“Gene base code 12 confirmed. Welcome home master.”
That’s probably a reference to the genetic code of the Light Wing. The real master is the Heresy Dragon, and Lagi is his other half.
“Gene base code 12 confirmed. Welcome home master.”
That’s probably a reference to the genetic code of the Light Wing. The real master is the Heresy Dragon, and Lagi is his other half.
[quote=“D-Unit”]“Gene base code 12 confirmed. Welcome home master.”
That’s probably a reference to the genetic code of the Light Wing. The real master is the Heresy Dragon, and Lagi is his other half.[/quote]
I’m not sure about it being the Light Wing’s genetic code specifically, but one of the sub scenarios does confirm that “gene base code 12” is the genetic code of the dragon.
It’s definitely the dragon that the system is identifying as its “master” in this case, and this does make sense if you think about it. The dragon was the physical host of the Heresy Program, and the Program did become the system’s controller at the end of PDS.
Well then if it had already been identified why did those monsters attack Lagi?
And why did Azel (the voice) call it intruder?
Lagi had been identified, but not Orta. I don’t know why Lagi couldn’t stop the attack though. Perhaps this was an automated defense system which he could not control. And the intruder the system is refering to was Orta. The entire episode is based on the system’s attempts to analyse Orta’s genetic code. What’s strange is that the analysis is only successful when you destroy enough enemies, and not the other way around.
perhaps it has to do with analyzing the bond between dragon and rider? as in, lagi is actually the instrument used to analyze orta for the ruins, the enemies are just there to provide a battle situation where the bond is strongly displayed?
It would make a lot more sense the other way around - testing the dragon’s power would be the perfect way to know if he’s Lagi since Lagi is suposed to be the most powerful.
[quote=“GehnTheBerserker”]Well then if it had already been identified why did those monsters attack Lagi?
And why did Azel (the voice) call it intruder?[/quote]
The intruder was NOT Orta - it was Abadd. Abadd piggybacked Orta’s entry into Sestren. Pay close attention at the beginning of the chapter.
I assumed that the system recognized Orta as an intruder because she was part human, and you know how pure type monsters always attack humans…
[quote=“Kadamose”]
[quote=“GehnTheBerserker”]Well then if it had already been identified why did those monsters attack Lagi?
And why did Azel (the voice) call it intruder?[/quote]
The intruder was NOT Orta - it was Abadd. Abadd piggybacked Orta’s entry into Sestren. Pay close attention at the beginning of the chapter.[/quote]
I’m not so sure about that. From what we’ve seen, Abadd had a great deal of freedom in Sestren. If he could use the system to transport him to the Cradle, I’m sure he could enter it without Orta’s help. Sure, Abadd only appeared after Orta entered Sestren, but we didn’t see him when Orta and Lagi were transformed into data. There’s no reason to assume he couldn’t enter Sestren by himself (also, Abadd was never attacked by the pure-types in the ruin and countermeasures in Sestren).
The “unrecorded presence” was very definitely Orta and / or the dragon; it was them that the system was literally attacking and ceaselessly trying to analyse. Whether or not it saw Abadd as an intruder too is pretty much unknown, as we never hear the System say anything about him.
Kadamose : Don’t you think the pure types are intellegent enought to know who exactly they are attacking?
Of course. But if that were completely true, and the dragon truly is recognized by Sestren as it’s master, then Sestren’s defense mechanisms would not have attacked the dragon (or it’s rider).
Even though the drones and Sestren were created in the same age, with the same technology, it does not mean that the drones, especially Abadd, had access to such critical systems. If you remember Azel, you would know that she didn’t even know what Sestren was to begin with.
Well I don’t belive in that either.I believe that the unrecorded presence IS Lagi…
It’s just about possible that the Episode 6 ruin analysed and identified Lagi, and then when he got inside the Sestren network it had to analyse and identify him too. Otherwise I’d say that the “unrecorded presence” would have to be Orta, and that the network’s defensive programs were actually aiming for her and hitting Lagi indirectly (because of the supposed forcefield that a dragon exerts around its rider).
It’s just about possible that the Episode 6 ruin analysed and identified Lagi, and then when he got inside the Sestren network it had to analyse and identify him too. Otherwise I’d say that the “unrecorded presence” would have to be Orta, and that the network’s defensive programs were actually aiming for her and hitting Lagi indirectly (because of the supposed forcefield that a dragon exerts around its rider).
Exactly. And the voice in Sestren also called Lagi “master”, just like Lagi was called in the ruin. The unrecorded presence has to be Orta.
Finally you agree with me
Exactly. And the voice in Sestren also called Lagi “master”, just like Lagi was called in the ruin. The unrecorded presence has to be Orta.
What I noticed is that it only calls Lagi “master” right at the very end of the episode, after all the analysing has taken place. That’s what makes me think it’s at least possible that the Sestren netowork did have to re-analyse Lagi, even if the Episode 6 ruin had already done so. Still, the Orta explanation would seem to make perfect sense too.
What I noticed is that it only calls Lagi “master” right at the very end of the episode, after all the analysing has taken place. That’s what makes me think it’s at least possible that the Sestren netowork did have to re-analyse Lagi, even if the Episode 6 ruin had already done so. Still, the Orta explanation would seem to make perfect sense too.
Actually, you could run through Episode 7 without having a successful analysis. So if it failed to re-analyse Lagi, the system could not have called Lagi its master.
It struck me that the whole analysis thing in Episode 7 doesn’t literally seem to make sense, because even if you’re “successfully analysed” at the first sub-boss you still have to be analysed again at the second one. My best guess is that they’re analysing different individual elements, so their results might not have to contriubute to any ultimate analysis of Lagi. But yeah, I agree that it being Orta is the more likely solution taking everything into acount.
perhaps it has to do with analyzing the bond between dragon and rider? as in, lagi is actually the instrument used to analyze orta for the ruins, the enemies are just there to provide a battle situation where the bond is strongly displayed?
did no one even give that a second thought?
the dragon and rider are supposed to become one unit in battle with their minds linked and actions coordinated. perhaps this whole idea of “is the intruder lagi or is it orta?” isn’t really the point. if the system saw it as one being then the lagi/orta unit would have been different from the lagi/edge unit, would it not?