: Elias faces the beast and sees not a monster, but a shifting mosaic of faces—friends, enemies, and eventually, his own. The beast is "powerful, hurting, and apparently without hope of change" because it is made of everything humanity refuses to love about itself.
: It uses the Beast Archetype to represent primal, unaddressed emotions rather than just a physical threat.
In stories, a is often more than just a monster; it serves as a mirror for our own internal struggles, representing primal instincts, hidden pain, or the consequences of one's actions.
: Elias faces the beast and sees not a monster, but a shifting mosaic of faces—friends, enemies, and eventually, his own. The beast is "powerful, hurting, and apparently without hope of change" because it is made of everything humanity refuses to love about itself.
: It uses the Beast Archetype to represent primal, unaddressed emotions rather than just a physical threat.
In stories, a is often more than just a monster; it serves as a mirror for our own internal struggles, representing primal instincts, hidden pain, or the consequences of one's actions.