- I thought it was interesting how much agency Verso loses starting with Act 3 when we learn that he is a painted version of Verso rather than the real Verso. I found it unsettling and sad to see him refer to real Renoir as Maelle’s father rather than his, or how discounted in general he is by the major players in the story going forward. He only gains some agency back when you as the player take the chance to play as him to win back that lost agency to save his namesake’s family from potential destruction.
- Maelle is sympathetic in that I understand perfectly where she’s coming from. In the real world, she’s mute, half blind, and disfigured. Verso is dead. Her family is in strife both with each other and with others outside their house. In Verso’s painting however, Verso lives on as a painted replica, her family is tightly knitted despite everything, and, without the meddling of her mom of dad (and potentially without Clea if she was willing), Lumiere and the rest of the painted world would be a nice place to live. Her desire to hang on to that experience makes sense. Even if the world is constructed and contrived, the experience is as real as anything she experienced in the real world. Does it really matter if the world is “fake” or “real” if her feelings are authentic all the same?
- Renoir’s methods are extremely heavy handed — to the point that he accidentally drives Maelle/Alicia into escapism by presenting himself as an existential threat to Verso’s very soul as represented by his canvas. I think that if he took the tact he adopted at the end much sooner the Maelle wouldn’t feel as if she couldn’t leave the canvas or else Verso’s final testament to his own existence would vanish.
[*]That said, I went with Verso’s path to the end. It made more sense, especially with the revelation that Maelle was going full send on escapism, to force her out rather than to keep the charade going past its run time. After seeing the family seem to make peace with what happened in the end (Clea’s body language was weird though), I felt I made the right choice.
I went to Youtube after to see Maelle’s ending and was pretty horrified to see painted Verso pleading for death after losing and ending up being controlled like a puppet in the end by Maelle while the world around her seemed to have a sickly joviality that seemed equally forced — all punctuated by Maelle’s face and eyes becoming obscured by paint. And then you have the implication of her family in the real world remaining fractured because she couldn’t learn to let go and come to terms with her reality.
If it means erasing Verso’s canvas to help her and the family ultimately come together and move on, then I would chose Verso’s path every time.