[How incredible, she thinks, that a human had created such a machine. A2 is beginning to come to terms with the fact that if the humans had created them — the androids — it was merely their distant ancestors. Some prototype long before YoRHa, before even the resistance androids. Perhaps that whispered-about set of twins, who had doomed them all.
A machine that was a mother to everything on Earth, a machine God that loved humanity because of her human creator.
...]
It sounds like a fairy tale.
[Her voice is soft. The words aren't condescending, though they carry a level of skepticism — A2's perception of both gods and machines could best be described as "negative." Humans too, in many ways. Everything she knew about humans, other than the ones she'd encountered here, was android and machine fables. And... their experiments. The cruelty they enacted upon one another for progress.]
What's she like? Gaia. Ah... her personality, that is.
[She did have an individual consciousness, right? Both Beta and Aloy have implied as much.]
no subject
A machine that was a mother to everything on Earth, a machine God that loved humanity because of her human creator.
...]
It sounds like a fairy tale.
[Her voice is soft. The words aren't condescending, though they carry a level of skepticism — A2's perception of both gods and machines could best be described as "negative." Humans too, in many ways. Everything she knew about humans, other than the ones she'd encountered here, was android and machine fables. And... their experiments. The cruelty they enacted upon one another for progress.]
What's she like? Gaia. Ah... her personality, that is.
[She did have an individual consciousness, right? Both Beta and Aloy have implied as much.]