Have Weiss cells-G or cells of Jenova?

Obsidian Fire

Ahk Morn!
AKA
The Engineer
Stagnant Mako has nothing to do with Jenova though. It has everything to do with the Planet and Chaos, if anything. Chaos was supposed to be kept separate from the main Lifestream until Lucrecia found the Stagnent mako it was in, which Deepground somehow got a hold of.

The tainted mako on the other hand, has everything to do with Sephiroth, Jenova, etc. What I took the whole "pure" thing to mean was the Weiss just had been exposed to normal Lifestream, while Nero was exposed to Stagnant mako and the other DEEPGROUND soldiers had been exposed to mako and Jenova.
 

Starling

Pro Adventurer
The whole gene mapping explanation never really made sense to me. Gene mapping is just the process of identifying genes and where they are on the chromosome, while actually modifying genes would be genetic engineering, which is often done by using retroviruses to insert DNA. Other methods of genetic modification would be to physically insert the relevant DNA into a cell's nucleus, but it amounts to the same thing once the DNA has entered the target cell.

Even if they opt for artificially recreating the genetic sequence they used, it's like choosing whether to copy-pasted a piece of computer code or just retyping it by hand off a sheet of paper. The piece of code will still do the same thing.

As some may know, genetic modification has progressed to the point that it's possible to modify organisms by inserting genetic material from another species, such as taking the gene responsible for bio-luminescence in jellyfish and inserting into cats, causing them to glow in the dark and goats that produce spider silk in their milk. These cases are referred to as transgenic organisms and are still mostly at the research stage.

If there truly is a difference between inserting Jenova cells into someone and inserting Jenova's genetic material by some other means, it's that the methods used in real life are done at the stage of conception, while Jenova cells have the benefit of not being constrained to real life scientific limitations thanks to the whole shape-shifting thing. Figuring out which genes do what is largely combination of trial and error as well as comparing whatever similar things are available. Because of that and how Shinra thought Jenova was a Cetra around the time they made Sephiroth and Genesis, they likely blindly inserted Gillian's genes or at least the portion containing Jenova's influence onto Genesis without really knowing anything beyond which genes were human and which were Jenova's.

The whole thing is a lot less of a hassle if you just figure they inserted Gillian's cells into a fetus and left it at that, since they apparently used a less direct method than Gillian being Genesis' biological mother via in vitro fertilization with someone else carrying the baby.

Since out of Angeal, Genesis and Sephiroth, Sephiroth was the only one the planet seemed to consider a threat to its existence and in dire need of elimination, that seems to support my earlier suggestion that only Jenova cells under Sephiroth's influence are considered tainted, and that G-cells, while still a variation of Jenova cells, don't count.

Regarding the regular Deepground SOLDIERs, I don't remember where it said former Shinra SOLDIERs willingly joined them after meteorfall and find it absurd anyone would do that. They're known to have taken SOLDIERs from the Wutai war, which makes more sense. Considering Deepground was in the middle of a rebellion, everyone got sealed in when meteor almost hit Midgar and the place is supposed to be a hellhole only Azul would consent to entering, there's no way they got anyone new around that time.

As for regular SOLDIERs predating Sephiroth, I'm pretty sure SOLDIER was created after Sephiroth was born, not before. Remember that the original goal of the Jenova project was to study Jenova and use her to recreate the Cetra. They started with using Jenova cells in Sephiroth, Genesis and Angeal, though I'm not entirely sure Angeal was intentional. Since Sephiroth likely didn't exhibit the kind of traits they were hoping would lead them to the Promised Land, they presumably re-purposed the project for military application and created SOLDIER by coming up with a variation of the method that would work on older individuals so they wouldn't have to raise an entire army from childhood. This would make SOLDIER almost as old as Sephiroth, which by the OG is roughly 30 years.
 

The Twilight Mexican

Ex-SeeD-ingly good
AKA
TresDias
A few brief points:

-Obsidian is right about the stagnant mako being unrelated to Jenova. That was something that was naturally occurring all along

-It's said in the DoC Complete Guide that SOLDIERs who survived Meteorfall joined up with Deepground: http://thelifestream.net/guide-book-translations/dc-official-complete-guide-term-list-pg-318/

-SOLDIER predates Sephiroth by quite some time. Shin-Ra's rise to power in the first place resulted partly from using mako-enhanced soldiers (i.e. SOLDIERs) wielding manufactured materia to end a long-standing international war (per VII's Ultimania Omega). This was before Jenova was ever found. Deepground was the hospital for these original SOLDIERs. Recall also that the point is made that Deepground's purpose changed (to inhumane experimentation) after Genesis came along

If Genesis predates Sephiroth, and Sephiroth predated SOLDIER, how could Deepground have been around to change its purpose as a result of Genesis since Deepground was built for SOLDIER? =P
 
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Wolf_

Pro Adventurer
While there is no way of proving it, perhaps Jenova's genetic marker was discovered in Genesis' genes and removed before use on Weiss. If you assumed the augmented strength remained with Genesis, that would, in theory give you a 'Pure' gene to work with. None of them where made for the purpose of being a vessel for Omega so you could understand most of them having cells tainted with Jenova's as it provides the host with strength (They were making solders after all.)

Theory two, Weiss could have a natural ability to fend off certain parasites like Jenova. There's lot's of people that are immune to certain things in real life so its not to much of a stretch.

Theory three.. Hojo knew all about Omega for some time and had a hand in 'making' Weiss as an experiment or even contingency plan. He wanted Sephiroth to destroy the world and I don't see him wanting to die along with them. It could have been his goal to get Sephiroth to kill everyone and summon Omega for him to leave the planet.

Disclaimer: I know nothing about Gene's and i have been drinking ;P
 

Clement Rage

Pro Adventurer
-Obsidian is right about the stagnant mako being unrelated to Jenova. That was something that was naturally occurring all along

Yeah, but if it's naturally occurring in order to protect and/or imprison stuff, that irons out some of the bumps in the plot.

SOLDIERs joining Deepground makes very little sense, unless they were the in house garrison that got caught in the rebellion.
 

Starling

Pro Adventurer
A few brief points:

-Obsidian is right about the stagnant mako being unrelated to Jenova. That was something that was naturally occurring all along

-It's said in the DoC Complete Guide that SOLDIERs who survived Meteorfall joined up with Deepground: http://thelifestream.net/guide-book-translations/dc-official-complete-guide-term-list-pg-318/

-SOLDIER predates Sephiroth by quite some time. Shin-Ra's rise to power in the first place resulted partly from using mako-enhanced soldiers (i.e. SOLDIERs) wielding manufactured materia to end a long-standing international war (per VII's Ultimania Omega). This was before Jenova was ever found. Deepground was the hospital for these original SOLDIERs. Recall also that the point is made that Deepground's purpose changed (to inhumane experimentation) after Genesis came along

If Genesis predates Sephiroth, and Sephiroth predated SOLDIER, how could Deepground have been around to change its purpose as a result of Genesis since Deepground was built for SOLDIER? =P

The wording of the Deepground entry looks like it refers to Genesis joining SOLDIER as the point where Deepground changed rather than when he was born. Genesis and Sephiroth were likely born the same year or a year apart, making their age difference somewhat negligible.

Shinra discovered mako in 1959, the same year they discovered Jenova. Shinra began construction on Midgar's plate in 1976, so Deepground couldn't have been established before that. Prior to that, Shinra was busy figuring the applications of mako as an energy source and conducting whatever studies on Jenova they did before getting started on human experimentation.

As for the SOLDIER entry, it doesn't claim that all of SOLDIER joined Deepground willingly so much as the ones that got stuck in Midgar after Meteorfall ended up having to join them, probably against their will. Again, Deepground is made out to be a hellhole people only end up in when dragged there against their will or born there, with the notable exception of Azul, who's shown as the one guy who joins them willingly simply because his obsession with being strong leads him to believe it's where he'll become strongest and he's confident in his ability to thrive in a place like that. I'm a bit skeptical about the majority of regular SOLDIERs suffering that fate, as it's one of the things that stretch my suspension of disbelief a little too thin.

How exactly would SOLDIERs have a harder time leaving Midgar than the rest of the people who lived there? Wouldn't they have been helping evacuate everyone? You can't just handwave it as them all getting stuck in the Shinra building, especially since we know Rufus got out and still has a decent amount of Shinra staff working with him. Even if you excuse all that and assume most SOLDIERs died or got caught up with Deepground, there are still at least some SOLDIERs still around. It feels like a lazy excuse to sweep all the SOLDIERs under the rug while trying to justify the excessive size of Deepground's army through supplementary materials.

Personally, as useful as the ultimania information can be, I think it should be taken with a grain of salt, especially if it conflicts with other information that's been given or doesn't quite make sense if you take the time to think about the implications.
 

The Twilight Mexican

Ex-SeeD-ingly good
AKA
TresDias
Starling said:
The wording of the Deepground entry looks like it refers to Genesis joining SOLDIER as the point where Deepground changed rather than when he was born.

Even were that accurate (and it isn't), the fact remains that Deepground was created as a medical facility for SOLDIER.

Now, bearing that in mind, let's run over some details of the timeline:

-Rosso is 25 during Dirge, approximately three years after FFVII, making her no more than 22 at that time
-Genesis and Sephiroth were, at the very most, 30 during FFVII -- and they were probably more like 27 since Gast left Shin-Ra in 1980
-Sephiroth became famous as a hero of the Wutai War, which began 15 years before FFVII, before Genesis and Angeal ever left Banora

Even if Deepground had been built for inhumane experimentation from its inception rather than as a SOLDIER medical facility, Sephiroth would have had to have already inspired the development of SOLDIER and become famous by the time he was (at the very most) eight years old to inspire Genesis and Angeal to join SOLDIER (likewise at eight years old) in order for Rosso to be born in Deepground following Genesis joining SOLDIER.

Considering that it did exist as a hospital for SOLDIER first, though, that pushes Sephiroth's exploits and fame back even earlier than eight years old -- which, even allowing for that possibility, in no reasonable way fits with a timeline in which the Wutai War (which led to Sephiroth's fame in the first place) began circa 1992.

Seeing as Genesis and Sephiroth were born no earlier than 1977 (at the very earliest) and no later than 1982 (at the very latest) going by the "25~30 years before FFVII" timeframe we've always been given, with Rosso confirmed to be born in 1985 and the Wutai War beginning in 1992, Sephiroth would have been between 10 and 15 when he became famous -- putting himself, Genesis and Angeal all outside the eight-year window that would allow for Rosso's birth year to correspond to a timeframe in which Deepground's repurposing followed Genesis joining SOLDIER.

Added to all of that, we still have these much earlier details to reconcile: Shin-Ra produced its first SOLDIERs before it rose to power, when it was still just a weapons manufacturer. They used SOLDIER and the now-easily-manufactured materia to end the war that had been ravaging the planet, and subsequently took control of the world because it had become dependent on mako energy during the war.

Deepground and SOLDIER unquestionably existed before Genesis, Angeal and Sephiroth.

Starling said:
Shinra discovered mako in 1959, the same year they discovered Jenova.
I know that's the year given on the plaque on her helmet, but I think that was just an internal homage of sorts to an earlier draft of the timeline. Timelines from every Ultimania that look at VII are clear about Jenova's discovery being approximately 30 years before FFVII, not 50.
 
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Starling

Pro Adventurer
Sephiroth became famous as a hero of the Wutai War, which began 15 years before FFVII, before Genesis and Angeal ever left Banora

Even if Deepground had been built for inhumane experimentation from its inception rather than as a SOLDIER medical facility, Sephiroth would have had to have already inspired the development of SOLDIER and become famous by the time he was (at the very most) eight years old to inspire Genesis and Angeal to join SOLDIER (likewise at eight years old) in order for Rosso to be born in Deepground following Genesis joining SOLDIER.

Is it stated anywhere that Sephiroth inspired Genesis and Angeal to join SOLDIER instead of simply wanting to join and meeting Sephiroth there? Where does it say they didn't leave Banora before the war? Zack left to Join SOLDIER at 13, so they could've left a year or two before it started.

Considering that it did exist as a hospital for SOLDIER first, though, that pushes Sephiroth's exploits and fame back even earlier than eight years old -- which, even allowing for that possibility, in no reasonable way fits with a timeline in which the Wutai War (which led to Sephiroth's fame in the first place) began circa 1992.

Seeing as Genesis and Sephiroth were born no earlier than 1977 (at the very earliest) and no later than 1982 (at the very latest) going by the "25~30 years before FFVII" timeframe we've always been given, with Rosso confirmed to be born in 1985 and the Wutai War beginning in 1992, Sephiroth would have been between 10 and 15 when he became famous -- putting himself, Genesis and Angeal all outside the eight-year window that would allow for Rosso's birth year to correspond to a timeframe in which Deepground's repurposing followed Genesis joining SOLDIER.

Vincent is 57 in the OG and is physically 27, which means he was shot and experimented on in 1977. Sephiroth was born either just before or right after this happened, making it the year he was born.

If Rosso's age is 25 in DoC, that means she was born in 1985, 8 years after Sephiroth. That's plenty of time for Shinra to get SOLDIER and Deepground started between Sephiroth's birth and Rosso's. The Wutai war spans 1992-2001, starting when Sephiroth was 15 and Rosso was 7. That's more than enough time to allow Sephiroth to garner fame and notoriety.

Considering it's likely the shift from medical facility to unethical human experimentation was gradual and got to it's worst by the end of the war, its likely things there weren't quite as bad when Rosso was born as they were by the time the war was running it's course. I suggest this amendment:

Hojo and Hollander took different approaches in the Jenova project trying to prove their work superior than the other's, leading to Genesis and Sephiroth. When Hojo's experimentation was deemed superior than Holander's, he ended up getting research surrounding Genesis to continue in Deepground, which was just being set up as a medical and additional research facility for the newly founded SOLDIER. Alternatively, another scientist was intrigued by Hollander's research and used it in Deepground without his direct involvement, considering they conducted experiments based on Grimoire's research into stagnant mako and the experiments Hojo conducted on Vincent.

Deepground and SOLDIER unquestionably existed before Genesis, Angeal and Sephiroth.

While you've explained why Deepground's shift in morals and obsession with Genesis couldn't have been set off by him joining SOLDIER, you didn't really counter my reasoning for why Deepground couldn't have been founded prior to 1976.

I know that's the year given on the plaque on her helmet, but I think that was just an internal homage of sorts to an earlier draft of the timeline. Timelines from every Ultimania that look at VII are clear about Jenova's discovery being approximately 30 years before FFVII, not 50.

Shinra discovering mako in 1979 would contradict them building the Nibel mako reactor and putting Jenova inside it by 1968, as well as building Midgar's upper plate in 1976, which requires that they already built the first mako reactor in mount Nibel. They'd have to have discovered mako 40 years before the game at latest. On top of that, even if mako was discovered in 1979, it would've undermined your claim that they made SOLDIERs with just mako before their rise to power, since it had to have happened at an earlier date.

I'm starting to think there should be a thread dedicated to finding all the contradictions in the compilation, coming up with possible solutions for them and determining which pieces of information should be discarded for conflicting with important information or being too nonsensical. Some discussions have already done some of the work so to start it'd just be a matter of having all that info available in 1 thread.
 

The Twilight Mexican

Ex-SeeD-ingly good
AKA
TresDias
Is it stated anywhere that Sephiroth inspired Genesis and Angeal to join SOLDIER instead of simply wanting to join and meeting Sephiroth there?
Sephiroth was Genesis's childhood idol. His dream was to share a Banora dumbapple with him. This is shown when Zack first enters the Banora Underground -- he finds an article about Genesis winning an agriculture contest by developing Banora White Juice, and there's a comment in there from Genesis stating, "My dream is for my parents and me to serve the hero Sephiroth our apples one day. Since we are close in age, I'd like to show him what I've accomplished in my life."

This discovery is what leads Zack to decide to eat a dumbapple with Genesis after defeating him.

You can see Zack's discovery at the 2:00-minute mark in this video:


Sephiroth being the reason for Genesis joining SOLDIER is also reiterated in the Genesis Fanclub Newsletter 666 -- "Why he joined SOLDIER: The heroics of Sephiroth, who is the same age as Genesis, inspired him to work for the good of the world."

Starling said:
Where does it say they didn't leave Banora before the war? Zack left to Join SOLDIER at 13, so they could've left a year or two before it started.
It was during the war that Zack left. The war is what made Sephiroth famous in the first place (per his profile from the 10th Anniversary Ultimania if nothing else), inspiring a lot of young men to go try joining SOLDIER.

Starling said:
Vincent is 57 in the OG and is physically 27, which means he was shot and experimented on in 1977. Sephiroth was born either just before or right after this happened, making it the year he was born.
Vincent was born approximately 50 years before FFVII (per his own 10th AU profile), and was shot about 23 years before FFVII (source: his profile in the Ultimania Omega), long after Sephiroth had already been born.

27+23=50 -- this adds up with the timeframe from his profile. That 57 number you cite (source?) does not.

Starling said:
If Rosso's age is 25 in DoC, that means she was born in 1985, 8 years after Sephiroth. That's plenty of time for Shinra to get SOLDIER and Deepground started between Sephiroth's birth and Rosso's. The Wutai war spans 1992-2001, starting when Sephiroth was 15 and Rosso was 7. That's more than enough time to allow Sephiroth to garner fame and notoriety.

Rosso was born in Deepground (she also says this in DoC), and Sephiroth was only eight years old at most when that took place (again, he was likely even younger than that when Rosso was born).

That is not a plausible timeframe for that enormous facility to be built, to be set up as a medical station for SOLDIER, and then to transition (as a result of Genesis -- having been inspired by Sephiroth -- joining SOLDIER) into the shop of horrors it became in order for her birth to occur there. All of that could not take place in that period of time, especially given that she was born before the war in which Sephiroth became famous and inspired Genesis in the first place.

Even if three to eight years was a plausible timeframe for all of that (and, again, it isn't), what you suggest is rendered impossible by these simple details:

-Sephiroth became famous due to the Wutai War
-The Wutai War began around 1992
-Rosso was born in 1985

She -- and the inhumane experiments done to her -- came before 1992, when Sephiroth started becoming famous. This being the absolute earliest Genesis could have been inspired to join SOLDIER to begin with.

And anyway, once again, there's the fact that Shin-Ra had mako-enhanced SOLDIERs before they rose to power. Their rise to power was definitely before 1992.

While you've explained why Deepground's shift in morals and obsession with Genesis couldn't have been set off by him joining SOLDIER, you didn't really counter my reasoning for why Deepground couldn't have been founded prior to 1976.
I guess you mean this: "Shinra began construction on Midgar's plate in 1976, so Deepground couldn't have been established before that."

Deepground was underneath Midgar. The upper plate didn't need to be there for something to be built underground. All Shin-Ra needed was control of the spot where the central pillar (which they built) would later be, since that was where the entrance (the only one we know about at least) to Deepground was placed.

Starling said:
Shinra discovering mako in 1979 would contradict them building the Nibel mako reactor and putting Jenova inside it by 1968, as well as building Midgar's upper plate in 1976, which requires that they already built the first mako reactor in mount Nibel. They'd have to have discovered mako 40 years before the game at latest. On top of that, even if mako was discovered in 1979, it would've undermined your claim that they made SOLDIERs with just mako before their rise to power, since it had to have happened at an earlier date.

I never said anything about Shin-Ra discovering mako in 1979. The official timelines are explicit that the discovery occurred in 1959. Likewise, they are explicit that Jenova was discovered about 30 years before FFVII.

Starling said:
I'm starting to think there should be a thread dedicated to finding all the contradictions in the compilation, coming up with possible solutions for them and determining which pieces of information should be discarded for conflicting with important information or being too nonsensical. Some discussions have already done some of the work so to start it'd just be a matter of having all that info available in 1 thread.
I compiled most of the contradictions into a section of this document a while back.
 

