» Fri Nov 16, 2012 10:06 am
Yeah, you're kind of right. Somehow I had forgotten about the "lovely time" line!
Although, yeah... I still got it as, he was expecting the high chaos / good ending, and he was pleasantly surprised to be proven wrong. Just as you said, he is somehow right in believing it's best for the empire to be wiped out. heavily corrupted, rotten by plague and by scheming nobles all the same... Common folks like Samuel, Callista, Cecelia, and good people like Captain Curnow won't deserve such a fate, but the rest does.
I perfectly agree that he uses people for his own entertainment. I think he is bored, maybe he seeks to send the world into the Void quicker ( as the heart says when you acquire it, in the Void, everything will eventually went there ). But... I dunno. I can't blame him. Bored super-beings are a common theme in most stories, and they never really do things that would improve the human's way of life. Think back to the old cults, Greek gods, etc. They rarely do good deeds for humanity. In a way, I feel the Outsider is a lesser evil : at the very least, he doesn't smite!
Oh, and your sig reminds me : the Daedras from Skyrim are a good example too. Some are utterly evil, some are ... Less evil. Saying good seems farstretched, even for Azura. Let's say the Outsider is kind of a Daedra in the Dishonored universe. Yes, he got fun watching mortals and branding some pawns for his entertainment, but in the end, I do not think he has some upper motives.
Is that really "evil"? Isn't that very different from a tv show for him? Some dark tv reality show, where he probably voted for Corvo? Well maybe that's going very far, but we, as humans, who, for some anyways ( and I dare say "for a lot of people ), enjoy those tv shows and movies and especially the reality shows, aren't that different from the outsider. We are desperatly looking for something unexpected to happen.