Steam 설치
로그인
|
언어
简体中文(중국어 간체)
繁體中文(중국어 번체)
日本語(일본어)
ไทย(태국어)
Български(불가리아어)
Čeština(체코어)
Dansk(덴마크어)
Deutsch(독일어)
English(영어)
Español - España(스페인어 - 스페인)
Español - Latinoamérica(스페인어 - 중남미)
Ελληνικά(그리스어)
Français(프랑스어)
Italiano(이탈리아어)
Bahasa Indonesia(인도네시아어)
Magyar(헝가리어)
Nederlands(네덜란드어)
Norsk(노르웨이어)
Polski(폴란드어)
Português(포르투갈어 - 포르투갈)
Português - Brasil(포르투갈어 - 브라질)
Română(루마니아어)
Русский(러시아어)
Suomi(핀란드어)
Svenska(스웨덴어)
Türkçe(튀르키예어)
Tiếng Việt(베트남어)
Українська(우크라이나어)
번역 관련 문제 보고
Edit: Okay, I have triggered all the endings in the following order: "Alone", "Mindfulness", and finally "Continue".
In "Mindfulness", the character does not cooperate for the hypnosis: 1) there is too little time for the hypnosis to happen before the time loop resets, 2) he prefers to focus on the clock.
Mind blown.
Why do you believe that "let her go" is the true ending. To me, the true ending would rather be "Continue":
1) out of the three endings, it is the only ending with the FULL credits (including thanks to Annapurna, translators, etc.),
2) out of the three endings, it is the only ending from which you cannot continue without looping from the start (which is consistent with the themes of time-loops and amnesia in terms of gameplay),
3) out of the three endings, it is the only ending in which the main protagonist truly forgets the details. In the other two endings, he accepts to let her go, or he deceives the father without truly cooperating in the hypnosis.
cf. https://steamcommunity.com/app/1097200/discussions/2/3042731710355134205/
When you think about it, there are many fathers:
- the wife's father,
- the cop who is a father of a little girl,
- the protagonist who is not yet a father, but learns about the pregnancy that very night.
The main protagonist has the feeling that he has killed the father, because:
1) his wife is pregnant so he will become/replace the father figure in the family,
2) he has trouble accepting the situation, which he might want to escape.
All of the endings deal with abandoning the future mother, because of an illegitimate union between the two.
The "let her go" ending would mean that the protagonist abandons the mother and her baby, just like his father abandoned him (assuming he was indeed born as an illegitimate child from a romance between a family man and a nanny). Hence why their home becomes empty of any human presence.
Overall, I think this could be a story about a character dealing with hardships regarding the father figure. His own father was absent from his childhood and called him a "monster". He had to grow up without a father figure in his life. Now, that very night, he learns that he will become a father as well, and his imagination runs wild as he wants to escape (but he is imprisoned by the situation... and the time-loop).