Roger

He/him
AKA
Minato
To be fair, there IS no plausible timeframe for Depground to be build and Crisis Core makes it canon that Genesis was born a perfectly normal child and that SOLDIER itself was an operation that required a single floor of the Shinra building to house, the medical facility dedicated to their support meanwhile is a third level of the city with it's own personal Mako reactor.
 

The Twilight Mexican

Ex-SeeD-ingly good
AKA
TresDias
I have to agree with you that there's no realistic timeframe for Deepground's construction, but it's a lot easier to swallow that it could have been built between 1959 and 1985, with much of it completed prior to 1976 (when Shin-Ra moved its headquarters to Midgar, and presumably when they started building the plate) than it is to buy that they did it all in at most eight years -- and after the surface infrastructure had been established.

It's especially easier to swallow since that matches the timeline of events we've been given rather than contradicting it left and right, as another recently proposed timeline does. =P
 
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Starling

Pro Adventurer
Is it stated anywhere that Sephiroth inspired Genesis and Angeal to join SOLDIER instead of simply wanting to join and meeting Sephiroth there?
Sephiroth was Genesis's childhood idol. His dream was to share a Banora dumbapple with him. This is shown when Zack first enters the Banora Underground -- he finds an article about Genesis winning an agriculture contest by developing Banora White Juice, and there's a comment in there from Genesis stating, "My dream is for my parents and me to serve the hero Sephiroth our apples one day. Since we are close in age, I'd like to show him what I've accomplished in my life."

This discovery is what leads Zack to decide to eat a dumbapple with Genesis after defeating him.

You can see Zack's discovery at the 2:00-minute mark in this video:


Sephiroth being the reason for Genesis joining SOLDIER is also reiterated in the Genesis Fanclub Newsletter 666 -- "Why he joined SOLDIER: The heroics of Sephiroth, who is the same age as Genesis, inspired him to work for the good of the world."

Starling said:
Where does it say they didn't leave Banora before the war? Zack left to Join SOLDIER at 13, so they could've left a year or two before it started.
It was during the war that Zack left. The war is what made Sephiroth famous in the first place (per his profile from the 10th Anniversary Ultimania if nothing else), inspiring a lot of young men to go try joining SOLDIER.
Ok so canon did say that but to be honest it really would make more sense if Sephiroth didn't somehow inspire everyone ever to join SOLDIER. I don't care how famous he's supposed to be for his part in the war, that's unrealistic and you'd expect Angeal and Genesis to join up before he had time to even gain that fame in the first place. It'd also make more sense for Genesis to resent Sephiroth's fame and think he should've been the hero if they knew each-other beforehand and Genesis actually had an opportunity to become famous instead.

If you assume Sephiroth was involved in the war from the start and it took at least a year for him to be regarded as a hero as well as a few months for hero worship to set in, then the earliest Angeal and Genesis can SOLDIER is 1993.

In order to be first class and have the authority they have by CC, Angeal and Genesis would need to have been around for at least 5 years, which would require them to join in 1995 at latest.

Going by Zack and Cloud's ages when they left for SOLDIER, the minimum age requirement for SOLDIER seems to be 13-14. Since it takes time to gain experience and be considered ready to be promoted, it presumably takes a minimum of 3 years to get to First class regardless of skill. While Sephiroth likely trained in combat from a young age, he'd still have to get into SOLDIER in a relatively normal way since no one seemed to think he was raised in SOLDIER. It'd also be absurd to assume he fought in the war and gained fame at any younger age. Since this is what Sephiroth is most widely known and respected for, it'd make the most sense if he was around 16-18 when he earned his fame. Accounting for the above, Sephiroth has to be at least 15 by 1994, narrowing down his year of birth to 1977-1979 instead of 1977-1982 and his OG age to 28-30. If you apply my 16-18 estimate for Sephiroth's age when he got famous, you narrow that down by another year, leaving you with 1977-1978.

Vincent was born approximately 50 years before FFVII (per his own 10th AU profile), and was shot about 23 years before FFVII (source: his profile in the Ultimania Omega), long after Sephiroth had already been born.

27+23=50 -- this adds up with the timeframe from his profile. That 57 number you cite (source?) does not.

How does Vincent being shot and experimented on years after Sephiroth is born even begin to make sense? Vincent objected to the effects the experiments were having on Lucrecia while she was still pregnant and Lucrecia didn't even get to hold Sephiroth after he was born. They were both out of his life within months of his birth. I've never seen anyone claim differently until this post. The approximation neither proves your point nor disproves mine, as both fit within the range it suggests. One thing I noticed is that his profile on the site says he was born November 13 when this indicates it was October. Revising some of the older site content would help make sure there aren't other mistakes like that. My inability to read Japanese severely limits my ability to dig up sources outside of TLS, as I never seem to be able to find a translation to compare it to. One thing I do know is that most people generally agree that 57 is his age. My above calculations for Sephiroth's age also make it more likely than 50 even based on the approximations.

Rosso was born in Deepground (she also says this in DoC), and Sephiroth was only eight years old at most when that took place (again, he was likely even younger than that when Rosso was born).

That is not a plausible timeframe for that enormous facility to be built, to be set up as a medical station for SOLDIER, and then to transition (as a result of Genesis -- having been inspired by Sephiroth -- joining SOLDIER) into the shop of horrors it became in order for her birth to occur there. All of that could not take place in that period of time, especially given that she was born before the war in which Sephiroth became famous and inspired Genesis in the first place.
Considering the timeframes for other events in the compilation, 8 years to build Deepground is quite generous. Canon has things like Shinra rebuilding a near exact replica of Nibelheim and populating it with actors pretending they've lived their whole lives there within 5 years, getting away with something similar in Kalm without anyone seeming to know about it, people forgetting what the 8 towns that became Midgar used to be called after only 30 years, 16 year old war veterans and the OG lasting about a month. It's especially reasonable if you acknowledge Deepground's excessive size in relation to everything else and downsize accordingly for realism. They don't even need to have the whole thing done by then so long as it's complete enough to function for medical procedures and human experimentation. Add the presence of natural caverns and they don't even need to make all the tunnels to finish.

Even if three to eight years was a plausible timeframe for all of that (and, again, it isn't), what you suggest is rendered impossible by these simple details:

-Sephiroth became famous due to the Wutai War
-The Wutai War began around 1992
-Rosso was born in 1985

She -- and the inhumane experiments done to her -- came before 1992, when Sephiroth started becoming famous. This being the absolute earliest Genesis could have been inspired to join SOLDIER to begin with.

And anyway, once again, there's the fact that Shin-Ra had mako-enhanced SOLDIERs before they rose to power. Their rise to power was definitely before 1992.
You seem to be getting the presence of mako only SOLDIERs during Shinra's rise to power from the ultimania omega, which consists of scrapped and unused concepts.The starting paragraph of the site's translation is even a warning that it's not canon. Included in it are things like Jenova being a gene found in everyone, which can be activated with mako in the case of SOLDIER. Even at that concept stage they had both. The war mentioned in that is clearly what became the Wutai war in the finished game.

I guess you mean this: "Shinra began construction on Midgar's plate in 1976, so Deepground couldn't have been established before that."

Deepground was underneath Midgar. The upper plate didn't need to be there for something to be built underground. All Shin-Ra needed was control of the spot where the central pillar (which they built) would later be, since that was where the entrance (the only one we know about at least) to Deepground was placed.
The infrastructure for Midgar's plate includes the central pillar and the mako reactors, which Deepground needs in order to have power for its facilities. Starting to built those counts as starting construction of the plate. The pillar would also be useless as an access point until they had the Shinra HQ on top to go back and forth from.

Starling said:
Shinra discovering mako in 1979 would contradict them building the Nibel mako reactor and putting Jenova inside it by 1968, as well as building Midgar's upper plate in 1976, which requires that they already built the first mako reactor in mount Nibel. They'd have to have discovered mako 40 years before the game at latest. On top of that, even if mako was discovered in 1979, it would've undermined your claim that they made SOLDIERs with just mako before their rise to power, since it had to have happened at an earlier date.

I never said anything about Shin-Ra discovering mako in 1979. The official timelines are explicit that the discovery occurred in 1959. Likewise, they are explicit that Jenova was discovered about 30 years before FFVII.
Sorry, I misread that, probably from how tired I was when I posted. I took more time with this post to avoid having it happen again, which is one of the reasons it took so long. Still, the 30 year thing is an approximation, not an exact date. I've suggested at least once that the on-site timeline be updated as I find the ultimania one dissatisfying. With this kind of thing, information given within the work holds more weight than stuff like game guides, so I'd say a plaque with the year 1959 on it trumps a vague approximation of 30 years pre-game from a book, especially when 30 years is the absolute minimum time for it to be used with Sephiroth and Genesis.

Starling said:
I'm starting to think there should be a thread dedicated to finding all the contradictions in the compilation, coming up with possible solutions for them and determining which pieces of information should be discarded for conflicting with important information or being too nonsensical. Some discussions have already done some of the work so to start it'd just be a matter of having all that info available in 1 thread.
I compiled most of the contradictions into a section of this document a while back.

I meant as an on-site group project that presents the information in a more inviting and accessible format. While I appreciate all the hard work you put into that, it hurts my eyes to look at. The text font is difficult for me to read and I can't tell when the pre-read information ends unless I take the time to scroll slowly instead of just skimming until I get to the part I'm after. It could've also benefited from being separated into pages with mention of what information was on what page. From what I read, half of it's the LTD analysis and the rest is largely a FAQ to clear up misconceptions and stuff people were confused about rather than specifically addressing compilation inconsistencies.


I have to agree with you that there's no realistic timeframe for Deepground's construction, but it's a lot easier to swallow that it could have been built between 1959 and 1985, with much of it completed prior to 1976 (when Shin-Ra moved its headquarters to Midgar, and presumably when they started building the plate) than it is to buy that they did it all in at most eight years -- and after the surface infrastructure had been established.

It's especially easier to swallow since that matches the timeline of events we've been given rather than contradicting it left and right, as a recent other proposed timeline does. =P
What you said at the end about my previous posts is the written equivalent of pausing a conversation with someone to tell someone else how unreasonable the first person's arguments are while they're still standing right in front of you. It's unnecessary and rude to do that in a post that isn't even addressing the person in question.
 

The Twilight Mexican

Ex-SeeD-ingly good
AKA
TresDias
It'd also make more sense for Genesis to resent Sephiroth's fame and think he should've been the hero if they knew each-other beforehand and Genesis actually had an opportunity to become famous instead.
That would have made more sense, but Genesis is crazy and all. He was probably thinking in terms of himself being the first human-Jenova hybrid since he knew about that by this point.

Starling said:
How does Vincent being shot and experimented on years after Sephiroth is born even begin to make sense? Vincent objected to the effects the experiments were having on Lucrecia while she was still pregnant and Lucrecia didn't even get to hold Sephiroth after he was born. They were both out of his life within months of his birth. I've never seen anyone claim differently until this post.
Well, you have seen it brought up, you just don't remember. Anyway, do you have a source for all those claims? Isn't that just what all of us (mis)understood Vincent's flashback from the original game to mean?

Not saying it was an unreasonable interpretation of the flashback (I was surprised to learn what the canon timeframe is as well), but the flashback never gives us any dates to work from. The Ultimanias, however, do.

Starling said:
The approximation neither proves your point nor disproves mine, as both fit within the range it suggests.
57 doesn't strike me as a reasonable precise amount for what is otherwise "approximately 50." Not when dealing with small numbers like this.

Starling said:
One thing I noticed is that his profile on the site says he was born November 13 when this indicates it was October. Revising some of the older site content would help make sure there aren't other mistakes like that.
Yes, that does need fixing. Thanks for pointing it out. That's a detail I overlooked when I was revising that page to fix a lot of its errors that could have been avoided had it just been written as a straightforward presentation of the content on those pages in the 10th Anniversary and CC Ultimanias.

Unlike the rest of the translations on the site, that page wasn't done as a direct translated recreation of the content on the page (a decision I've personally always disagreed with). Other information known about the timeline was included along with information from the actual timeline pages, so it isn't always obvious what's straight out of the books and what was added via editorializing to make the timeline as a whole more complete.

I've always meant to go back and really go over it with a fine toothed comb, but was always working on something else.

Starling said:
One thing I do know is that most people generally agree that 57 is his age.
We all used to think that, but that's because we were assuming Sephiroth was about 30 and that Vincent had confronted Hojo/gotten shot around the time of Sephiroth's birth. It turned out we were all wrong, though (through no fault of our own).

Starling said:
Considering the timeframes for other events in the compilation, 8 years to build Deepground is quite generous. Canon has things like Shinra rebuilding a near exact replica of Nibelheim and populating it with actors pretending they've lived their whole lives there within 5 years, getting away with something similar in Kalm without anyone seeming to know about it, people forgetting what the 8 towns that became Midgar used to be called after only 30 years, 16 year old war veterans and the OG lasting about a month. It's especially reasonable if you acknowledge Deepground's excessive size in relation to everything else and downsize accordingly for realism. They don't even need to have the whole thing done by then so long as it's complete enough to function for medical procedures and human experimentation. Add the presence of natural caverns and they don't even need to make all the tunnels to finish.
These are all reasonable points, but I think it's also worth pointing out that Midgar's construction began in 1976 and still wasn't finished in 0007. So not everything was built in a hurry.

Given their relative size to one another, Midgar is a better comparison for Deepground than a hamlet like Nibelheim or even a full-sized town like Kalm. We also don't know how extensively Kalm was damaged, or whether it's bigger now than it used to be, so we shouldn't really make use of it for such comparisons.

Of course Deepground is still smaller than Midgar, but my point is that you could fit a whole lot of Kalm-sized towns inside Deepground. Midgar is the only thing that offers a decent point of comparison.

Starling said:
You seem to be getting the presence of mako only SOLDIERs during Shinra's rise to power from the ultimania omega, which consists of scrapped and unused concepts.The starting paragraph of the site's translation is even a warning that it's not canon.
That applies only to the Early Material File section of the Ultimania toward the back of the book, beginning at pg. 518. Though these details about Shin-Ra are repeated there, I'm referencing the company's profile from the front of the book (pg. 56). Several hundred pages before that, and right after the profiles of the main cast.

For what it's worth, though, that warning you speak of also mentions that many of the details mentioned in that section are in common with details from the finished product (this line is actually in the book). These about Shin-Ra are among them.

Again, just so we're clear, I'm not citing the Early Material File section at all for what we've been discussing. Only pg. 56.

Starling said:
The infrastructure for Midgar's plate includes the central pillar and the mako reactors, which Deepground needs in order to have power for its facilities.
Deepground has its own separate reactor.
Starling said:
The pillar would also be useless as an access point until they had the Shinra HQ on top to go back and forth from.
I said Shin-Ra needed control of the spot that would become the pillar. That's all they would need to start constructing Deepground. They could do that before ever moving their headquarters to Midgar, building the pillar, the plate, etc.

Starling said:
Sorry, I misread that, probably from how tired I was when I posted. I took more time with this post to avoid having it happen again, which is one of the reasons it took so long.
It's fine.
Starling said:
With this kind of thing, information given within the work holds more weight than stuff like game guides, so I'd say a plaque with the year 1959 on it trumps a vague approximation of 30 years pre-game from a book, especially when 30 years is the absolute minimum time for it to be used with Sephiroth and Genesis.
I would agree with you about the trumping were we not given this timeframe again and again and again and again, both before AC came out and after. We've repeatedly, consistently been told "approximately 30 years."

I think you would have to agree -- if they wanted us to think Jenova was found in 1959 and had a date as precise to work with as 10/10/1959 -- they would have given it to us on the same page as the timeline in the 10th Anniversary Ultimania on which they gave us the precise date of 9/23/1959 for the discovery of mako energy (or 1/9/1968 for the completion of the Mt. Nibel mako reactor; or 6/24/1976 for Shin-Ra relocating to Midgar).

Instead, on the same page as those other precise dates, it says "approximately 30 years ago" for Gast finding Jenova. There's no reason it should say this if that isn't what was intended while 10/10/1959 is.

Heck, there's no reason Vincent's birth can be given as "approximately 50 years ago" and this couldn't if it were meant to be that rather than "approximately 30."

I've actually read before that those dates on Jenova in AC were an Easter egg of sorts to some dates of significance to the staff. Some birthdays or something. I've not been able to find out exactly what they mean, but they definitely don't match up with the rest of the timeline as given.

By the way, you've got it backwards: 30 years is given as the maximum timeframe for Jenova to have been used with Genesis and Sephiroth.

Starling said:
I meant as an on-site group project that presents the information in a more inviting and accessible format.
That would be good too. :monster:

Starling said:
While I appreciate all the hard work you put into that, it hurts my eyes to look at. The text font is difficult for me to read and I can't tell when the pre-read information ends unless I take the time to scroll slowly instead of just skimming until I get to the part I'm after. It could've also benefited from being separated into pages with mention of what information was on what page. From what I read, half of it's the LTD analysis and the rest is largely a FAQ to clear up misconceptions and stuff people were confused about rather than specifically addressing compilation inconsistencies.
It's in that format because that's all GameFAQs accepted. :monster: Multiple pages aren't possible within a .txt document, but the table of contents has ctrl+f navigation instructions, making skimming unnecessary.

There's a section specifically for Compilation inconsistencies toward the end (ctrl+f code: 8.0Co).

Starling said:
What you said at the end about my previous posts is the written equivalent of pausing a conversation with someone to tell someone else how unreasonable the first person's arguments are while they're still standing right in front of you. It's unnecessary and rude to do that in a post that isn't even addressing the person in question.
It was, but from my perspective, I felt I was being told that I'm wrong about stuff stated in plain, unambiguous language (seemingly including that 1992 somehow came before 1985), and had something I didn't say being attributed to me (the 1979 misunderstanding). I was annoyed.

It was still unnecessary, though, yes.
 
Last edited:

Starling

Pro Adventurer
It'd also make more sense for Genesis to resent Sephiroth's fame and think he should've been the hero if they knew each-other beforehand and Genesis actually had an opportunity to become famous instead.
That would have made more sense, but Genesis is crazy and all. He was probably thinking in terms of himself being the first human-Jenova hybrid since he knew about that by this point.
I suppose, though he seems to have largely gotten "Shinra has betrayed us, we're all monsters and everyone else has to die if I can't live" out of it.

Starling said:
How does Vincent being shot and experimented on years after Sephiroth is born even begin to make sense? Vincent objected to the effects the experiments were having on Lucrecia while she was still pregnant and Lucrecia didn't even get to hold Sephiroth after he was born. They were both out of his life within months of his birth. I've never seen anyone claim differently until this post.
Well, you have seen it brought up, you just don't remember. Anyway, do you have a source for all those claims? Isn't that just what all of us (mis)understood Vincent's flashback from the original game to mean?

Not saying it was an unreasonable interpretation of the flashback (I was surprised to learn what the canon timeframe is as well), but the flashback never gives us any dates to work from. The Ultimanias, however, do.
When looking at the OG flashback, Gast is seen walking into the mansion ahead of Hojo and Lucrecia, confirming that he was there around that time. Vincent even mentions Gast along with Hojo and Lucrecia when he says he couldn't stop the experiments leading to Sephiroth.

After the bits about the romance, we get to Vincent insisting that he's against the experiments Hojo and Lucrecia are about to begin.

The flashback then shows Vincent arguing with Hojo after the experiments cause Lucrecia to collapse, followed by Hojo shooting and experimenting on him.

Lucrecia says she never got to hold Sephiroth and can't die. It seems to be implied she tried to kill herself before going to the cave you find her in. There's nothing to keep her there after losing Vincent and Sephiroth so she'd have to have left shortly after that.

Starling said:
The approximation neither proves your point nor disproves mine, as both fit within the range it suggests.

