The Fog told me that it isn't just people lost in the Sea. It's also memories and entire worlds. Now, if it was just limited to people, an argument could be made that it could be some form of afterlife, but Elias mentioned that unlike my world, there is no afterlife in the Sea, only death. Memories are prone to being lost simply due to how the human brain functions. Entire worlds being pulled in, however, seems a bit suspect.
Reira mentioned bodies being there, too, and the same type of bodies appearing later on, I assume here. Bodies of monsters that have left this place, and bodies of monsters who have died and been revived. However, they were completely lifeless, empty shells of what they used to be, as if the process of dying and reviving strips us of our damaged bodies and puts us back into a perfect copy. But they were still being manipulated by something. They were still capable of movement, and they were attacking.
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The Fog told me that it isn't just people lost in the Sea. It's also memories and entire worlds. Now, if it was just limited to people, an argument could be made that it could be some form of afterlife, but Elias mentioned that unlike my world, there is no afterlife in the Sea, only death. Memories are prone to being lost simply due to how the human brain functions. Entire worlds being pulled in, however, seems a bit suspect.
Reira mentioned bodies being there, too, and the same type of bodies appearing later on, I assume here. Bodies of monsters that have left this place, and bodies of monsters who have died and been revived. However, they were completely lifeless, empty shells of what they used to be, as if the process of dying and reviving strips us of our damaged bodies and puts us back into a perfect copy. But they were still being manipulated by something. They were still capable of movement, and they were attacking.
The shell of a cicada doesn't move on its own.