Detroit : Become Human

A tragic prophecy is told in a grand tone.
The game focuses on an eternal topic, the emotions and rights of androids. I think the reason why humans are so entangled in this topic is that although humans have created androids, androids are obviously better than humans, whether it is an inaccessible shell or replaceable organs and so on. Therefore, human beings will try to prove the superiority and unshakable status of human beings by using “androids have no human feelings” and “androids are not life”. (For example, Karl’s son’s evaluation of Marcus, Zraco thinks that Karla’s love for Alice is wishful thinking)
Once humans discovered that androids also began to have “emotions,” the argument began to falter.
After playing, I still can’t get out of the ambivalence. I still don’t know if the androids really have feelings, and the behavior is based on self-learning imitation, or program input settings. I also don’t know if we can explore “them” or “their” moral ethics and free will.
What does Connor think of Hank, what state of mind does Carla protect Alice in, is it love between Marcus and Noth, or is there some kind of connection in this complex world? I don’t know all of this, because all I see is the impact of my own choices.
There are many differences between humans and androids, but I think the biggest one is vision. Bionics do not have free thinking, but they also have an equal eye on everything. Humans have the rights and freedoms most coveted by androids, but they also have selfishness and prejudice. Humans spurn the metal body and icy temperature of bionics, but they still have racial discrimination and class contradictions towards their own people, not to mention how humans view robots.
When the word “robot” was invented, people had already decided on their future, “robota” and “robotnik”.
I did everything I could to hope for a relatively peaceful ending. But outside the game, we or androids can’t resist more brutal forces after all.
The two places that left the deepest impression are that Marcus and Noth were climbing on the building, and the advertisement on the bottom of their feet happened to be “RISE”; the other was Marcus’s speech in Jericho, “The voice that humans don’t want to hear, I’ll let them hear.”
How high does it have to climb and how loud it is to be heard.


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