57 doesn't strike me as a reasonable precise amount for what is otherwise "approximately 50." Not when dealing with small numbers like this.
Vague approximations like the one in the Ultimania aren't exactly specific and going with a nice round number like 50 or 30 leaves it open for whatever's within 10 years of that unless additional information makes the range more specific. If you're going to leave a timerange like that, it's best to elaborate on why and provide information that explains why it can't be a few years past that or else it's barely even an answer. You could say something happened about a hundred years ago and have it be closer to 70 if it were character dialogue instead due to vagueness and hyperbole. I'm pretty sure Jenova's arrival gets referenced as about 2000 years ago no matter what year it is when it's being brought up, for example. They would've been better off simply omitting such a vague approximation from the ultimania timeline so it wouldn't be there to conflict with what's shown in the compilation.

Yes, that does need fixing. Thanks for pointing it out. That's a detail I overlooked when I was revising that page to fix a lot of its errors that could have been avoided had it just been written as a straightforward presentation of the content on those pages in the 10th Anniversary and CC Ultimanias.

Unlike the rest of the translations on the site, that page wasn't done as a direct translated recreation of the content on the page (a decision I've personally always disagreed with). Other information known about the timeline was included along with information from the actual timeline pages, so it isn't always obvious what's straight out of the books and what was added via editorializing to make the timeline as a whole more complete.

I've always meant to go back and really go over it with a fine toothed comb, but was always working on something else.
I can see why you'd disagree with that formatting. I think a timeline made by the site based on information given could've been an alternative to that. While I can't really help with translating anything from Japanese to English, I wouldn't mind proofreading stuff post-translation if I'm not busy when something like that is being worked on.

We all used to think that, but that's because we were assuming Sephiroth was about 30 and that Vincent had confronted Hojo/gotten shot around the time of Sephiroth's birth. It turned out we were all wrong, though (through no fault of our own).
See above about the flashbacks about Vincent getting shot and the time around Sephiroth's birth. What about the calculations I made about Sephiroth's age in relation to when Angeal and Genesis joined SOLDIER? Sometimes mistakes occur in official sources or they give information that conflicts with more reasonable information given in another official source. It reminds me a bit of the whole FFX and FF7 thing and basically everything about the Shera. It's why truly putting everything in the compilation together in a way that makes sense would require disregarding some of what's said in official sources.

These are all reasonable points, but I think it's also worth pointing out that Midgar's construction began in 1976 and still wasn't finished in 0007. So not everything was built in a hurry.
Like I said, Deepground doesn't need to be finished in those 8 years either. It's possible for them to have continually expanded after they got the basics running up to when the rebellion happened.

Given their relative size to one another, Midgar is a better comparison for Deepground than a hamlet like Nibelheim or even a full-sized town like Kalm. We also don't know how extensively Kalm was damaged, or whether it's bigger now than it used to be, so we shouldn't really make use of it for such comparisons.

Of course Deepground is still smaller than Midgar, but my point is that you could fit a whole lot of Kalm-sized towns inside Deepground. Midgar is the only thing that offers a decent point of comparison.
Scaling the physical location aside, the sheer number of people we're expected to think were hiding under there all that time is a bit much even with all the kidnapping Shinra's known to do. I mean how many people would it take for an army that can do the kind of large scale attacks and abductions they did in DoC? Are Weiss, Nero and Rosso the only ones that were born there? If almost that entire army consists of kidnapped people, the Turks really abducted people for regular SOLDIER and the science department kidnapped people for human experimentation unrelated to Deepground, then how many people is Shinra supposed to have abducted exactly? Add to that the rampant genocide from Shinra, terrorism, Genesis, Sephiroth as well as Shinra and you have to wonder how much of the global population the death toll from all that throughout the compilation is supposed to be. Another thing to keep in mind is that a lot of people died from everything going on in Deepground, meaning there'd be even more of them if that weren't the case.

That applies only to the Early Material File section of the Ultimania toward the back of the book, beginning at pg. 518. Though these details about Shin-Ra are repeated there, I'm referencing the company's profile from the front of the book (pg. 56). Several hundred pages before that, and right after the profiles of the main cast.

For what it's worth, though, that warning you speak of also mentions that many of the details mentioned in that section are in common with details from the finished product (this line is actually in the book). These about Shin-Ra are among them.

Again, just so we're clear, I'm not citing the Early Material File section at all for what we've been discussing. Only pg. 56.
The paragraph we're discussing said:
The last segment of the FFVII Early Material Files has been translated by hitoshura, and this one by far, offers the best look into the possible world of FFVII had the creators gone a different route. Below is a collection of notes and definitions regarding the world scenario and plot points of the draft of FFVII. Many things here are different from the original, finalized game, so please keep that in mind and don’t let yourself actually think this has anything to do with the finalized story. With that, enjoy!
Drafts are like prototype versions of stories and give insight to the development process but only what's seen in the finalized product can be considered canon, nothing more. Just because you can recognize elements of the final concept in an earlier one doesn't mean anything not mentioned in the final product can be assumed to be true.

Isn't each grouping on the game book translation page stuff from different ultimanias? The only page 56 on that list is Nanaki's profile in the 10th anniversary ultimania and I don't see any entry besides the early concept one that you could be referring to. If you mean pages 33-35 in the 10th anniversary ultimania before the character profiles, then there's a typo in the AVALANCHE entry and nothing is said about Shinra creating SOLDIER before discovering Jenova, nor is there anything about a war prior to the one with Wutai. The SOLDIER entry only mentions a combination of mako and Jenova cells and a use of the term research in relation to taking failed SOLDIERs for human experimentation. Is that supposed to be when they were first testing the process?

Deepground has its own separate reactor.

I said Shin-Ra needed control of the spot that would become the pillar. That's all they would need to start constructing Deepground. They could do that before ever moving their headquarters to Midgar, building the pillar, the plate, etc.
That counts as the infrastructure that would be made during the plate construction. The sector 0 reactor seems to be responsible for the green glow around the Shinra tower and presumably powers it, which would be hard to build before the pillar and other plate infrastructure. The plate's construction would also offer a great cover for bringing in construction materials for Deepground.

The Nibel mako reactor was the first one built, in 1968. Deepground answers directly to the president so their being in Midgar would require that Shinra have its base there, which happened when they constructed the plate. It'd be hard to manage Deepground if they were still mostly in the western continent as the location of their first reactor implies.

It's fine.

I would agree with you about the trumping were we not given this timeframe again and again and again and again, both before AC came out and after. We've repeatedly, consistently been told "approximately 30 years."

I think you would have to agree -- if they wanted us to think Jenova was found in 1959 and had a date as precise to work with as 10/10/1959 -- they would have given it to us on the same page as the timeline in the 10th Anniversary Ultimania on which they gave us the precise date of 9/23/1959 for the discovery of mako energy (or 1/9/1968 for the completion of the Mt. Nibel mako reactor; or 6/24/1976 for Shin-Ra relocating to Midgar).

Instead, on the same page as those other precise dates, it says "approximately 30 years ago" for Gast finding Jenova. There's no reason it should say this if that isn't what was intended while 10/10/1959 is.

Heck, there's no reason Vincent's birth can be given as "approximately 50 years ago" and this couldn't if it were meant to be that rather than "approximately 30."

I've actually read before that those dates on Jenova in AC were an Easter egg of sorts to some dates of significance to the staff. Some birthdays or something. I've not been able to find out exactly what they mean, but they definitely don't match up with the rest of the timeline as given.

By the way, you've got it backwards: 30 years is given as the maximum timeframe for Jenova to have been used with Genesis and Sephiroth.
I wouldn't know about the easter egg thing but I'd need to see proof before I believe that. Gast left in 1980, 27 years before the OG. That gives 3 years for Gast to start the Jenova project and do research on it before leaving if we go with Jenova being found 30 years before the OG. That is the absolute minimum amount of time you can expect him to make enough progress that Hojo and Hollander didn't basically do everything with their own branches of the project and that's without even getting into whether or not he had to still be present in Shinra when Sephiroth was born, in which case Jenova would have to be found at least a few years earlier.

That would be good too. :monster:

Starling said:
While I appreciate all the hard work you put into that, it hurts my eyes to look at. The text font is difficult for me to read and I can't tell when the pre-read information ends unless I take the time to scroll slowly instead of just skimming until I get to the part I'm after. It could've also benefited from being separated into pages with mention of what information was on what page. From what I read, half of it's the LTD analysis and the rest is largely a FAQ to clear up misconceptions and stuff people were confused about rather than specifically addressing compilation inconsistencies.
It's in that format because that's all GameFAQs accepted. :monster: Multiple pages aren't possible within a .txt document, but the table of contents has ctrl+f navigation instructions, making skimming unnecessary.

There's a section specifically for Compilation inconsistencies toward the end (ctrl+f code: 8.0Co).
Why would gamefaqs do that? It's a big reason I avoid going there. I think it's safe to say I didn't make it to the end of the document before, though I'm pretty sure I remember mention of BC being too contradictory to acknowledge in any form.

I'd rather take a more positive approach if I can, even though BC is probably almost completely unsalvageable. The best way to start with this kind of thing would be by gathering all the references to dates, ages and order of events, deal with the inconsistencies there and put together a coherent timeline before addressing other inconsistencies. I'd also like to be able to point out when something covered is absurd from a logical standpoint and what would make more sense even if it's canon, though that might need its own section. LO isn't considered canon anymore so it doesn't need to be included. I think BC's version of the Nibelheim incident is no longer considered canon by extension as well, considering their ties to each-other.

Starling said:
What you said at the end about my previous posts is the written equivalent of pausing a conversation with someone to tell someone else how unreasonable the first person's arguments are while they're still standing right in front of you. It's unnecessary and rude to do that in a post that isn't even addressing the person in question.
It was, but from my perspective, I felt I was being told that I'm wrong about stuff stated in plain, unambiguous language (seemingly including that 1992 somehow came before 1985), and had something I didn't say being attributed to me (the 1979 misunderstanding). I was annoyed.

It was still unnecessary, though, yes.

When something on the internet annoys me, I find taking a break helps give a more reasonable response. You get to calm down and think of something more polite to say than if you didn't. It can make a difference even if you're not particularly mad or annoyed, but need a moment to think or do something else. As long as you remember to save your progress if you already started typing, there's no harm in it. You can't completely avoid getting mad about stuff but the way you respond can make a big difference regarding the overall tone of the discussion. One of the things I like about forum discussions is that you get more time to think and feel less rushed in a discussion than when discussing things in person, especially with people who rely on that issue to cut off opposing arguments.
 

The Twilight Mexican

Ex-SeeD-ingly good
AKA
TresDias
When looking at the OG flashback, Gast is seen walking into the mansion ahead of Hojo and Lucrecia, confirming that he was there around that time. Vincent even mentions Gast along with Hojo and Lucrecia when he says he couldn't stop the experiments leading to Sephiroth.

After the bits about the romance, we get to Vincent insisting that he's against the experiments Hojo and Lucrecia are about to begin.

The flashback then shows Vincent arguing with Hojo after the experiments cause Lucrecia to collapse, followed by Hojo shooting and experimenting on him.

Lucrecia says she never got to hold Sephiroth and can't die. It seems to be implied she tried to kill herself before going to the cave you find her in. There's nothing to keep her there after losing Vincent and Sephiroth so she'd have to have left shortly after that.
Again, no dates are given. We just get transitions from one scene to another across what was already obviously close to a year (time for Vincent to meet Lucrecia, fall in love with her, get rejected, for her to get with Hojo, be pregnant, etc.). The span of time was just greater than we thought.

As I said before, we all thought Vincent confronting Hojo was related to Lucrecia collapsing, and that it had happened right after. Based on the construction of the scene, we had no reason to think anything else. We were wrong, though.

Starling said:
There's nothing to keep her there after losing Vincent and Sephiroth so she'd have to have left shortly after that.
She wouldn't have had to, no, but she did stay there for quite some time. We see as much in DoC.

Starling said:
Vague approximations like the one in the Ultimania aren't exactly specific and going with a nice round number like 50 or 30 leaves it open for whatever's within 10 years of that unless additional information makes the range more specific.
I think it's reasonable to say that "approximately 60" is a better fit for 57 than "approximately 50," especially when we're given "approximately 23" for the event of his death and specifically 27 for his age at the time.

Starling said:
What about the calculations I made about Sephiroth's age in relation to when Angeal and Genesis joined SOLDIER?
Not unreasonable. It's more of a speculation than a calculation, though.

Starling said:
Sometimes mistakes occur in official sources or they give information that conflicts with more reasonable information given in another official source. It reminds me a bit of the whole FFX and FF7 thing and basically everything about the Shera.
I'm not sure that's a good example. There's nothing particularly problematic there.

Starling said:
Like I said, Deepground doesn't need to be finished in those 8 years either. It's possible for them to have continually expanded after they got the basics running up to when the rebellion happened.
True enough. You still aren't addressing the math that makes all this unnecessary, though: 1985 came before 1992. That's cut and dry.

Starling said:
Scaling the physical location aside, the sheer number of people we're expected to think were hiding under there all that time is a bit much even with all the kidnapping Shinra's known to do.
Yes, all of the plotting issues with Deepground boil down to scale in one form or another.

Starling said:
Drafts are like prototype versions of stories and give insight to the development process but only what's seen in the finalized product can be considered canon, nothing more. Just because you can recognize elements of the final concept in an earlier one doesn't mean anything not mentioned in the final product can be assumed to be true.
Again, though, I am not talking about the Early Material File section.

Starling said:
The paragrapgh we're discussing said:
The last segment of the FFVII Early Material Files has been translated by hitoshura, and this one by far, offers the best look into the possible world of FFVII had the creators gone a different route. Below is a collection of notes and definitions regarding the world scenario and plot points of the draft of FFVII. Many things here are different from the original, finalized game, so please keep that in mind and don’t let yourself actually think this has anything to do with the finalized story. With that, enjoy!
That was just Makoeyes talking about the content of that article when he posted the translations. This is the paragraph on that page we're discussing:
Materials on the worldview and terminology, with many parts in common with the final game. Additionally, we have included “Another Hypothesis” which, while quite different from the final game, is an interesting interpretation.
That paragraph is straight out of the book. Well, translated straight out of the book.
Starling said:
Isn't each grouping on the game book translation page stuff from different ultimanias? The only page 56 on that list is Nanaki's profile in the 10th anniversary ultimania and I don't see any entry besides the early concept one that you could be referring to.
We don't nearly have every page of every Ultimania translated. There isn't a translation on the site for pg. 56 of the Ultimania Omega.

Here's what I'm referring to:
Keyword 【神羅カンパニー】
この世界を事実上仕切っている、巨大企業。もとは「神羅製作所」という名の兵器開発会社であったが、魔晄エネルギーの発見を機に飛躍的に成長。魔晄エネルギーを凝縮した「マテリア」や、魔晄エネルギーを直接その身に浴びた精鋭兵士「ソルジャー」を戦場に投入して当時世界全土に広がっていた大戦を終結 に導き、さらに生活面にも魔晄エネルギーを応用することで、その後の世界を支配した。

Keyword: "Shin-Ra Company"
A megacorporation that effectively governs the world. Originally a weapons development company named "Shin-Ra Works," it grew rapidly from the discovery of mako energy. Deploying crystallized mako energy ("materia") and elite troops who had been directly exposed to mako energy ("SOLDIER") to the battlefield, Shin-Ra guided to its end a great war that had engulfed the whole world in those days; in addition, they would later control the world due to the use of mako energy in people's day-to-day lives.

Page scan:
http://i.imgur.com/BYPkjDb.jpg

Very quickly, what are we told here?

-That there was a war going on "in those days" (when Shin-Ra discovered mako)
-Shin-Ra ended that war after developing mako, through adding materia and SOLDIER to the battlefield
-The SOLDIER units deployed at that time were only showered with mako (no mention is made of Jenova)
-After the war, Shin-Ra would end up controlling the world because of people's dependence on mako

It's clearly not talking about the Wutai War since that started in 1992, not "in those days" (i.e. 1959), and also because Shin-Ra already controlled the rest of the world prior to the Wutai War.

Starling said:
The Nibel mako reactor was the first one built, in 1968. Deepground answers directly to the president so their being in Midgar would require that Shinra have its base there, which happened when they constructed the plate. It'd be hard to manage Deepground if they were still mostly in the western continent as the location of their first reactor implies.

Not necessarily. The president could give orders from anywhere, the same as he gives out orders to the world from Midgar. For that matter, I don't get the impression he headed down into Deepground to personally oversee much anyway. He had the Restrictors for that.

Besides, by the time Deepground became the hellhole we know it for best, Shin-Ra would have probably already relocated since they did that in 1976.

Starling said:
Why would gamefaqs do that?
That's just the way it's always been with their site -- basic, easy-to-load documents and code.

Starling said:
I'd rather take a more positive approach if I can, even though BC is probably almost completely unsalvageable. The best way to start with this kind of thing would be by gathering all the references to dates, ages and order of events, deal with the inconsistencies there and put together a coherent timeline before addressing other inconsistencies. I'd also like to be able to point out when something covered is absurd from a logical standpoint and what would make more sense even if it's canon, though that might need its own section.

Elfe and Veld are the only assets from BC even worth salvaging in my opinion. :monster:

Starling said:
LO isn't considered canon anymore so it doesn't need to be included. I think BC's version of the Nibelheim incident is no longer considered canon by extension as well, considering their ties to each-other.
Basically.
 
Last edited:

Starling

Pro Adventurer
When looking at the OG flashback, Gast is seen walking into the mansion ahead of Hojo and Lucrecia, confirming that he was there around that time. Vincent even mentions Gast along with Hojo and Lucrecia when he says he couldn't stop the experiments leading to Sephiroth.

After the bits about the romance, we get to Vincent insisting that he's against the experiments Hojo and Lucrecia are about to begin.

The flashback then shows Vincent arguing with Hojo after the experiments cause Lucrecia to collapse, followed by Hojo shooting and experimenting on him.

Lucrecia says she never got to hold Sephiroth and can't die. It seems to be implied she tried to kill herself before going to the cave you find her in. There's nothing to keep her there after losing Vincent and Sephiroth so she'd have to have left shortly after that.
Again, no dates are given. We just get transitions from one scene to another across what was already obviously close to a year (time for Vincent to meet Lucrecia, fall in love with her, get rejected, for her to get with Hojo, be pregnant, etc.). The span of time was just greater than we thought.

As I said before, we all thought Vincent confronting Hojo was related to Lucrecia collapsing, and that it had happened right after. Based on the construction of the scene, we had no reason to think anything else. We were wrong, though.

Starling said:
There's nothing to keep her there after losing Vincent and Sephiroth so she'd have to have left shortly after that.
She wouldn't have had to, no, but she did stay there for quite some time. We see as much in DoC.
I don't recall the DoC scenes saying she stayed a particular amount of time. The scenes shared with the OG seem to agree on the events aside from inconsistencies with the locations. Lucrecia messing around with Vincent in an effort to bring him back is also meant to fit around the time she had Sephiroth, with her leaving when she couldn't do anything else for him. I don't think it's specified whether or not she's supposed to still be pregnant at that point but it all spanned 2-3 years at most.

I think it's reasonable to say that "approximately 60" is a better fit for 57 than "approximately 50," especially when we're given "approximately 23" for the event of his death and specifically 27 for his age at the time.
The 30 years thing tells me they prefer to round down rather than up. They're definitely not following mathematical convention with it. Anyway, 23 is an approximation as well. Where is that approximation? I'm just getting more than 20. In fact, his profile constantly goes back and forth between 20s and 27 for his age back then, as well as approximately 20 years and more than 20 for how long he was in the coffin, supporting that they round down when approximating.


Not unreasonable. It's more of a speculation than a calculation, though.
It makes a good case for the older end of Sephiroth's age range and the issues with the younger one. If a date is going to be taken as canon, then his has to be able to fit with the other dates and time ranges that are supposed to be canon as well. How would a younger age work in relation to all that?

