I'm curious as to what made the devs decide to go in this particular direction.
It really, really depends. I will never belive that life extension options are a bad thing: The ability to live as long as you want, and pass gracefully when you are tired, would be a blessing beyond any that we have been given since the ability to look at our reflection and see ourselves with bright eyes.Probably because immortality is unambiguously a bad thing.
So it's not necessarily bad as long as you have the ability to opt out, in other words, or at least willing to accept the drawbacks?It really, really depends. I will never belive that life extension options are a bad thing: The ability to live as long as you want, and pass gracefully when you are tired, would be a blessing beyond any that we have been given since the ability to look at our reflection and see ourselves with bright eyes.
On the other hand, FORCED endurance would inevitably turn into "I have no mouth and I must scream". At the very least, you'd be stuck floating in the void, praying that Protons eventually decay and that your mind turns off.
That second one seems impossible in OUR universe, thankfully: Once physical form is destroyed, the mind seems to go with it as far as we know. So there's no reason NOT to pursue longer and longer lives, as long as we can fill them with meaning!
Slightly off topic so apologies, but I don't think Kas would actually be any happier if she could have kids. If the ones she's adopted and raised aren't fulfilling her desire for kids, being able to give birth to/have someone else give birth to a kid probably won't either. Her problem isn't being unable to have kids its being literally incapable of actual love due to being a demonHell, one of the two main antagonists is motivated entirely by her inability to have a true child.
That's only because the form of immortality that Agni has is a cage, she has no choice or ability to opt out.Would you be happy if you had to see everyone you knew and loved get old and pass away while you remain? As entire ecosystems perish right in front of you eyes? As the last star explodes and all that remains is a dark black void? Would you be happy that, no matter if time itself stopped existing, you will not?
Yeah, but that's the issue. Usually, immortality is not something you can just say "know what? this shit kinda fell off" and just "unsuscribe" from it. Immortality is permanent, a curse you have to bear until time itself ceases to exist, and even then there's no guarantee you'll be granted releaseIf people knew they could opt out at any time, would they really be so eager to give it up?
The problem isn’t immortality being a curse, it’s the game treating all immortality as the same thing when it clearly isn’t.Yeah, but that's the issue. Usually, immortality is not something you can just say "know what? this shit kinda fell off" and just "unsuscribe" from it. Immortality is permanent, a curse you have to bear until time itself ceases to exist, and even then there's no guarantee you'll be granted release
Sure, you can just say nope and decline the offer of immortality, but being realistic, anyone who willingly gives their mortality away is probably either blinded by their own ego, or plain stupid
That's not really immortality then, just mortality with extra stepsconditional immortality
That’s just a really narrow definition of immortality.That's not really immortality then, just mortality with extra steps
Biological Immortality is also called Bio-indefinite Mortality, so saying it's "mortality with extra steps" isn't entirely wrong. But Immortality as a Curse is usually done with True Immortality, which means absolutely no dying, even if you did something like jump in a volcano. And I don't think it is unreasonable to make a distinction between "I need not fear the touch of time" and "No matter how traumatizing or painful an experience is, I will be forced to continue to get up and bear it every single day."That’s just a really narrow definition of immortality.
If you don’t age and can live indefinitely, that’s still immortality in any practical sense. Adding an opt-out doesn’t suddenly make you “mortal again,” it just means you’re not trapped.
If anything, the version where you can’t die under any circumstances is just one extreme form of immortality, not the default definition.
Calling it “mortality with extra steps” is like saying invulnerability with an off switch isn’t real invulnerability. It still functions the same way 99.9% of the time, you just aren’t locked into it forever.
That’s a fair distinction, honestly.Biological Immortality is also called Bio-indefinite Mortality, so saying it's "mortality with extra steps" isn't entirely wrong. But Immortality as a Curse is usually done with True Immortality, which means absolutely no dying, even if you did something like jump in a volcano. And I don't think it is unreasonable to make a distinction between "I need not fear the touch of time" and "No matter how traumatizing or painful an experience is, I will be forced to continue to get up and bear it every single day."