Talk:Monsters/@comment-24768935-20140529145716/@comment-25035274-20140610122205

What I said was that Kenkou Cross stated that the intention of this setting is happy endings. He intends it to ultimately be viewed as an escape from having to deal with the unpleasantness of the real world, and should he choose to write an ending to the overall story, it's certain to end the way he wants it to.

Murphy's Law: Anything that can go wrong, will go wrong. Usually in the worst way possible.

The problem is that Murphy's Law does 'not' apply to a fictional setting if the author doesn't want it to. It isn't a work of reality and while you may 'prefer' a setting to follow real-world logic, there is no requirement for it to do so. It's worth noting, by the by, that if you read everything on the wiki you can find(especially the Kenkou Cross interview), you'll find that he's expressly pointed out that there are 'no' genuine "bad endings" in any of his profiles. The only way to end in a genuinely bad way is if The Order happens to come knocking on your door with their swords drawn.

The closest you get is the Parasite Slime/Slime Carrier, and if you poke around you actually find out that the woman the slime catches actually does not lose her own will. If all you look at is the profile, then yes. It looks like a bad way to go. But if you take it in context with everything in all of the setting materials and in the things stated in Cross' interview, the woman is still herself. She just...suddenly really likes sex. A lot.

Many of the statements you see in the articles can't be taken to be completely literal. For instance, in the Lamia profile, it states the Lamia's jealousy is so strong that if her man cheats she'll kill him(specifically, strangle him to death). That statement isn't meant literally, any more than I mean it literally when I say that the guy that cut me off in traffic this morning made me so angry I could shoot him.

Again, I know the statements aren't all literal because Kenkou Cross himself has stated as much.