I'm not sure that's a good example. There's nothing particularly problematic there.
I've gone at length a couple times about the problems with the FF7-FFX thing and some of the issues they cause. The Shera has some problems too like expecting people to just accept a massive airship being dug up and repaired to working order rather than the remains of one being reverse engineered into a better airship using modern technology. It's not really the issue we're discussing though so it can be something for later discussion.

True enough. You still aren't addressing the math that makes all this unnecessary, though: 1985 came before 1992. That's cut and dry.
I think we're having a misunderstanding here. Shinra started building the plate in 1976, 9 years before Rosso was born in 1985. round 9 months to a year and you have 8 years for Deepground to build enough infrastructure for that to happen. It's already been agreed on that Deepground has to exist before 1992.

Yes, all of the plotting issues with Deepground boil down to scale in one form or another.


Again, though, I am not talking about the Early Material File section.


That was just Makoeyes talking about the content of that article when he posted the translations. This is the paragraph on that page we're discussing:

Materials on the worldview and terminology, with many parts in common with the final game. Additionally, we have included “Another Hypothesis” which, while quite different from the final game, is an interesting interpretation.

That paragraph is straight out of the book. Well, translated straight out of the book.
The presence of many similarities does not justify taking any of it as canon despite being about a scrapped concept. That's why you need sources about the final product to confirm what actually made it in. What I said immediately following that quote was meant to address that. Makoeyes' warning was spot on and it would've been far too easy for people to get the wrong idea reading the first translated line without it.

We don't nearly have every page of every Ultimania translated. There isn't a translation on the site for pg. 56 of the Ultimania Omega.
You could've said that and quoted your source before I wasted all that time looking for it. Why didn't anyone ever finish with that if the translations are supposed to have been a major source of site traffic for all those years?
Here's what I'm referring to:
Keyword 【神羅カンパニー】
この世界を事実上仕切っている、巨大企業。もとは「神羅製作所」という名の兵器開発会社であったが、魔晄エネルギーの発見を機に飛躍的に成長。魔晄エネルギーを凝縮した「マテリア」や、魔晄エネルギーを直接その身に浴びた精鋭兵士「ソルジャー」を戦場に投入して当時世界全土に広がっていた大戦を終結 に導き、さらに生活面にも魔晄エネルギーを応用することで、その後の世界を支配した。

Keyword: "Shin-Ra Company"
A megacorporation that effectively governs the world. Originally a weapons development company named "Shin-Ra Works," it grew rapidly from the discovery of mako energy. Deploying crystallized mako energy ("materia") and elite troops who had been directly exposed to mako energy ("SOLDIER") to the battlefield, Shin-Ra guided to its end a great war that had engulfed the whole world in those days; in addition, they would later control the world due to the use of mako energy in people's day-to-day lives.

Page scan:
http://i.imgur.com/BYPkjDb.jpg

Very quickly, what are we told here?

-That there was a war going on "in those days" (when Shin-Ra discovered mako)
-Shin-Ra ended that war after developing mako, through adding materia and SOLDIER to the battlefield
-The SOLDIER units deployed at that time were only showered with mako (no mention is made of Jenova)
-After the war, Shin-Ra would end up controlling the world because of people's dependence on mako

It's clearly not talking about the Wutai War since that started in 1992, not "in those days" (i.e. 1959), and also because Shin-Ra already controlled the rest of the world prior to the Wutai War.
If I'm going to accept your point about the ultimanias repeating the 30 years ago approximation for Jenova's discovery, I'm going to have to hold you to the same logic and ask several questions:

Is Jenova's omission in reference to SOLDIER really acceptable as proof that she wasn't involved? It's possible they just didn't bother mentioning her in that context. X isn't mentioned so Y must be true isn't really how you prove things.

What does the SOLDIER entry in that book say? I doubt they'd have a Shinra entry without a SOLDIER one.

Is this the only time they ever mention SOLDIER without Jenova? That ultimania was 10 years ago and this isn't something you want to rely solely on one source for.

Why would Shinra add Jenova cells to the formula if mako did all the work? How would they transition from mako only to mako and Jenova?

While the OG mentions Shinra making materia artificially, it doesn't mention any war besides the one with Wutai. Is there another mention of that too?

As far as anyone knew outside of Shinra, mako was what gave SOLDIER all their abilities. Jenova's role in the matter didn't become public knowledge until after meteorfall.

Not necessarily. The president could give orders from anywhere, the same as he gives out orders to the world from Midgar. For that matter, I don't get the impression he headed down into Deepground to personally oversee much anyway. He had the Restrictors for that.

Besides, by the time Deepground became the hellhole we know it for best, Shin-Ra would have probably already relocated since they did that in 1976.
He could have someone sent up to speak directly to.

It's easier to keep tabs on a super secret project only around 5 people outside of it know about through short distance communication methods than a more easy to intercept long distance one. And again, heavy Shinra presence would help mask their movements when going to and from Deepground for stuff.

That's just the way it's always been with their site -- basic, easy-to-load documents and code.
That don't seem to account for readability. Searching a really long document for keywords to guide me to the section I want is something I'm unfamiliar with and from what I saw, the format seriously messed up the Japanese text.
Starling said:
I'd rather take a more positive approach if I can, even though BC is probably almost completely unsalvageable. The best way to start with this kind of thing would be by gathering all the references to dates, ages and order of events, deal with the inconsistencies there and put together a coherent timeline before addressing other inconsistencies. I'd also like to be able to point out when something covered is absurd from a logical standpoint and what would make more sense even if it's canon, though that might need its own section.

Elfe and Veld are the only assets from BC even worth salvaging in my opinion. :monster:
Completely rewriting everything but the characters so they could be introduced into canon in a way that makes sense would be nice. I'd be happy if the remake could do something with Deneh and just ignore her role in BC and all the inconsistencies that would cause. There's some stuff you could do with Rayleigh too, I think. The problem is the plot more than anything, since BC is basically like a self-insert Turk fanfic where the player Turk takes a tour through canon and gets to interact with people across the compilation. It's a spinoff that wasn't meant to be treated as a legitimate compilation entry or else it wouldn't be a phone game.

That they ported KH coded to the DS annoys me because it's about as nonsensical even next to all the other weird stuff in the KH series. That entire game was just a gratuitous tour through past games to accomplish something as simple as Mickey going "Hey, wait a minute! I should really look into what happened to those 3 keyblade wielding friends I had 11-12 years ago."
 

The Twilight Mexican

Ex-SeeD-ingly good
AKA
TresDias
Okay, ready.
I don't recall the DoC scenes saying she stayed a particular amount of time.
Dates aren't given, no, but it's clearly some time after Sephiroth was born. When Hojo arrives in her lab, she says she wants to see her son.

Starling said:
Lucrecia messing around with Vincent in an effort to bring him back is also meant to fit around the time she had Sephiroth ...
All we have to go on is the "approximately 23 years" thing. Anything else needs support outside the scenes themselves since they don't provide dates.

Starling said:
The 30 years thing tells me they prefer to round down rather than up. They're definitely not following mathematical convention with it. Anyway, 23 is an approximation as well. Where is that approximation?
It comes from three places. First, on the timeline from pg. 9 of the Ultimania Omega:
http://i.imgur.com/tjIXne0.jpg

Next, in Vincent's profile on pg. 46:
http://i.imgur.com/zQlrEpj.jpg

Then it was implicitly used again by his profile in the 10th Anniversary Ultimania when it said he was born approximately 50 years before FFVII (since 27+23=50).

Starling said:
I'm just getting more than 20. In fact, his profile constantly goes back and forth between 20s and 27 for his age back then, as well as approximately 20 years and more than 20 for how long he was in the coffin, supporting that they round down when approximating.
You may be right.

Starling said:
I've gone at length a couple times about the problems with the FF7-FFX thing and some of the issues they cause. The Shera has some problems too like expecting people to just accept a massive airship being dug up and repaired to working order rather than the remains of one being reverse engineered into a better airship using modern technology. It's not really the issue we're discussing though so it can be something for later discussion.
Alright.

Starling said:
The Twilight Mexican said:
You still aren't addressing the math that makes all this unnecessary, though: 1985 came before 1992. That's cut and dry.
I think we're having a misunderstanding here. Shinra started building the plate in 1976, 9 years before Rosso was born in 1985. round 9 months to a year and you have 8 years for Deepground to build enough infrastructure for that to happen. It's already been agreed on that Deepground has to exist before 1992.
I think you misunderstood what I was referencing. I was still talking about SOLDIER pre-dating Sephiroth. In the course of discussing that, I mentioned that Rosso was born in Deepground in 1985 and that the inhumane experiments that led to her birth were prompted by Genesis's birth. You posited that those experiments instead started after Genesis joined SOLDIER.

I'm pointing out that:

-Sephiroth became famous because of the Wutai War
-The Wutai War began in 1992
-Genesis must then not have joined SOLDIER until at least 1992
-Rosso was born in 1985
-1985 is before 1992

Conclusion: Since Rosso was born before Genesis would have ever even thought about joining SOLDIER, the experiments in Deepground began around the time of his birth rather than after he joined SOLDIER.

Furthermore, since Deepground originally existed as a SOLDIER medical facility, and since Deepground existed prior to even Rosso's birth, Sephiroth wasn't the first SOLDIER.

Starling said:
The presence of many similarities does not justify taking any of it as canon despite being about a scrapped concept.
Fortunate then that I didn't do or suggest that. =P

And instead provided this:

↓↓↓↓
Starling said:
That's why you need sources about the final product to confirm what actually made it in.
↑↑↑↑

Starling said:
You could've said that and quoted your source before I wasted all that time looking for it.
I cited my source explicitly: "That applies only to the Early Material File section of the Ultimania toward the back of the book, beginning at pg. 518. Though these details about Shin-Ra are repeated there, I'm referencing the company's profile from the front of the book (pg. 56). Several hundred pages before that, and right after the profiles of the main cast."

Starling said:
Why didn't anyone ever finish with that if the translations are supposed to have been a major source of site traffic for all those years?
Because doing translations is a lot of work, and a lot of material gets repeated across the different books. Given that it takes at least a little work to even size up whether a profile in one book or another has enough unique information to justify the additional effort of translating the whole of it, and given that it isn't worth it personally to a translator with limited time (for example, I have a girlfriend, a 15-week-old son and a job that requires 12-hour work days) to translate the whole of something they think is likely to be filled with redundant info -- well, I think I can stop this explanation here. :monster:

We have had quite a bit of info from other parts of the Ultimania Omega translated by hito, but he hasn't finished the project and likely wouldn't be satisfied with the bits and pieces he has completed being put together for publication in such an incomplete way. It's one of those projects that probably won't ever get finished due to lack of time/interest.

Starling said:
If I'm going to accept your point about the ultimanias repeating the 30 years ago approximation for Jenova's discovery, I'm going to have to hold you to the same logic and ask several questions:

Is Jenova's omission in referenceto SOLDIER really acceptable as proof that she wasn't involved?
Seriously? I gave you a list of factors to take together and synthesize, but you're nickel and diming me instead?

Starling said:
What does the SOLDIER entry in that book say? I doubt they'd have a Shinra entry without a SOLDIER one.
It doesn't tell us anything we didn't otherwise know, but I went ahead and translated it for you:

Scan of pg. 217:
http://i.imgur.com/0rzcRF4.jpg

神羅が抱えるエリート兵士。タークスにスカウトされるなどして集まった人材のうち、ジェノバ細胞を埋めこまれたうえに魔晄を照射され、身体能力を人工的に強化された者のことを言う。この過程は、通常ならばあり得ない変化を無理やり心身に起こさせる乱暴な試みであため、結果として異常をきたす者も多く、その変化に耐えることができた者のみがソルジャーとなる。
精鋭兵として選ばれた存在であるソルジャーは、その実力によってさら1ST、2ND、3RDの3つのクラウドにわけられる。上位クラスほど人数はかぎられており、最上位であるクラス1STに至っては数えるほどしかいない。それぞれのクラスには異なる制服が支給されるが、クラス1STのみは私服を着ることも認められている。

(Screenshot caption)
戦場で華々しく活躍していたセフィロスは、少年たちにソルジャーへのあこがれを抱かせた。クラウドやザックスがソルジャーを目指したのも、セフィロスがいたからこそ。

"Shin-Ra's elite soldiers. With their personnel recruited by the Turks, their physical capabilities are artificially enhanced through exposure to mako and the injection of Jenova cells. As many who undergo the process experience abnormal results, and only those who can withstand it will become SOLDIERs, the procedure typically isn't imposed on one's mind and body against their will.

Those selected to join these elite troops join SOLDIER in one of three classes -- 1st, 2nd or 3rd -- divided according to ability. The number of people in the top classes is limited, and only a handful reach the highest rank of 1st. Although each class is issued its own uniform, only those in 1st Class are allowed to also wear plain clothes.

(Screenshot caption)
Flourishing on the battlefield, Sephiroth instilled in many young men a desire to join SOLDIER. Cloud and Zack set their sights on SOLDIER because of him specifically."

Starling said:
Is this the onlytime they ever mention SOLDIER without Jenova?
No. There are separate entries for SOLDIER and Deepground SOLDIER in the 10th Anniversary Ultimania. The former mentions both mako enhancement and Jenova while the latter mentions only mako.

The Japanese fans who wrote this Japanese FF wiki also seem to have the understanding that Jenova isn't a necessary ingredient for Deepground SOLDIERs:

根本的にはDGソルジャーはソルジャーではない人間を改造する場合と、通常のソルジャーを更に改造してなる場合があるので、ジェノバ細胞を持っているかいないかは余り関係ない。

"DG SOLDIERs aren't SOLDIERs in the conventional sense, as -- whether enhancing a baseline human or further modifying an ordinary SOLDIER -- it doesn't matter whether they have Jenova cells."

Like I said a while ago, the DG SOLDIERs are more similar to Shin-Ra's original SOLDIERs, who would have been sent to Deepground while it was still a SOLDIER medical facility. I'd even argue that the design choices for Deepground reflect this, as they wear belts with the original SOLDIER logo (as seen on Cloud and Sephiroth in Nomura's artwork for the original FFVII) while Zack, et. al. (including Cloud himself) carry a different emblem in the Compilation titles.

Starling said:
That ultimania was 10 years ago and this isn't something you want to rely solely on one source for.
The book's age is a valid consideration, but the Compilation was in production at the time of this Ultimania's release. The book even has a small section about the Compilation, with entries for Advent Children, Last Order, Dirge of Cerberus, Before Crisis and Crisis Core.

And while it is true that some details even in the Ultimania Omega were inevitably changed by the Compilation (Aerith didn't meet Zack while selling flowers in Crisis Core, for example), this stuff about SOLDIER pre-dating Sephiroth is reinforced by what we learned of Deepground in the Compilation.

Starling said:
Why would Shinra add Jenova cells to the formula if mako did all the work?
Why wouldn't they keep trying to enhance their elite fighters? And who says mako does all the work? Jenova cells provide physical augmentation even on their own (look at the kids hopping out of trees in Advent Children).

Starling said:
How would they transition from mako only to mako and Jenova?
Same way they transitioned from having neither to just mako: experimentation.

Starling said:
While the OG mentions Shinra making materia artificially, it doesn't mention any war besides the one with Wutai. Is there another mention of that too?
I would argue that Cid's reference to the "meaningless war" (下らない戦争) when we meet him is this earlier conflict since he references Shin-Ra still being a weapons developer in those days, whereas it had changed to a power company by at least 1976, long before the Wutai War:

長くて下らない戦争中に、神羅カンパニーがいろんな技術を開発したのは知ってんだろ?
今は魔晄屋だが、昔は兵器開発会社だったからな。

"You know Shinra developed a lot of technological gadgets during the meaningless war, right?
Now it's a Mako company, but in the old days it was a weapons manufacturer."

That would also fit with this additional passage I looked at while I was fulfilling your request about the SOLDIER entry:

Scan from pg. 216:
http://i.imgur.com/r6alDE6.jpg

マテリアと戦後の社会
魔晄エネルギーが固体に凝縮されたものがマテリアだ。自然状態でもエネルギーの豊富な場所では天然のマテリアが生成されることがあるが、それは希有な例で、一般に出まわっているマテリアは、神羅が実用製品として人為的に作り出したものである。
マテリアには古代種の知識が詰まっている、と言われる。これは、星と対話してその知識を引き出せた古代種の力を、一般人でも、知識の凝縮体であるマテリアを介在させればある程度は実現できる……ということを指した表現だ。
マテリアは基本的に戦闘用であり、従来の兵器をはるかに超える力を持つ。兵器開発会社だった神羅がマテリアを商品化し、みずから戦場に投入したことは、ソルジャー投入と並び、大陸をまたがり長年つづいていた戦争をあっさりと終結に導いた。マテリア製造技術を編み出し独占していた神羅は、必然的に戦後の世界を牛耳ることに。世界は平和を迎えたものの、神羅の独裁体制のなり、ますます魔晄に頼って星やほかの生物の命をかえりみない時代へと突入し、今日に至っている。

"Materia and postwar society
When mako energy condenses into a solid state, it becomes materia. Although materia will sometimes form naturally in places abundant with energy, this is an extremely rare occurrence and what materia is generally available was produced by Shin-Ra as a commercial product.

Materia is said to contain the knowledge of the Ancients. Thus, it is possible for an ordinary person to utilize this solidified knowledge to some extent to draw upon the knowledge of the Ancients and establish a connection with the planet ... or so they say.

Materia is used primarily for combat purposes, with power far exceeding traditional weaponry. When they were a weapons development company, Shin-Ra commercialized materia, personally deploying it onto the battlefield along with SOLDIER, and quickly bringing an intercontinental war that had lasted several years to an end. Having the monopoly on the materia manufacturing process they developed, Shin-Ra inevitably dominated the postwar world. Although the world welcomed peaceful times, it led to Shin-Ra's dictatorship and the rush into an era of ever-increasing mako dependence without consideration for the life force of the planet and other living things -- an era that continues to this day."

Starling said:
He could have someone sent up to speak directly to.
We already know of the four Restrictors, each one controlling a section of Deepground. Why do we need to imagine someone else for that role?

Starling said:
It's easier to keep tabs on a super secret project only around 5 people outside of it know about through short distance communication methods than a more easy to intercept long distance one. And again, heavy Shinra presence would help mask their movements when going to and from Deepground for stuff.
While true, like I said earlier, by the time Deepground was really getting into the shady, twisted shit, 1976 had already come and gone.
Starling said:
That don't seem to account for readability.
GameFAQs has been around for a long time, and, believe me, back when most folks were using dial-up (myself included), the way they set it up was a godsend.

Starling said:
Searching a really long document for keywords to guide me to the section I want is something I'm unfamiliar with and from what I saw, the format seriously messed up the Japanese text.
I tried many ways to fix it and finally gave up.

Starling said:
Completely rewriting everything but the characters so they could be introduced into canon in a way that makes sense would be nice. I'd be happy if the remake could do something with Deneh and just ignore her role in BC and all the inconsistencies that would cause. There's some stuff you could do with Rayleigh too, I think. The problem is the plot more than anything, since BC is basically like a self-insert Turk fanfic where the player Turk takes a tour through canon and gets to interact with people across the compilation. It's a spinoff that wasn't meant to be treated as a legitimate compilation entry or else it wouldn't be a phone game.
That's not really a fair statement. Japan has always taken their mobile games more seriously. FFIV: The After Years was originally released on a mobile platform before it ever got rereleased through WiiWare or on the PSP, and that one has about as much content as the original FFIV.

Starling said:
That they ported KH coded to the DS annoys me because it's about as nonsensical even next to all the other weird stuff in the KH series. That entire game was just a gratuitous tour through past games to accomplish something as simple as Mickey going "Hey, wait a minute! I should really look into what happened to those 3 keyblade wielding friends I had 11-12 years ago."
Good summary. :monster:
 

Starling

Pro Adventurer
Okay, ready.
I don't recall the DoC scenes saying she stayed a particular amount of time.
Dates aren't given, no, but it's clearly some time after Sephiroth was born. When Hojo arrives in her lab, she says she wants to see her son.
I accounted for it being either before or after depending on how long Hojo experimented on him but it's really a matter of months if Vincent's body risked decaying that whole time like Lucrecia seemed to think. Makes you wonder if this means Vincent is technically undead. Even if she doesn't mean decay as in decomposition of a corpse, she was pressed for time to bring Vincent back in good condition. Since she was at least a few months into the pregnancy if not near term when Vincent was shot, it can't have been a year between then and Sephiroth's birth, placing them within the same year.

