anima, but then he didn't use her in the Final Summoning, because otherwise he would be dead, and she would be Sin.
Anima is a psychological term meaning the feminine aspect in a man's psyche, by the way.
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I suppose that's why I didn't consider it, but it is a very interesting and tangible possibility.
It's probably due to the fact that I hadn't considered Seymour carefully until writing my recent fiction...he always seemed so secondary to "real plot" to me. Initially, Seymour's character seemed to be a manifestation of Square's/"our" need to anthropomorphize evil. I've changed my ideas since then, and I think he's at least a complex character that brings out tantalizing story elements.