Starling said:
Lucrecia messing around with Vincent in an effort to bring him back is also meant to fit around the time she had Sephiroth ...
All we have to go on is the "approximately 23 years" thing. Anything else needs support outside the scenes themselves since they don't provide dates.

It comes from three places. First, on the timeline from pg. 9 of the Ultimania Omega:
http://i.imgur.com/tjIXne0.jpg

Next, in Vincent's profile on pg. 46:
http://i.imgur.com/zQlrEpj.jpg

Then it was implicitly used again by his profile in the 10th Anniversary Ultimania when it said he was born approximately 50 years before FFVII (since 27+23=50).
The 23 approximation is obviously a result of the 50 approximation. If they give one, they have to give the other. If they were willing to approximate 23 years first, they would've just said it was 23 and made Vincent canonically 50 in the OG. We know from the approximation they gave for Sephiroth's age and Vincent being physically 27 that his age range is 52-57. They're being vague for the sake of vagueness, as it's wholly unnecessary to try to mask their ages when they're willing to give as much information as they have.

Starling said:
I'm just getting more than 20. In fact, his profile constantly goes back and forth between 20s and 27 for his age back then, as well as approximately 20 years and more than 20 for how long he was in the coffin, supporting that they round down when approximating.

You may be right.

Glad that's settled. :)

I think you misunderstood what I was referencing. I was still talking about SOLDIER pre-dating Sephiroth. In the course of discussing that, I mentioned that Rosso was born in Deepground in 1985 and that the inhumane experiments that led to her birth were prompted by Genesis's birth. You posited that those experiments instead started after Genesis joined SOLDIER.

I'm pointing out that:

-Sephiroth became famous because of the Wutai War
-The Wutai War began in 1992
-Genesis must then not have joined SOLDIER until at least 1992
-Rosso was born in 1985
-1985 is before 1992

Conclusion: Since Rosso was born before Genesis would have ever even thought about joining SOLDIER, the experiments in Deepground began around the time of his birth rather than after he joined SOLDIER.
Didn't we move on from when Genesis joined SOLDIER after you showed that CC actually mentioned that Genesis was inspired by Sephiroth to join SOLDIER? I still think it's less realistic than other things they could've done but I know that doesn't change that it was said in proper canon. I even used that in my calculations estimating Sephiroth's most likely age. The whole thing that Deepground apparently shifted its entire focus on Genesis right after he was born is strange when you remember that Genesis and Angeal were also said to have been born normal children. Something else has to have been a factor there for it to make sense, whether Hollander got involved with Deepground or someone somehow thought it'd be a good idea to use his research despite the apparent lack of meaningful results. Even with those possibilities the justifications are a bit flimsy for my preferences. There are still things like how the DoC guide and 10th anniversary ultimania entries on Deepground say "following the existence of a SOLDIER called G", which doesn't line up with either Deepground changing with Genesis' birth due to the wording or Genesis joining SOLDIER due to the dates given.

Furthermore, since Deepground originally existed as a SOLDIER medical facility, and since Deepground existed prior to even Rosso's birth, Sephiroth wasn't the first SOLDIER.

That's currently being debated.

Starling said:
The presence of many similarities does not justify taking any of it as canon despite being about a scrapped concept.

Fortunate then that I didn't do or suggest that. =P

And instead provided this:

↓↓↓↓
Starling said:
That's why you need sources about the final product to confirm what actually made it in.
↑↑↑↑
The arrows were a bit much. Even though you ended up referring to a different source, I felt it still needed to be said while it was being discussed.

I cited my source explicitly: "That applies only to the Early Material File section of the Ultimania toward the back of the book, beginning at pg. 518. Though these details about Shin-Ra are repeated there, I'm referencing the company's profile from the front of the book (pg. 56). Several hundred pages before that, and right after the profiles of the main cast."
You mentioned your source but didn't provide a means of finding a translation since the site doesn't have one. I was stuck wondering which site translation you were referring to and then where I was supposed to find the source if it wasn't on site. That issue and the misunderstanding about which page you were going on about could've been avoided if you'd been clearer about that from the start. I don't think I would've found a translation if you hadn't taken the time to provide one yourself.

Starling said:
Why didn't anyone ever finish with that if the translations are supposed to have been a major source of site traffic for all those years?
Because doing translations is a lot of work, and a lot of material gets repeated across the different books. Given that it takes at least a little work to even size up whether a profile in one book or another has enough unique information to justify the additional effort of translating the whole of it, and given that it isn't worth it personally to a translator with limited time (for example, I have a girlfriend, a 15-week-old son and a job that requires 12-hour work days) to translate the whole of something they think is likely to be filled with redundant info -- well, I think I can stop this explanation here. :monster:
But wouldn't a page containing information about the setting be considered important? Especially if you want to check the ultimanias for consistency in relation to everything else. Redundancy is sometimes necessary for a complete and detailed comparison of available information. Having translated a few things from french to english, I'm aware it does take time to translate certain things in order to best represent the meaning and wording of the original text, though I would think it only takes reading the text and a moment of thought to decide whether or not something has information that hasn't been translated from the other ultimanias. Then, it'd just be a matter of whether or not you have time to actually translate or should let other people know about it in case they have the time and motivation to do it instead. As long as anyone willing to do it was given access to decent quality scans where everything is easy to read, I'm sure someone could've gotten around to it after a while.

We have had quite a bit of info from other parts of the Ultimania Omega translated by hito, but he hasn't finished the project and likely wouldn't be satisfied with the bits and pieces he has completed being put together for publication in such an incomplete way. It's one of those projects that probably won't ever get finished due to lack of time/interest.
Is there a thread, by any chance? I think it'd be worth reviving interest in the ongoing translations.

Seriously? I gave you a list of factors to take together and synthesize, but you're nickel and diming me instead?
That expression seems to be more about being cheap or charging money than it is about nitpicking and such. Anyway, you can't really blame me for wanting more than just assertions that what you're saying is stated on an ultimania page. A general rule of debate is that you can't argue a point relying on a source of information your opponent doesn't have access to, as it prevents them from saying anything about it. Game cutscenes are easy enough to dig up on youtube if you know what you're looking for and said game isn't obscure but translations of something that has no official translation is a lot harder. Now that you've provided that, the discussion can actually move forward in that regard.

Another general rule of debate is that you can't claim something isn't present based on a passage not mentioning it when it's mentioned everywhere else. You need more explicit evidence or else you're just defending it as a possibility. Finally, like an experiment has to be replicated before it can prove anything, you need more than one source to verify that what you're saying about canon is true. Since you argued that the repetition of approximately 30 years for how long ago Jenova was found by the OG gave it credence as a likely date, I thought it was only fair that additional sources would be required for this as well.

Starling said:
What does the SOLDIER entry in that book say? I doubt they'd have a Shinra entry without a SOLDIER one.

It doesn't tell us anything we didn't otherwise know, but I went ahead and translated it for you:

Scan of pg. 217:
http://i.imgur.com/0rzcRF4.jpg

神羅が抱えるエリート兵士。タークスにスカウトされるなどして集まった人材のうち、ジェノバ細胞を埋めこまれたうえに魔晄を照射され、身体能力を人工的に強化された者のことを言う。この過程は、通常ならばあり得ない変化を無理やり心身に起こさせる乱暴な試みであため、結果として異常をきたす者も多く、その変化に耐えることができた者のみがソルジャーとなる。
精鋭兵として選ばれた存在であるソルジャーは、その実力によってさら1ST、2ND、3RDの3つのクラウドにわけられる。上位クラスほど人数はかぎられており、最上位であるクラス1STに至っては数えるほどしかいない。それぞれのクラスには異なる制服が支給されるが、クラス1STのみは私服を着ることも認められている。

(Screenshot caption)
戦場で華々しく活躍していたセフィロスは、少年たちにソルジャーへのあこがれを抱かせた。クラウドやザックスがソルジャーを目指したのも、セフィロスがいたからこそ。

"Shin-Ra's elite soldiers. With their personnel recruited by the Turks, their physical capabilities are artificially enhanced through exposure to mako and the injection of Jenova cells. As many who undergo the process experience abnormal results, and only those who can withstand it will become SOLDIERs, the procedure typically isn't imposed on one's mind and body against their will.

Those selected to join these elite troops join SOLDIER in one of three classes -- 1st, 2nd or 3rd -- divided according to ability. The number of people in the top classes is limited, and only a handful reach the highest rank of 1st. Although each class is issued its own uniform, only those in 1st Class are allowed to also wear plain clothes.

(Screenshot caption)
Flourishing on the battlefield, Sephiroth instilled in many young men a desire to join SOLDIER. Cloud and Zack set their sights on SOLDIER because of him specifically."

Thank you. Odd that it specifically says they don't put people through the procedure without consent considering all that unethical experimentation without people's consent, as well as the Turks apparently kidnapping people for SOLDIER. On the topic of SOLDIER, how exactly do people go about differentiating the specific term from the generic soldier? Are they written differently or is it largely about context?

Starling said:
Is this the only time they ever mention SOLDIER without Jenova?

No. There are separate entries for SOLDIER and Deepground SOLDIER in the 10th Anniversary Ultimania. The former mentions both mako enhancement and Jenova while the latter mentions only mako.

The Japanese fans who wrote this Japanese FF wiki also seem to have the understanding that Jenova isn't a necessary ingredient for Deepground SOLDIERs:

根本的にはDGソルジャーはソルジャーではない人間を改造する場合と、通常のソルジャーを更に改造してなる場合があるので、ジェノバ細胞を持っているかいないかは余り関係ない。

"DG SOLDIERs aren't SOLDIERs in the conventional sense, as -- whether enhancing a baseline human or further modifying an ordinary SOLDIER -- it doesn't matter whether they have Jenova cells."

Like I said a while ago, the DG SOLDIERs are more similar to Shin-Ra's original SOLDIERs, who would have been sent to Deepground while it was still a SOLDIER medical facility. I'd even argue that the design choices for Deepground reflect this, as they wear belts with the original SOLDIER logo (as seen on Cloud and Sephiroth in Nomura's artwork for the original FFVII) while Zack, et. al. (including Cloud himself) carry a different emblem in the Compilation titles.

If DG SOLDIERs aren't considered SOLDIERs in the conventional sense despite apparently being the original version, then were they ever? The way the DG SOLDIERs are referred to as special and how at least some of them undergo unique experiments suggests that mako may be the only constant and that they're likely different from whatever the original SOLDIERs were like. On top of that, at least some of them were taken during the Wutai War, in which case they would have Jenova cells even if not all of them do. It's unlikely the Deepground SOLDIERs are exactly how SOLDIER originally was, especially since all sorts of experiments are being run down there in the constant pursuit of improvement. What if they started out with more typical SOLDIERs including Jenova cells and then decided to test out methods of getting SOLDIERs without requiring Jenova? The ultimania omega entry is still the only thing that specifically places SOLDIER's existence around Shinra's initial rise to power rather than at a later point.

Considering Cloud had that emblem in the OG, it's more of a design retcon than anything else. DoC came before CC so that retcon hadn't occurred yet.

Starling said:
That ultimania was 10 years ago and this isn't something you want to rely solely on one source for.

The book's age is a valid consideration, but the Compilation was in production at the time of this Ultimania's release. The book even has a small section about the Compilation, with entries for Advent Children, Last Order, Dirge of Cerberus, Before Crisis and Crisis Core.

And while it is true that some details even in the Ultimania Omega were inevitably changed by the Compilation (Aerith didn't meet Zack while selling flowers in Crisis Core, for example), this stuff about SOLDIER pre-dating Sephiroth is reinforced by what we learned of Deepground in the Compilation.

It's still a single source and therefore not enough on its own, which is why additional sources and the absence of contradictions with information given by the rest of the compilation is important.

Starling said:
Why would Shinra add Jenova cells to the formula if mako did all the work?

Why wouldn't they keep trying to enhance their elite fighters? And who says mako does all the work? Jenova cells provide physical augmentation even on their own (look at the kids hopping out of trees in Advent Children).
People's ability to jump absurd heights in ACC is difficult to measure when everyone seems to be able to ignore physics when convenient. If mako alone could already create SOLDIERs on par with the ones where Jenova cells were used, then Jenova cells would only be useful for the ones who were born with them and didn't really make a difference for anyone else as far as combat prowess goes.

On top of that, wouldn't Shinra need to deal with every case of mako poisoning where someone survives with sufficient exposure to effectively do the same thing as if they were mako only SOLDIERs? Surely there've been people who managed that and Shinra would have to routinely hunt down and get rid of anyone who does to avoid competition, no matter how out of the way those people may be.

Starling said:
How would they transition from mako only to mako and Jenova?

Same way they transitioned from having neither to just mako: experimentation.
I meant more on an administrative level. Did they stop accepting new SOLDIERs for a few years to implement the new system or just keep the old one until they worked out the kinks for the new one? If consent is such a big deal like the SOLDIER entry seems to suggest, then how do they even accomplish anything through unethical experimentation? Surely it'd skew the results and generally be less effective, costing them time and resources. On top of that, why would they keep the old version instead of updating the whole group? Is it because they don't have the sense not to constantly kill their assets?

Starling said:
While the OG mentions Shinra making materia artificially, it doesn't mention any war besides the one with Wutai. Is there another mention of that too?

I would argue that Cid's reference to the "meaningless war" (下らない戦争) when we meet him is this earlier conflict since he references Shin-Ra still being a weapons developer in those days, whereas it had changed to a power company by at least 1976, long before the Wutai War:

長くて下らない戦争中に、神羅カンパニーがいろんな技術を開発したのは知ってんだろ?
今は魔晄屋だが、昔は兵器開発会社だったからな。

"You know Shinra developed a lot of technological gadgets during the meaningless war, right?
Now it's a Mako company, but in the old days it was a weapons manufacturer."

That would also fit with this additional passage I looked at while I was fulfilling your request about the SOLDIER entry:

Scan from pg. 216:
http://i.imgur.com/r6alDE6.jpg

マテリアと戦後の社会
魔晄エネルギーが固体に凝縮されたものがマテリアだ。自然状態でもエネルギーの豊富な場所では天然のマテリアが生成されることがあるが、それは希有な例で、一般に出まわっているマテリアは、神羅が実用製品として人為的に作り出したものである。
マテリアには古代種の知識が詰まっている、と言われる。これは、星と対話してその知識を引き出せた古代種の力を、一般人でも、知識の凝縮体であるマテリアを介在させればある程度は実現できる……ということを指した表現だ。
マテリアは基本的に戦闘用であり、従来の兵器をはるかに超える力を持つ。兵器開発会社だった神羅がマテリアを商品化し、みずから戦場に投入したことは、ソルジャー投入と並び、大陸をまたがり長年つづいていた戦争をあっさりと終結に導いた。マテリア製造技術を編み出し独占していた神羅は、必然的に戦後の世界を牛耳ることに。世界は平和を迎えたものの、神羅の独裁体制のなり、ますます魔晄に頼って星やほかの生物の命をかえりみない時代へと突入し、今日に至っている。

"Materia and postwar society
When mako energy condenses into a solid state, it becomes materia. Although materia will sometimes form naturally in places abundant with energy, this is an extremely rare occurrence and what materia is generally available was produced by Shin-Ra as a commercial product.

Materia is said to contain the knowledge of the Ancients. Thus, it is possible for an ordinary person to utilize this solidified knowledge to some extent to draw upon the knowledge of the Ancients and establish a connection with the planet ... or so they say.

Materia is used primarily for combat purposes, with power far exceeding traditional weaponry. When they were a weapons development company, Shin-Ra commercialized materia, personally deploying it onto the battlefield along with SOLDIER, and quickly bringing an intercontinental war that had lasted several years to an end. Having the monopoly on the materia manufacturing process they developed, Shin-Ra inevitably dominated the postwar world. Although the world welcomed peaceful times, it led to Shin-Ra's dictatorship and the rush into an era of ever-increasing mako dependence without consideration for the life force of the planet and other living things -- an era that continues to this day."

So I guess what Cid says in the OG supports that a second war did actually happen. However, if that other ultimania entry you quoted is from the same one as the other, then those entries should count as the same source. Otherwise it'd be like trying to cite two different parts of the same document or book as separate sources in a research project that requires multiple sources. Of course, it's still an interesting entry and relevant to the discussion so I'm glad you translated it. As it stands, the other war seems to be canon but SOLDIER's involvement can't be confirmed to still apply, as Shinra could very well have had a more passive role simply selling weapons rather than actually deploying specialized troops. It'd certainly explain why they still bother with a mayor and why their hold on electric power is more notable than their apparent military capabilities before they'd established their monopoly.

Starling said:
He could have someone sent up to speak directly to.
We already know of the four Restrictors, each one controlling a section of Deepground. Why do we need to imagine someone else for that role?
Only four? Weren't they originally an entire SOLDIER unit? Whether one of them or one of the scientists that would have to have worked down there, it doesn't really matter as long as someone could simply go report directly to the President whenever necessary. On the topic of the Restrictors, who exactly did their job before the Wutai war anyway?

Starling said:
It's easier to keep tabs on a super secret project only around 5 people outside of it know about through short distance communication methods than a more easy to intercept long distance one. And again, heavy Shinra presence would help mask their movements when going to and from Deepground for stuff.

While true, like I said earlier, by the time Deepground was really getting into the shady, twisted shit, 1976 had already come and gone.
Stuff involving that part of Deepground's history doesn't quite add up. I brought up the issue about how the ultimania entries say it was prompted by the existence of the SOLDIER "G" (Genesis) and how that doesn't seem to fit quite right but I'm still working on getting all the info that'd make it easier to properly scrutinize stuff like that.

GameFAQs has been around for a long time, and, believe me, back when most folks were using dial-up (myself included), the way they set it up was a godsend.
Just because it was great in the early days of the internet doesn't mean it's great now that times and the internet have changed. Dial up took so long to connect just that would take up most of the time my parents were willing to lose the phone line for. I largely spent my computer time on space pinball and age of empires 2.

I tried many ways to fix it and finally gave up.
I'm pretty sure the only way to properly fix that is to find a format that supports it without problem. Otherwise it just gets screwed up no matter how many times you fix it.

Starling said:
Completely rewriting everything but the characters so they could be introduced into canon in a way that makes sense would be nice. I'd be happy if the remake could do something with Deneh and just ignore her role in BC and all the inconsistencies that would cause. There's some stuff you could do with Rayleigh too, I think. The problem is the plot more than anything, since BC is basically like a self-insert Turk fanfic where the player Turk takes a tour through canon and gets to interact with people across the compilation. It's a spinoff that wasn't meant to be treated as a legitimate compilation entry or else it wouldn't be a phone game.
That's not really a fair statement. Japan has always taken their mobile games more seriously. FFIV: The After Years was originally released on a mobile platform before it ever got rereleased through WiiWare or on the PSP, and that one has about as much content as the original FFIV.
The problem with phones is that they're not really made for games. While technology has progressed and allowed to fit more processing power into smaller devices, size still matters regarding how much you can fit into a system. CC, for example had to deal with the limitations of the PSP, as well as the average production schedule for a decent portable game. Locations are a bit bland, there are way too many palette swaps/enemy renames and it shows that it could've done more if it were made for a home console. While the 3DS is capable of porting N64 games with graphical improvements, I've found the small screen size makes them feel smaller than when the TV served as the screen and dislike some changes that had to be made for the change in controls resulting from being ported to a portable console. Phones aren't even made for gaming, nor are their games held to the same standard as the ones made for actual gaming consoles. Sure, you can port an old game with 8bit graphics without that aspect suffering too much but I can't imagine going from a game controller to a touch screen or phone buttons would be an improvement in any way.

Pretty much every issue with BC, whether graphics, writing or gameplay boils down to it being a phone game. When held to the standard of other compilation entries, whether you like the other entries or not, BC is clearly inferior in quality. If they'd made it as a spinoff that is in no way canon and therefore not part of the compilation, that quality issue would've been more acceptable, though I'd still question their reasons for going with phones instead of a portable game console.

I find it strange you find my summary of BC unfair while agreeing with the KH one even though the same issues apply.
Starling said:
That they ported KH coded to the DS annoys me because it's about as nonsensical even next to all the other weird stuff in the KH series. That entire game was just a gratuitous tour through past games to accomplish something as simple as Mickey going "Hey, wait a minute! I should really look into what happened to those 3 keyblade wielding friends I had 11-12 years ago."
Good summary. :monster:

Thanks. You know, I actually managed to follow the plot of the franchise until KH 3D. I never really got around to looking into it that much though since the yaoi fandom discouraged me from actively looking for someone to discuss the series with. The KH section of the forums also doesn't seem to have much going on.
 

Roger

He/him
AKA
Minato
Considering Cloud had that emblem in the OG, it's more of a design retcon than anything else. DoC came before CC so that retcon hadn't occurred yet.

I think the new emblem existed by the time of the first Advent Children.
 

The Twilight Mexican

Ex-SeeD-ingly good
AKA
TresDias
I accounted for it being either before or after depending on how long Hojo experimented on him but it's really a matter of months if Vincent's body risked decaying that whole time like Lucrecia seemed to think. Makes you wonder if this means Vincent is technically undead. Even if she doesn't mean decay as in decomposition of a corpse, she was pressed for time to bring Vincent back in good condition. Since she was at least a few months into the pregnancy if not near term when Vincent was shot, it can't have been a year between then and Sephiroth's birth, placing them within the same year.
Only if you're assuming he was shot around the time of Sephiroth's birth, which we don't have reason to believe at this time.

Starling said:
The 23 approximation is obviously a result of the 50 approximation. If they give one, they have to give the other. If they were willing to approximate 23 years first, they would've just said it was 23 and made Vincent canonically 50 in the OG.
They did do the 23-year approximation first. That was given in the Ultimania Omega, which came out in September 2005.

The 50-year approximation for his age is from the 10th Anniversary Ultimania, which came out in September 2007.

Starling said:
We know from the approximation they gave for Sephiroth's age and Vincent being physically 27 that his age range is 52-57.

We only "know" that if we're disregarding what's been clarified for us in black and white outside a flashback filled with vague time transitions. =P

If they didn't want us to take the impression that Vincent was shot at least two years after Seph was born, they didn't have to use the "approximately 23 years" timeframe in the same source that provided "25-30 years" for Sephiroth's birth.

Again, "approximately 23 years" was given long before the "approximately 50 years" thing, so it's not like they had already painted themselves into a corner.

[EDIT: Going back and looking more closely looking at pg. 46 and pg. 47 of the Ultimania Omega, I found this --

----
【約23年前】ルクレシィア失踪。宝条を責め、逆上した宝条に肉体を改造されるが、それも罰だと受け止め、棺のなかで眠りにつく(※2)

※2
セフィロスを産んで数年ルクレシィアの身体はしだいに変調をきたし、外見も醜く変化していった。人に見せられぬ姿となった己に絶望したルクレシィアのせい――憤ったヴィンセントは宝条に食ってかかるが、逆に銃で撃たれ、意識を失っているあいだに宝条の「科学的好奇心」のエジキとなってしまう。

[Approximately 23 years ago] Lucrecia disappears. Vincent blames the maniacal Hojo, but ends up with his body modified by him; perceiving this as a punishment, Vincent goes to sleep in a coffin. (※2)

(※2)
For several years after giving birth to Sephiroth, Lucrecia's body gradually became abnormal, and her appearance became grotesque. Vincent fell into his own despair over her no longer wanting to be seen by anyone -- filled with resentment, he confronted Hojo and blew up at him, but was shot and fell prey to Hojo's "scientific curiosity" after losing consciousness.
----

That's very clear with regard to the timeframe.]

Starling said:
Didn't we move on from when Genesis joined SOLDIER after you showed that CC actually mentioned that Genesis was inspired by Sephiroth to join SOLDIER?
That was the main thing we were initially discussing, so everything I was bringing up at first was about that. You were still responding to points related to that.

Starling said:
The whole thing that Deepground apparently shifted its entire focus on Genesis right after he was born is strange when you remember that Genesis and Angeal were also said to have been born normal children. Something else has to have been a factor there for it to make sense, whether Hollander got involved with Deepground or someone somehow thought it'd be a good idea to use his research despite the apparent lack of meaningful results. Even with those possibilities the justifications are a bit flimsy for my preferences.
Deepground's focus didn't shift to Genesis; the experiments involving him led to a shift in focus. That's saying two different things.

Even if they were still waiting for the results on Genesis, that doesn't preclude doing new experiments with a procedure pioneered from the project that produced him. That's just how science -- and most everything involving trial and error -- works: You find something new to work with and continue tinkering with it. Even if you get a failure, you don't scrap everything involved.

Also remember that they weren't putting all their eggs in one basket. Weiss, Nero and Rosso were all the results of different experiments -- and they were still said to be the only three survivors out of hundreds of experiments.

Starling said:
There are still things like how the DoC guide and 10th anniversary ultimania entries on Deepground say "following the existence of a SOLDIER called G", which doesn't line up with either Deepground changing with Genesis' birth due to the wording or Genesis joining SOLDIER due to the dates given.
I will grant you that it doesn't explicitly refer to his birth the way other Japanese words could have, but that is why I used the literal meaning ("existence") of the word from that page. That retains the nuance that his coming into being was the catalyst for Deepground's turn to the dark(er) side while leaving wiggle room that it could refer to his birth, his gestation in his mother's womb or even just the project that produced him -- something in that time period related to his existence.

Remember that we're ultimately discussing something from another culture and a different language. It's perfectly acceptable, albeit a tad flowery, to use "sonzai" (存在 -- "existence"; i.e. "the status of being") to refer to something or even a someone. It sounds clumsy when translated to English, but you see this often enough, particularly in stuff with a literary bent. Other Ultimanias have used similarly odd-sounding constructions, such as referring to Tidus and Yuna as an "important existence" (大切な存在) to one another.

If you'd like to learn more about the word, here's a couple of links worth looking over:

http://forum.wordreference.com/threads/sonzai-suru-jitsuzai-suru.2514262/
https://books.google.com/books?id=W...AEIKDAD#v=onepage&q=sonzai difference&f=false

That second link even comments that "there is no 'good fit' for translating words that mean 'being'" (i.e. "to exist"), and that you must pick words related to the context.

There's probably nuances to "sonzai" I still don't know about.

Starling said:
The arrows were a bit much. Even though you ended up referring to a different source, I felt it still needed to be said while it was being discussed.
Seeing as it didn't apply to the discussion actually taking place, I disagree.

Starling said:
You mentioned your source but didn't provide a means of finding a translation since the site doesn't have one. I was stuck wondering which site translation you were referring to and then where I was supposed to find the source if it wasn't on site. That issue and the misunderstanding about which page you were going on about could've been avoided if you'd been clearer about that from the start. I don't think I would've found a translation if you hadn't taken the time to provide one yourself.
I didn't know that a) you wouldn't believe me; b) you were going to go looking for a translation; and c) you were going to think there was a translation on TLS. I was also posting from my phone, which isn't my first choice for dealing with Japanese anyway, though I often have.

And once again, I was explicit about my source down to the page number. A quick look over the index of translated pages from that book should have indicated within seconds that there was no translation for that page here.

If you were still confused after that, you could have simply asked me if I had a link to it somewhere rather than coming back much later to accuse me of being vague (I couldn't have been more clear) and blame me for wasting your time (you made your own decisions).

Starling said:
But wouldn't a page containing information about the setting be considered important?
Not when you have a dozen or more sources that mostly just repeat each other.

Starling said:
Redundancy is sometimes necessary for a complete and detailed comparison of available information. Having translated a few things from french to english, I'm aware it does take time to translate certain things in order to best represent the meaning and wording of the original text, though I would think it only takes reading the text and a moment of thought to decide whether or not something has information that hasn't been translated from the other ultimanias.
"A moment of thought" for someone fluent in the language, maybe; or for whom translating is their only hobby; or who has plenty of disposable time to set aside to stay in practice.

Listen, I realize you have no idea that you're doing it, but you're being extremely insulting. Please stop.

No one is paid for the translation work they do here, and it's often a thankless job too (especially when a translator gets blamed by other fans for the text saying things they don't like, as I have personally been on the receiving end of more than once). If a translator takes the time, be grateful. If they don't feel like it, they don't deserve a lecture.

Starling said:
As long as anyone willing to do it was given access to decent quality scans where everything is easy to read, I'm sure someone could've gotten around to it after a while.
I have scans of the entire Ultimania Omega. I own a copy, hito owns a copy, Shademp owns a copy. This is no secret. Yet we haven't exactly been inundated with requests to provide scans to willing and able translators who have nothing else to do with their time and lives.

We're also not going to host a file with all of the scans right there on the front page either, for what I hope are obvious reasons.

Starling said:
Is there a thread, by any chance? I think it'd be worth reviving interest in the ongoing translations.
It's pinned at the top of the donator section. One of the ideas for that section was to give members who helped with operating costs a look at works in progress, though that has rarely been done. It would, in my opinion, be up to hito to make the decision about the thread being moved somewhere visible to everyone.

The work being incomplete, I doubt he would be comfortable with it, and I certainly won't make that choice for him.

Starling said:
That expression seems to be more about being cheap or charging money than it is about nitpicking and such.
"To impair, weaken, or defeat piecemeal (as through a series of small incursions or excessive attention to minor details)."

So, yes, nitpicking is nickel and diming.

Starling said:
Anyway, you can't really blame me for wanting more than just assertions that what you're saying is stated on an ultimania page.
No, I don't blame you for that at all. I really don't. I'd probably have asked for a scan myself since I'd hope to take the time to look at it for myself.

Like I said earlier in this post, my problem is with not asking for more details if you needed them and then blaming me for your own choices.

Starling said:
A general rule of debate is that you can't argue a point relying on a source of information your opponent doesn't have access to, as it prevents them from saying anything about it.
I've engaged in formal debate, so I know all about the "that isn't common knowledge" tactic. I also know formal debate is a pissing contest more interested in who can land the best zingers or spin the most appealing argument than it is with seeing to it that the truth wins out.

I do enjoy debate for its own sake, but my interest here is in determining the facts, not "winning."

Starling said:
Another general rule of debate is that you can't claim something isn't present based on a passage not mentioning it when it's mentioned everywhere else.
You're referring to the "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" thing. I know. Like I said, you're not the only one familiar with debate or logic fallacies.

But I've not done what you're speaking of, so, once more, please stop being insulting. Again, I know you probably don't know you're doing it, but you are.

Starling said:
On the topic of SOLDIER, how exactly do people go about differentiating the specific term from the generic soldier? Are they written differently or is it largely about context?

"SOLDIER" is ソルジャー, pronounced "so-ru-jaa." Regular soldiers are 兵士, pronounced "he-i-shi."

Starling said:
If DG SOLDIERs aren't considered SOLDIERs in the conventional sense despite apparently being the original version, then were they ever?
To be fair, "conventional" only means "common" or "regular." Conventional automobiles of today aren't the originals either.

Starling said:
The way the DG SOLDIERs are referred to as special and how at least some of them undergo unique experiments suggests that mako may be the only constant and that they're likely different from whatever the original SOLDIERs were like. On top of that, at least some of them were taken during the Wutai War, in which case they would have Jenova cells even if not all of them do. It's unlikely the Deepground SOLDIERs are exactly how SOLDIER originally was, especially since all sorts of experiments are being run down there in the constant pursuit of improvement.
To be fair (again), I only said that Deepground SOLDIERs are more similar to the originals and that they would have initially been made up of original SOLDIERs.

Starling said:
The ultimania omega entry is still the only thing that specifically places SOLDIER's existence around Shinra's initial rise to power rather than at a later point.
Yet it says this more than once; it fits with what Cid says; and it fits with when Rosso was born. We aren't being asked to get a round peg to fit a square hole here.

If we find something out that is difficult to reconcile with the rest of this, I will acknowledge it all you like, but for now, we have a seamless flow of developments.

For that matter, why do we need more than one source book anyway? Are we going to start calling into question every statement in every official source that only appears once, even when everything else we know about it fits? There are many things that have only ever come up once, such as the origin of Aerith's name, Cloud's final Limit Break from Advent Children Complete being named "Omnislash Ver.6," and Banora being on the same landmass as Mideel.

Starling said:
Considering Cloud had that emblem in the OG, it's more of a design retcon than anything else. DoC came before CC so that retcon hadn't occurred yet.
Like Minato said, that redesign was unveiled as far back as during Advent Children's development. It was visible on Sephiroth's earlier Compilation redesign in the earliest promotional materials:

http://www.creativeuncut.com/wallpaper/ff7-advent-children-01c.jpg

That image was released in 2004, but the redesign may have happened as early as 2003 when the first trailers were unveiled. I can't find high quality recordings to see if the emblem on Sephiroth's belt was already different by then -- not that it will really be necessary since we've already established the emblem was redesigned no later than 2004.

Starling said:
... which is why additional sources and the absence of contradictions with information given by the rest of the compilation is important.
Long-held misunderstandings from the fandom don't count as contradictions, though.

Starling said:
People's ability to jump absurd heights in ACC is difficult to measure when everyone seems to be able to ignore physics when convenient.
The ordinary people getting attacked by Shadow Creepers didn't seem to, despite how convenient that timing would have been for them.

Starling said:
If mako alone could already create SOLDIERs on par with the ones where Jenova cells were used, then Jenova cells would only be useful for the ones who were born with them and didn't really make a difference for anyone else as far as combat prowess goes.
Who said they didn't gain any benefit from the Jenova cells?

For that matter, what point are you trying to make here? Even disregarding this whole conversation about SOLDIER, it's well-established that mako enhances people on its own. Weiss's enhancements explicitly come from mako without Jenova. Makonoids are explicitly described as humans who have been transformed by continuous exposure to mako. Sephiroth's entire plot in the original game was to absorb the totality of the planet's mako.

Starling said:
On top of that, wouldn't Shinra need to deal with every case of mako poisoning where someone survives with sufficient exposure to effectively do the same thing as if they were mako only SOLDIERs? Surely there've been people who managed that and Shinra would have to routinely hunt down and get rid of anyone who does to avoid competition, no matter how out of the way those people may be.
It goes without saying that such occurrences must be rare, if they ever occur. There's apparently enough medical knowledge about mako poisoning for a doctor in Mideel of all places to know how to diagnose it, yet we've still never heard of that sort of thing happening.

I would think that should sufficiently answer your question. A question that -- if it needed asking to begin with -- would already apply whether this conversation ever happened since mako poisoning is a thing that happens anyway and mako alone is already known to enhance people.

Why are you asking this like it's a problem that only arises if you can make a SOLDIER without Jenova? Again, mako has been demonstrated time and time again to be a source of enhancement and power with or without Jenova.

It's also obvious, though, that Jenova provides something extra. Perhaps it increases magical strength more than anything, perhaps it simply makes one harder to kill -- but whatever it is, they clearly took to using it because they observed some benefit from doing so.

As I pointed out above, this is yet another question that you should be asking regardless of this conversation if it's truly a question that needs answering. Honestly, even if Sephiroth were the first SOLDIER of any kind, do you think they would have never bothered to see what happens if you do the process without using Jenova cells as well?

Starling said:
I meant more on an administrative level. Did they stop accepting new SOLDIERs for a few years to implement the new system or just keep the old one until they worked out the kinks for the new one? If consent is such a big deal like the SOLDIER entry seems to suggest, then how do they even accomplish anything through unethical experimentation? Surely it'd skew the results and generally be less effective, costing them time and resources. On top of that, why would they keep the old version instead of updating the whole group? Is it because they don't have the sense not to constantly kill their assets?
You're asking questions for which there aren't answers any fan could know -- and for that matter, these are more questions that really don't need answering. What we know and need to know is that Shin-Ra was corrupt and conducted experiments that were thoroughly amoral.

When our bad guys are at the point of performing random, Nazi-esque experiments on people just to see what happens while their officers wear Nazi-esque uniforms and the troops shout "Sieger!" (ズィーガー) -- the German word for "victor," and etymology of the Nazi's "Sieg heil!" salute (as if the point wasn't already driven home) -- then trying to introduce strict logic into the equation becomes a waste of time. Especially when we're discussing fictional villains who simply need to be presented as callous and loathsome to be effective in their roles.

(To clarify what I'm referring to, the Deepground salute translated as "Hail Weiss!" was "Saiger! Weiss!" in the Japanese text and audio. You can see Azul and several DG SOLDIERs say it at the 13:00-minute mark in this video.)

Starling said:
So I guess what Cid says in the OG supports that a second war did actually happen. However, if that other ultimania entry you quoted is from the same one as the other, then those entries should count as the same source. Otherwise it'd be like trying to cite two different parts of the same document or book as separate sources in a research project that requires multiple sources. Of course, it's still an interesting entry and relevant to the discussion so I'm glad you translated it. As it stands, the other war seems to be canon but SOLDIER's involvement can't be confirmed to still apply, as Shinra could very well have had a more passive role simply selling weapons rather than actually deploying specialized troops.
Both entries explicitly speak of SOLDIER involvement and of Shin-Ra directly ending the war themselves. Again, we're not talking about anything from the Early Material File section, in which case doubt about the final product would be called for.

Starling said:
Only four? Weren't they originally an entire SOLDIER unit?

For all we know, there were never more than four in said unit. We don't have any other units with a known membership size to compare them to.

Starling said:
Just because it was great in the early days of the internet doesn't mean it's great now that times and the internet have changed.
GameFAQs continues to have an enormous user base, so I don't think it's hurting them. For that matter, have you seen the primitive interface for 2chan, Japan's largest online community (10 million users daily)?

Ease of use often trumps razzle dazzle -- especially now with so many people likely to use mobile devices to access their site. I'm pleased to see a high-traffic western site uninterested in vapid decoration that eats up data and increases load time/demand on memory. There are too many sites (news sites especially) that are almost impossible to use on mobile for reasons like that.

Starling said:
I find it strange you find my summary of BC unfair while agreeing with the KH one even though the same issues apply.
Your summary of BC was fine. This comment was inaccurate, though: "It's a spinoff that wasn't meant to be treated as a legitimate compilation entry or else it wouldn't be a phone game."

They've always treated BC as a legitimate entry, and given it plenty of attention. Last Order and Dirge of Cerberus Lost Episode are the only titles they've disavowed being part of the Compilation. Ironically, DC Lost Episode was a mobile title as well, but was the only one of the two to be orphaned.

And anyway, like I mentioned, FFIV: The After Years came to mobile first.

Starling said:
You know, I actually managed to follow the plot of the franchise until KH 3D.
They more than dropped the ball at that point. They put a hole in it and let the air out.
 
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I have scans of the entire Ultimania Omega. I own a copy, hito owns a copy, Shademp owns a copy. This is no secret. Yet we haven't exactly been inundated with requests to provide scans to willing and able translators who have nothing else to do with their time and lives.
To be more exact, I own three copies. :monster: One sealed, one for casual flipping, one to pull out pages and scan or photograph either at my own leisure or by somebody's request.
 

Starling

Pro Adventurer
I accounted for it being either before or after depending on how long Hojo experimented on him but it's really a matter of months if Vincent's body risked decaying that whole time like Lucrecia seemed to think. Makes you wonder if this means Vincent is technically undead. Even if she doesn't mean decay as in decomposition of a corpse, she was pressed for time to bring Vincent back in good condition. Since she was at least a few months into the pregnancy if not near term when Vincent was shot, it can't have been a year between then and Sephiroth's birth, placing them within the same year.
Only if you're assuming he was shot around the time of Sephiroth's birth, which we don't have reason to believe at this time.
See below.


Starling said:
The 23 approximation is obviously a result of the 50 approximation. If they give one, they have to give the other. If they were willing to approximate 23 years first, they would've just said it was 23 and made Vincent canonically 50 in the OG.
They did do the 23-year approximation first. That was given in the Ultimania Omega, which came out in September 2005.

The 50-year approximation for his age is from the 10th Anniversary Ultimania, which came out in September 2007.
It's more that they referenced the 23 year approximation before the 50 one as they have to exist together to have any consistency. You'd probably have to ask them directly to be absolutely sure which they decided on first since this is more about the equation than the result.


Starling said:
We know from the approximation they gave for Sephiroth's age and Vincent being physically 27 that his age range is 52-57.
We only "know" that if we're disregarding what's been clarified for us in black and white outside a flashback filled with vague time transitions. =P

If they didn't want us to take the impression that Vincent was shot at least two years after Seph was born, they didn't have to use the "approximately 23 years" timeframe in the same source that provided "25-30 years" for Sephiroth's birth.
Judging by the contradictions throughout the compilation, I think it's safe to say they don't have the forethought to avoid a discrepancy like that. It's obvious they have trouble keeping their dates straight considering the consistency issue here.

More importantly, those transitions aren't as vague as you seem to think. The OG flashbacks aim to show events more than tell you what's happening, hence being sparing in what it tells you, instead letting you to see for yourself. There's little dialog in the flashbacks and quite frankly, dialog isn't really needed to understand what's being conveyed. Storytelling is a combination of show and tell, where too much show over tell is bad storytelling and conflicts in what's shown vs what's told can lead to inconsistencies the same way conflicting storytelling in different parts of the same continuity is why the compilation has so many consistency issues.


Again, "approximately 23 years" was given long before the "approximately 50 years" thing, so it's not like they had already painted themselves into a corner.

[EDIT: Going back and looking more closely looking at pg. 46 and pg. 47 of the Ultimania Omega, I found this --

----
【約23年前】ルクレシィア失踪。宝条を責め、逆上した宝条に肉体を改造されるが、それも罰だと受け止め、棺のなかで眠りにつく(※2)

※2
セフィロスを産んで数年ルクレシィアの身体はしだいに変調をきたし、外見も醜く変化していった。人に見せられぬ姿となった己に絶望したルクレシィアのせい――憤ったヴィンセントは宝条に食ってかかるが、逆に銃で撃たれ、意識を失っているあいだに宝条の「科学的好奇心」のエジキとなってしまう。

[Approximately 23 years ago] Lucrecia disappears. Vincent blames the maniacal Hojo, but ends up with his body modified by him; perceiving this as a punishment, Vincent goes to sleep in a coffin. (※2)

(※2)
For several years after giving birth to Sephiroth, Lucrecia's body gradually became abnormal, and her appearance became grotesque. Vincent fell into his own despair over her no longer wanting to be seen by anyone -- filled with resentment, he confronted Hojo and blew up at him, but was shot and fell prey to Hojo's "scientific curiosity" after losing consciousness.
----

That's very clear with regard to the timeframe.]
Lucrecia disappearing before Vincent was shot flies in the face of Lucrecia being shown to be around after he was shot. Also, if that were canon then Sephiroth would have to be born before Vincent was shot.

The OG and DoC give no indication that Lucrecia is in any way supposed to be seen as grotesque or deformed in any way. The most it gives is that Lucrecia didn't want to be around anyone which seems to be more about despairing over the whole thing with Sephiroth and not being able to die.


0:06-4:15 is the stuff involving Vincent.
First, Vincent is surprised to see Lucrecia in the cave and tries to go to her, only for Lucrecia to tell him to stay back, starting the flashbacks.

Lucrecia, Hojo, Gast and Vincent are seen walking into the mansion, around the start of the project.

Vincent and Lucrecia are seen walking through Nibelheim together to signify them getting closer during their time together.

Lucrecia and Vincent are seen holding hands while facing each other, then Lucrecia lets go and runs off, Vincent holding his hand out as if asking her to wait. This is meant to signify when their relationship ended.

Lucrecia and Hojo are seen embracing and Vincent turns away sadly. We then get the line "If she is happy... then I don't mind." Showing that while Vincent was unhappy that Lucrecia went with Hojo, he was willing to put his feelings aside if it meant Lucrecia would be happy.

Lucrecia is seen patting her stomach while sitting in a chair, a pretty standard way of indicating that a female character is pregnant, especially in this context.

Vincent is seen arguing with Hojo about being against conducting experiments on humans, Hojo objecting that he and Lucrecia are both scientists, know what they're doing and are ok with using their unborn child. Lucrecia is also shown to be present and on Hojo's side. We then get Vincent saying Sephiroth was born at some point after that.

Lucrecia is seen collapsing in the same room she was shown in the scene indicating her pregnancy, which is presumably where she stayed while in Nibelheim.

Vincent is seen confronting Hojo about the experiment. No words are given but the gestures indicate the argument becoming more heated until Hojo simply shoots Vincent.

Next scene shows Vincent on a table while Hojo experiments on him, then transitions to Vincent getting up and transforming, presumably into Galian Beast judging by the sounds and Galian being Vincent's first limit break.

What Vincent says following this indicates that he considers the way he is after the experiments to be a punishment for not being able to stop Gast, Hojo and Lucrecia from going through with the experiment.

After the flashbacks are over, Vincent seems to express that he's surprised to see her alive, implying he thought she died at some point.

Lucrecia tells him that she didn't want to be with anyone, she wanted to die but she couldn't because of the effect the Jenova cells had on her. Aside from the dreams she mentions having of Sephiroth, she also says that she never got to hold Sephiroth, as if Vincent didn't necessarily know by that point, which he wouldn't if she disappeared after he was shot.

From the way the flashback is set up, there's good reason to think it all unfolds chronologically. Given that Vincent mentions Sephiroth being born between the part where he objects to the start of the experiment and the one where Lucrecia collapses, it would seem that her collapse is meant to be taken as having taken place either right before or at some point after Sephiroth was born. That Vincent was shown arguing with Hojo following the scene where she collapsed indicates that we are meant to infer that the unintended complications causing Lucrecia to collapse in that manner prompted Vincent to renew objections more insistently than before, which is when Hojo shot him. This would place Sephiroth's birth not long before Vincent got shot and experimented on.

To further support this, Vincent knew Lucrecia had a son named Sephiroth, which means either the name was brought up before Sephiroth was born or Lucrecia gave birth shortly before Vincent was shot.

Here are video compilations of the relevant DoC flashbacks:

Part 1

Part 2

Now in DoC, the flashbacks aren't given together or in chronological order but it generally reiterates the OG flashbacks and adds stuff about Grimoire, Chaos and Lucrecia experimenting on Vincent after Hojo.

In the DoC flashbacks, Lucrecia was troubled at having to work with the son of her mentor, whose death she felt guilty about. However, she grew to like him over time as shown with stuff like that picnic under the tree. The falling out between Vincent and Lucrecia was attributed to Vincent finding out about her association with his father, in circumstances that seem to imply Hojo left the information out for Vincent to find by accident and Lucrecia thought he'd been snooping around and found it. She clearly harbours immense guilt on the matter and is trying to avoid reminders of it, so it's not something she'd bring up on a computer and just leave for others to stumble upon. That Hojo mentions her coming to her senses and choosing him suggests that he was trying to court her around that time as well, manipulating her emotions in his favour.

In the DoC version of the scene where Vincent objects to the experiments Hojo and Lucrecia plan on doing, Lucrecia is shown to still be emotionally distraught following the issues with Vincent, not really listening to his genuine concerns for her and he child's well-being and insistent that her choices don't concern him. Lucrecia's collapse is still placed after this scene as a consequence of the experiment and what Vincent would be objecting to when he asks Hojo why he "let this happen" in the DoC version of the confrontation between them.

The scene where Lucrecia collapses adds flashes of Jenova, Sephiroth burning Nibelheim, the white materia falling and Meteor as what may be the kind of dreams Lucrecia was apparently having about Sephiroth or simply some foreshadowing they felt like adding. In some of the scenes where Lucrecia is trying to bring Vincent back, we see that she still seems to be suffering from those problems at that point.

We also see that she apparently walked in on Hojo as he was manically laughing over Vincent's body, showing her just how deranged he really is. During the scenes where she's trying to revive Vincent, we can see that her failure to make progress on it, Hojo dropping in to mess with her and her inability to see let alone hold her son, she gets increasingly desperate and somewhat irrational until she simply can't take it anymore and leaves information to help Vincent, hoping he'll find it someday. Lack of mention of her apparent suicide attempt may be due to censorship or the tone they were going for. The part where she actually brings up Sephiroth seems to be close to when she left, though. DoC seems to want us to think Sephiroth was born after Vincent was shot, as it's somewhat odd that she'd only bring him up that close to when she left if he was around all that time. Of course, it may not be so odd if the experimentation lasted only a few months. Either way, Lucrecia was pregnant before Vincent got shot, meaning he was born either before or a few months after, regardless of how long Lucrecia stuck around before leaving.


Starling said:
Didn't we move on from when Genesis joined SOLDIER after you showed that CC actually mentioned that Genesis was inspired by Sephiroth to join SOLDIER?
That was the main thing we were initially discussing, so everything I was bringing up at first was about that. You were still responding to points related to that.
Mostly because it brought up stuff like disagreement over when Sephiroth was born and the continuity issues pertaining to Deepground, which is why this discussion is still going.


Starling said:
The whole thing that Deepground apparently shifted its entire focus on Genesis right after he was born is strange when you remember that Genesis and Angeal were also said to have been born normal children. Something else has to have been a factor there for it to make sense, whether Hollander got involved with Deepground or someone somehow thought it'd be a good idea to use his research despite the apparent lack of meaningful results. Even with those possibilities the justifications are a bit flimsy for my preferences.
Deepground's focus didn't shift to Genesis; the experiments involving him led to a shift in focus. That's saying two different things.

Even if they were still waiting for the results on Genesis, that doesn't preclude doing new experiments with a procedure pioneered from the project that produced him. That's just how science -- and most everything involving trial and error -- works: You find something new to work with and continue tinkering with it. Even if you get a failure, you don't scrap everything involved.

Also remember that they weren't putting all their eggs in one basket. Weiss, Nero and Rosso were all the results of different experiments -- and they were still said to be the only three survivors out of hundreds of experiments.
Considering the reports made them out to be obsessed about Genesis being what they strive to live up to and the whole Tsviets are the hellspawn of G thing makes it seem like Genesis himself was a key factor in what their experiments were trying to achieve. Sephiroth is basically the superior version of what Shinra was hoping to achieve with Genesis, so you'd think they would've used Sephiroth as the template for their experiments instead.

Why they keep going on about Genesis with little to no mention of Sephiroth shows a distinct preference for Genesis despite how little time passed between their conceptions. Basing their goals around the experiments involving Genesis is one thing but going so far as to gloss over the progress involving Sephiroth and to use Genesis specifically for the Tsviets is another.

It's an aspect of Deepground's history that simply doesn't match up.

Starling said:
There are still things like how the DoC guide and 10th anniversary ultimania entries on Deepground say "following the existence of a SOLDIER called G", which doesn't line up with either Deepground changing with Genesis' birth due to the wording or Genesis joining SOLDIER due to the dates given.
I will grant you that it doesn't explicitly refer to his birth the way other Japanese words could have, but that is why I used the literal meaning ("existence") of the word from that page. That retains the nuance that his coming into being was the catalyst for Deepground's turn to the dark(er) side while leaving wiggle room that it could refer to his birth, his gestation in his mother's womb or even just the project that produced him -- something in that time period related to his existence.

Remember that we're ultimately discussing something from another culture and a different language. It's perfectly acceptable, albeit a tad flowery, to use "sonzai" (存在 -- "existence"; i.e. "the status of being") to refer to something or even a someone. It sounds clumsy when translated to English, but you see this often enough, particularly in stuff with a literary bent. Other Ultimanias have used similarly odd-sounding constructions, such as referring to Tidus and Yuna as an "important existence" (大切な存在) to one another.

If you'd like to learn more about the word, here's a couple of links worth looking over:

http://forum.wordreference.com/threads/sonzai-suru-jitsuzai-suru.2514262/
https://books.google.com/books?id=W...AEIKDAD#v=onepage&q=sonzai difference&f=false

That second link even comments that "there is no 'good fit' for translating words that mean 'being'" (i.e. "to exist"), and that you must pick words related to the context.

There's probably nuances to "sonzai" I still don't know about.
Interesting. I'll have to remember thiat aspect of the Japanese language and culture in the future.

I think this leaves room for Deepground to gain interest in Genesis or his project at a later point than his birth, even if they did so before he joined SOLDIER. After all, he was initially considered relatively normal so there wouldn't be much reason to be interested in the project until some noteworthy result drew their attention to it, in which case that Genesis exists would still be a way they'd likely reference it.


Starling said:
The arrows were a bit much. Even though you ended up referring to a different source, I felt it still needed to be said while it was being discussed.
Seeing as it didn't apply to the discussion actually taking place, I disagree.
It was relevant to the part concerning the unused materials. Even when you said that wasn't where your source was, you still pointed out the paragraph about the usage of the material, making any response to that relevant.


Starling said:
You mentioned your source but didn't provide a means of finding a translation since the site doesn't have one. I was stuck wondering which site translation you were referring to and then where I was supposed to find the source if it wasn't on site. That issue and the misunderstanding about which page you were going on about could've been avoided if you'd been clearer about that from the start. I don't think I would've found a translation if you hadn't taken the time to provide one yourself.
I didn't know that a) you wouldn't believe me; b) you were going to go looking for a translation; and c) you were going to think there was a translation on TLS. I was also posting from my phone, which isn't my first choice for dealing with Japanese anyway, though I often have.

And once again, I was explicit about my source down to the page number. A quick look over the index of translated pages from that book should have indicated within seconds that there was no translation for that page here.

If you were still confused after that, you could have simply asked me if I had a link to it somewhere rather than coming back much later to accuse me of being vague (I couldn't have been more clear) and blame me for wasting your time (you made your own decisions).
An Ultimania entry you haven't heard about before that apparently goes against something you understood to be canon isn't really something you take someone's word on, especially since the Ultimanias have been somewhat dubious in their clarifications on canon at times as game guides seem to do.

Like I said, there's not much I'd be able to comment on regarding your source of information without looking at it myself, so I tried to find it and only saw the unused material translations. The translations on TLS are pretty much the only ones that come up in searches. I would've been fine with either mention that the translation wasn't something I'd be likely to find or a quotation of the information so I'd have more than just the gist of what's apparently on it. I'm pretty sure doing so falls under the burden of proof as it relates to supporting your claim.

Misunderstandings like this generally waste time for both sides involved so it's in everyone's best interest to avoid them. Like I said before, a page number doesn't mean much if I can't find the page. I made it pretty clear I wasn't finding your source and that the only thing I could find corresponding even partly to what you were going on about was the early material stuff.

Starling said:
But wouldn't a page containing information about the setting be considered important?
Not when you have a dozen or more sources that mostly just repeat each other.
So was missing stuff like the page you referenced just because no one got around to it then? A note that a particular entry is the same as another save for some different or other would be ok too as an alternative to retranslating the same thing barring correcting an error in the previous one.


Starling said:
Redundancy is sometimes necessary for a complete and detailed comparison of available information. Having translated a few things from french to english, I'm aware it does take time to translate certain things in order to best represent the meaning and wording of the original text, though I would think it only takes reading the text and a moment of thought to decide whether or not something has information that hasn't been translated from the other ultimanias.
"A moment of thought" for someone fluent in the language, maybe; or for whom translating is their only hobby; or who has plenty of disposable time to set aside to stay in practice.

Listen, I realize you have no idea that you're doing it, but you're being extremely insulting. Please stop.

No one is paid for the translation work they do here, and it's often a thankless job too (especially when a translator gets blamed by other fans for the text saying things they don't like, as I have personally been on the receiving end of more than once). If a translator takes the time, be grateful. If they don't feel like it, they don't deserve a lecture.
I kinda figured by the time someone got familiar enough with a language to translate it they'd be fluent enough to only really struggle with the culture specific stuff or at least assess whether or not new information is present in the untranslated text as they read through it.

If you notice that an entry is different from the ones already translated then you just have to decide whether or not you think it's worth your time to translate, or at least bring up to others in case they'd like to try it. Doing that much doesn't actually require translating it.

I'm not expecting anyone capable of doing it to have the time and motivation to do it, I was mostly wondering why it couldn't at least be noted down somewhere that anyone with the time and motivation to do it could choose to do it if they wanted to. Making translations something that multiple people could work together on if they want would probably help make it less of a burden, since it wouldn't be entirely dependent on a single person deciding one day to do it all themselves.


Starling said:
As long as anyone willing to do it was given access to decent quality scans where everything is easy to read, I'm sure someone could've gotten around to it after a while.
I have scans of the entire Ultimania Omega. I own a copy, hito owns a copy, Shademp owns a copy. This is no secret. Yet we haven't exactly been inundated with requests to provide scans to willing and able translators who have nothing else to do with their time and lives.

We're also not going to host a file with all of the scans right there on the front page either, for what I hope are obvious reasons.
The first step would have to be made on someone's part. People without the Ultimania copies wouldn't necessarily expect to get their hands on them or know who to ask for scans. Making a thread with them available might just prompt the interest you aren't currently seeing. Even if it doesn't, once it's on the forums it could potentially be revived once someone interested in it comes across it. It wouldn't hurt to try it.


Starling said:
Is there a thread, by any chance? I think it'd be worth reviving interest in the ongoing translations.
It's pinned at the top of the donator section. One of the ideas for that section was to give members who helped with operating costs a look at works in progress, though that has rarely been done. It would, in my opinion, be up to hito to make the decision about the thread being moved somewhere visible to everyone.

The work being incomplete, I doubt he would be comfortable with it, and I certainly won't make that choice for him.
Fair enough.


Starling said:
That expression seems to be more about being cheap or charging money than it is about nitpicking and such.
"To impair, weaken, or defeat piecemeal (as through a series of small incursions or excessive attention to minor details)."

So, yes, nitpicking is nickel and diming.
I must've missed that definition. To be fair, what people consider nitpicking and unnecessary criticism is subjective. I often don't mind what's generally considered nitpicking so long as it's done politely or brings up something interesting, as it's good to examine every aspect of an argument if you're going to take it as fact. If an argument can hold up to scrutiny, then it should be able to handle it just fine.


Starling said:
Anyway, you can't really blame me for wanting more than just assertions that what you're saying is stated on an ultimania page.
No, I don't blame you for that at all. I really don't. I'd probably have asked for a scan myself since I'd hope to take the time to look at it for myself.

Like I said earlier in this post, my problem is with not asking for more details if you needed them and then blaming me for your own choices.
I'd say expressing difficulty in finding your source while clearly trying to and how that was stalling the discussion would make it evident enough providing a translation or a link to one would be necessary.


Starling said:
A general rule of debate is that you can't argue a point relying on a source of information your opponent doesn't have access to, as it prevents them from saying anything about it.
I've engaged in formal debate, so I know all about the "that isn't common knowledge" tactic. I also know formal debate is a pissing contest more interested in who can land the best zingers or spin the most appealing argument than it is with seeing to it that the truth wins out.

I do enjoy debate for its own sake, but my interest here is in determining the facts, not "winning."
Referencing less well known information is fine if you can provide your opponent with the means to look at it themselves. Otherwise, assuming your point is made simply because they have no way to comment on your source would be poor reasoning and improper debating. Ideally, an objective participant to the debate would be available to fact check both sides but that's not usually possible in informal settings so that leaves it up to the one who references the information to provide the source if requested.

From what I've seen, the issues regarding formal debate seem to stem from imposing time limits, pressuring people to provide many quick and easy points rather than take the time to carefully think about the topic and come up with more detailed arguments. Even in regular discussion someone who knows what they're doing could easily use time limitations or the illusion thereof to force the other person to rush their points without putting as much thought into them or the first person's arguments, guiding the discussion in their favour. Of course, the same can be done if someone is allowed to bring up too much at once, so careful moderation is still needed. Still, when formal debate was touched upon in one of my classes, emphasis was placed on quality of arguments as well as objectivity in determining which points were made best and we were given a reasonable amount time to prepare our arguments, as well as the opportunity to research our subjects rather than put on the spot. Both classes of my year got the same topics, which were fairly even, as shown when we ended up with opposing results based on the quality of the arguments put forth. After all, it's hard to make a point if it isn't argued well, meaning quality of arguments will always be an important aspect of debate whether formal or informal. I'd say it was a very good learning experience.

Starling said:
Another general rule of debate is that you can't claim something isn't present based on a passage not mentioning it when it's mentioned everywhere else.

You're referring to the "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" thing. I know. Like I said, you're not the only one familiar with debate or logic fallacies.

But I've not done what you're speaking of, so, once more, please stop being insulting. Again, I know you probably don't know you're doing it, but you are.
Arguing that SOLDIER originally didn't include Jenova cells based on Ultimania quotes not bringing it up assumes that Jenova cells weren't used because they weren't mentioned, which I believe qualifies. At best it means both are possible until sufficient evidence is given to prove or disprove one over the other.

Bringing up fallacies when they're noticed is in no way meant to be insulting, as there are so many it's probably impossible to avoid all of them unless you spend hours proofreading everything while checking off a list of every fallacy you've made sure isn't present. Once the fallacy has been brought to attention, it's just a matter of correcting the issue.

Starling said:
On the topic of SOLDIER, how exactly do people go about differentiating the specific term from the generic soldier? Are they written differently or is it largely about context?
"SOLDIER" is ソルジャー, pronounced "so-ru-jaa." Regular soldiers are 兵士, pronounced "he-i-shi."
Neat. I guess that makes sense since proper names derived from english words seem to be used that way whenever they come up, though it's been a while since I watched anything like anime in Japanese with english subtitles to remind me of that tendency.


Starling said:
If DG SOLDIERs aren't considered SOLDIERs in the conventional sense despite apparently being the original version, then were they ever?
To be fair, "conventional" only means "common" or "regular." Conventional automobiles of today aren't the originals either.
I figure it's more likely they meant conventional as in the standard variety of SOLDIER by the time of the OG, since it's the main reference point for most of the information given. Of course, you'd think that would be an excellent opportunity for them to say something about what way they're supposed to be unconventional. It generally just gives the impression that they're different from the standard SOLDIERs and unique experiments are said to be conducted in Deepground, which is left as the first thing that would come to mind about why they're unconventional. It could also be that they're unwilling test subjects trapped in a secret facility rather than people who joined willingly like the SOLDIERs in Shinra HQ. Essentially, their status as unconventional isn't really indicative of whether or not they're anything like the original SOLDIERs and it makes you wonder if there was ever a time where they would've been considered conventional to begin with.


Starling said:
The way the DG SOLDIERs are referred to as special and how at least some of them undergo unique experiments suggests that mako may be the only constant and that they're likely different from whatever the original SOLDIERs were like. On top of that, at least some of them were taken during the Wutai War, in which case they would have Jenova cells even if not all of them do. It's unlikely the Deepground SOLDIERs are exactly how SOLDIER originally was, especially since all sorts of experiments are being run down there in the constant pursuit of improvement.
To be fair (again), I only said that Deepground SOLDIERs are more similar to the originals and that they would have initially been made up of original SOLDIERs.
And the lack of certainty for how similar they are to what SOLDIER started out as means you can't say for sure what SOLDIER was originally like simply based on what's seen of Deepground.


Starling said:
The ultimania omega entry is still the only thing that specifically places SOLDIER's existence around Shinra's initial rise to power rather than at a later point.
Yet it says this more than once; it fits with what Cid says; and it fits with when Rosso was born. We aren't being asked to get a round peg to fit a square hole here.

If we find something out that is difficult to reconcile with the rest of this, I will acknowledge it all you like, but for now, we have a seamless flow of developments.
What Cid says confirms a war but doesn't confirm SOLDIER's involvement in it, more than an approximated time range, or that SOLDIER didn't have Jenova cells unless the timerange is unquestionably, without a doubt before Jenova was found. Alone it just increases the probability that SOLDIER was involved unless something contradicts that.

Rosso's date of birth doesn't add to SOLDIER predating Sephiroth as he was born before her. It just places Deepground's founding before 1985.

For that matter, why do we need more than one source book anyway?
Because the compilation is full of contradictions and so information provided from one part has to be compared to the rest, much like how researching requires the ability to find multiple credible sources supporting the information you're using. The Ultimanias are supplementary material rather than a true part of the compilation and so don't hold as much weight as the source material. In order to determine the best way to sort out contradictions concerning information on a particular subject all claiming to be canon, you have to compare what all the sources say, account for the quality of each source and figure out what information best matches up with everything else. Basically, the kind of thing that consistency thread would be around for once I finally get around to posting it.

Are we going to start calling into question every statement in every official source that only appears once, even when everything else we know about it fits?
Yes.

Just to clarify, questioning statements that presumably fit with everything else would simply be a matter of confirming that and would likely be done in the process of identifying the contradictions.

There are many things that have only ever come up once, such as the origin of Aerith's name, Cloud's final Limit Break from Advent Children Complete being named "Omnislash Ver.6," and Banora being on the same landmass as Mideel.
The first two don't really apply in-universe. We can tell that the limit break Cloud uses to finish off Sephiroth in ACC is a variation of Omnislash simply through visual comparison and since it's extremely unlikely 6 variations of it exist, in-universe it's more likely to be called Omnislash version 2, though they could also potentially not bother make much distinction between the two versions. For Banora, the terrain and prevalence of shallow lifestream that eventually wells to the surface is rather reminiscent of Mideel, so a statement that it's on the same landmass basically confirms existing suspicions based on observation. Still, they could always change their minds about the location if it's only stated in an Ultimania.


Starling said:
Considering Cloud had that emblem in the OG, it's more of a design retcon than anything else. DoC came before CC so that retcon hadn't occurred yet.
Like Minato said, that redesign was unveiled as far back as during Advent Children's development. It was visible on Sephiroth's earlier Compilation redesign in the earliest promotional materials:

http://www.creativeuncut.com/wallpaper/ff7-advent-children-01c.jpg

That image was released in 2004, but the redesign may have happened as early as 2003 when the first trailers were unveiled. I can't find high quality recordings to see if the emblem on Sephiroth's belt was already different by then -- not that it will really be necessary since we've already established the emblem was redesigned no later than 2004.
Ok. What are the chances of Deepground having always had a different emblem than standard SOLDIER? It'd make sense considering their status as something separate from regular SOLDIER and I don't think anything was said about the reasons behind the retcon.


Starling said:
It's still a single source and therefore not enough on its own, which is why additional sources and the absence of contradictions with information given by the rest of the compilation is important.
Long-held misunderstandings from the fandom don't count as contradictions, though.
That's not addressing the point being made here. Comparing information given in various parts of the compilation and finding that some of it doesn't line up is, in fact, a contradiction.

Starling said:
People's ability to jump absurd heights in ACC is difficult to measure when everyone seems to be able to ignore physics when convenient.
The ordinary people getting attacked by Shadow Creepers didn't seem to, despite how convenient that timing would have been for them.
Bystanders endangered by the shadow creepers being able to easily escape would be inconvenient for the screenwriters, while having a bunch of children suddenly jump into Cloud's path to force him to crash and make himself vulnerable to attack, is. It's been admitted that the physics in ACC don't accurately reflect how things work in the setting, as they were focusing on the way things looked.


Starling said:
If mako alone could already create SOLDIERs on par with the ones where Jenova cells were used, then Jenova cells would only be useful for the ones who were born with them and didn't really make a difference for anyone else as far as combat prowess goes.
Who said they didn't gain any benefit from the Jenova cells?

For that matter, what point are you trying to make here? Even disregarding this whole conversation about SOLDIER, it's well-established that mako enhances people on its own. Weiss's enhancements explicitly come from mako without Jenova. Makonoids are explicitly described as humans who have been transformed by continuous exposure to mako. Sephiroth's entire plot in the original game was to absorb the totality of the planet's mako.
I'm fully aware mako can do things on its own. For example, It's suggested that mako is responsible for monsters but since at least some of them are presumably naturally occurring wildlife, it would seem it's more that mako has made them more aggressive and possibly more powerful. The thing is, they're not really an example of how mako alone affects humans and most examples of mako exposure in humans is either about mako poisoning or involves other factors in experiments.

Jenova cells certainly make a difference for people who were born with them but since they're noticeably above SOLDIERs who also have Jenova cells and the Deepground SOLDIERs are treated as equivalent, you have to wonder if it makes a difference for the rest, especially if Deepground has a mix of Jenova and mako only SOLDIERs that are apparently relatively even in power.

The confusing thing about the makonoids is that they say they're that way due to mako exposure but they're found in pods with tubes going to Jenova's chamber and some of the Genesis copies look like them. Disregarding the possible involvement of Jenova, it was also noted that the pods were for condensing mako, possibly for making materia, which would also be a factor in how the mako affected them.

They say Weiss is pure and doesn't have any of Jenova's influence but as a Tsviet he'd have G cells, which are derived from Jenova cells. In his case it would be that G cells somehow don't count as an impurity or Jenova, possibly for reasons I've brought up earlier in the thread.

When it comes to humans made stronger by mako, the strongest examples comparable to SOLDIER tend to involve Jenova or some variation of its cells and if not, involve some experiment that isn't really viable for making a whole army that way. If you can make normal SOLDIERs with just mako and have them be just as strong as the ones with mako and Jenova cells, then that leaves the implication that among the standard SOLDIERs, the Jenova cells don't actually give them any particular advantage.

In conclusion, we're supposed to think a combination of Jenova and mako make better SOLDIERs but it isn't reflected in how the normal varieties of SOLDIER are shown. I'd like to determine why.

Starling said:
On top of that, wouldn't Shinra need to deal with every case of mako poisoning where someone survives with sufficient exposure to effectively do the same thing as if they were mako only SOLDIERs? Surely there've been people who managed that and Shinra would have to routinely hunt down and get rid of anyone who does to avoid competition, no matter how out of the way those people may be.
It goes without saying that such occurrences must be rare, if they ever occur. There's apparently enough medical knowledge about mako poisoning for a doctor in Mideel of all places to know how to diagnose it, yet we've still never heard of that sort of thing happening.

I would think that should sufficiently answer your question. A question that -- if it needed asking to begin with -- would already apply whether this conversation ever happened since mako poisoning is a thing that happens anyway and mako alone is already known to enhance people.

Why are you asking this like it's a problem that only arises if you can make a SOLDIER without Jenova? Again, mako has been demonstrated time and time again to be a source of enhancement and power with or without Jenova.
I ask because if mako is all it takes to make a SOLDIER, mako poisoning occurs with sufficient frequency for it to be known outside of Shinra and it's common knowledge that mako exposure is involved even though Jenova's use isn't, then anyone with the right equipment could basically get some mako, dunk people in them and get their own SOLDIERs on the same level, even though Jenova wouldn't be included. What difference then would Jenova make for the standard SOLDIER? What would make it worth including if only unique cases reap any benefit? What exactly would be stopping everyone with motive to try to make their own army of SOLDIERs that should turn out the same as the supposedly originally mako only SOLDIERs? Wouldn't Wutai have been able to try that if it was so easy?

It's also obvious, though, that Jenova provides something extra. Perhaps it increases magical strength more than anything, perhaps it simply makes one harder to kill -- but whatever it is, they clearly took to using it because they observed some benefit from doing so.
From what I can tell, mako increases magical strength while Jenova would more likely render people harder to kill, not that this seems to make much of a difference for most. There has to be a benefit to Jenova cells that's applicable to standard SOLDIERs if Shinra's been using it as long as it has but that doesn't address the issues posed by SOLDIER having originally only required mako.


As I pointed out above, this is yet another question that you should be asking regardless of this conversation if it's truly a question that needs answering. Honestly, even if Sephiroth were the first SOLDIER of any kind, do you think they would have never bothered to see what happens if you do the process without using Jenova cells as well?
Wasn't that how they got stuff like the makonoids? Hojo definitely makes liberal use of mako outside of his Jenova experiments but it doesn't mean they came up with anything viable for standard enhancement before Jenova was used. Deepground seems to come across as where they do the bulk of the human experimentation to get stronger SOLDIERs, though without regard for viability of those methods as an addition to SOLDIER. That Deepground SOLDIERs are dependent on near constant mako exposure just to function is hardly a desirable trait for the regular SOLDIERs and would easily be quite problematic outside of an army that's kept on as tight a leash as Deepground, given next to no freedom.



Starling said:
I meant more on an administrative level. Did they stop accepting new SOLDIERs for a few years to implement the new system or just keep the old one until they worked out the kinks for the new one? If consent is such a big deal like the SOLDIER entry seems to suggest, then how do they even accomplish anything through unethical experimentation? Surely it'd skew the results and generally be less effective, costing them time and resources. On top of that, why would they keep the old version instead of updating the whole group? Is it because they don't have the sense not to constantly kill their assets?
You're asking questions for which there aren't answers any fan could know -- and for that matter, these are more questions that really don't need answering. What we know and need to know is that Shin-Ra was corrupt and conducted experiments that were thoroughly amoral.
Well, I was hoping you'd at least have some speculative input on that. If something can't be outright proven or disproven, then the next best thing is to see if you can narrow down the possibilities and determine what's possible and maybe even what's probable out of those. You have to ask those kinds of questions if you're going to determine what makes sense and what doesn't from an in-universe perspective and then figure out why. To leave this matter to Shinra doing things for the evulz without at least trying to determine if there's more to it than that would be wholly unsatisfying.


When our bad guys are at the point of performing random, Nazi-esque experiments on people just to see what happens while their officers wear Nazi-esque uniforms and the troops shout "Sieger!" (ズィーガー) -- the German word for "victor," and etymology of the Nazi's "Sieg heil!" salute (as if the point wasn't already driven home) -- then trying to introduce strict logic into the equation becomes a waste of time. Especially when we're discussing fictional villains who simply need to be presented as callous and loathsome to be effective in their roles.

(To clarify what I'm referring to, the Deepground salute translated as "Hail Weiss!" was "Saiger! Weiss!" in the Japanese text and audio. You can see Azul and several DG SOLDIERs say it at the 13:00-minute mark in this video.)
The Nazi stuff in the lost episode makes me wonder if it had anything to do with why it was never localized. They probably overdid it on the similarities.


Starling said:
So I guess what Cid says in the OG supports that a second war did actually happen. However, if that other ultimania entry you quoted is from the same one as the other, then those entries should count as the same source. Otherwise it'd be like trying to cite two different parts of the same document or book as separate sources in a research project that requires multiple sources. Of course, it's still an interesting entry and relevant to the discussion so I'm glad you translated it. As it stands, the other war seems to be canon but SOLDIER's involvement can't be confirmed to still apply, as Shinra could very well have had a more passive role simply selling weapons rather than actually deploying specialized troops.
Both entries explicitly speak of SOLDIER involvement and of Shin-Ra directly ending the war themselves. Again, we're not talking about anything from the Early Material File section, in which case doubt about the final product would be called for.
It's from the same Ultimania so you're still talking about the same source. If it was from a different Ultimania then you'd have multiple sources even if neither of them would be from the games/ACC, like the 30 years thing for Jenova you brought up before, though I'm still unsure if mention of that approximation in multiple Utimanias should be taken over the date given in ACC.


Starling said:
Only four? Weren't they originally an entire SOLDIER unit?
For all we know, there were never more than four in said unit. We don't have any other units with a known membership size to compare them to.
A quick search tells me that military organization forms groups as follows, give or take a grouping depending on the specific military in question:

Region/Theater > Military Group/Front > Army > Corps > Division > Brigade/Group/Reinforced Regiment > Battalion/Regiment > Company/Artillery Battery/US Cavalry Troop > Platoon/Commonwealth Troop/French Army Section > Section/Patrol (Around 1-2 Squads or 3-6 Fireteams, 12-24 soldiers)> Squad/Crew (around 2-3 Fireteams, 8-14 soldiers) > Fireteam (usually 4 people or less) > Support/Specialist team (3 people or less)

Army to Region is classified as command, Regiment to Corps as formations and anything equivalent to a battalion is a unit, which can number into the thousands. Companies and equivalent are subunits consisting of around 80-250 soldiers, followed by Platoons as sub-subunits consisting of around 26-55. 4 people would essentially consist of the second smallest organized military unit in use within the military, which also happens to be the unit most modern military organization bases its infantry around.

If they really only mean 4 people for a SOLDIER unit, then apparent misuse of military terminology aside, I suppose this along with Zack being sent on his own or only accompanied by a few people could indicate that SOLDIER really is supposed to be small enough that it's only deployed as small specialized groups accompanied by regular infantry, Turks, etc depending on what they're being sent to do. Of course, this makes the rampant loss of SOLDIERs to fuel excessively large opposing groups that act as canon fodder whenever you fight them such as all the Genesis copies and Deepground SOLDIERs even more glaring.

Starling said:
Just because it was great in the early days of the internet doesn't mean it's great now that times and the internet have changed.
GameFAQs continues to have an enormous user base, so I don't think it's hurting them. For that matter, have you seen the primitive interface for 2chan, Japan's largest online community (10 million users daily)?

Ease of use often trumps razzle dazzle -- especially now with so many people likely to use mobile devices to access their site. I'm pleased to see a high-traffic western site uninterested in vapid decoration that eats up data and increases load time/demand on memory. There are too many sites (news sites especially) that are almost impossible to use on mobile for reasons like that.
Never heard of 2chan, though the existence of 4chan implies 1chan-3chan exist. I've seen screenshots of 4chan and it's so dated I wonder how anyone manages to keep a conversation straight, especially when the page offsets them diagonally. It's like looking at an improperly loaded webpage and trying to navigate the sheer nonsense it appears to be when in that state. Maybe it's because I didn't use the internet much around those days for previously stated reasons but it's just not the kind of format I find intuitive and easy to navigate. As time goes on and more people grow up with the current state of the internet, the people who spent their early internet years with those dated formats will make up a smaller and smaller fraction of the current day internet users. You may have a point about mobile but I don't see why anyone would want to look up such long FAQs on a tiny phone screen of all things. Phones aren't really meant for more than quick internet searches anyway.


Starling said:
I find it strange you find my summary of BC unfair while agreeing with the KH one even though the same issues apply.
Your summary of BC was fine. This comment was inaccurate, though: "It's a spinoff that wasn't meant to be treated as a legitimate compilation entry or else it wouldn't be a phone game."

They've always treated BC as a legitimate entry, and given it plenty of attention. Last Order and Dirge of Cerberus Lost Episode are the only titles they've disavowed being part of the Compilation. Ironically, DC Lost Episode was a mobile title as well, but was the only one of the two to be orphaned.

And anyway, like I mentioned, FFIV: The After Years came to mobile first.
As I elaborated, making BC a phone game hurt its ability to be of adequate quality as a compilation entry. That at least part of it is no longer considered canon should be evidence of this. FF4 has the benefit of being made in a way current cellphone technology would have an easier time managing an adequate sequel to than they could manage with something meant to be part of the compilation. That other compilation entries suffer from poor writing just shows that the limitations of a phone game in no way helped the way it turned out, no matter how seriously Japan may take its phone games. It's not the weakest compilation entry for nothing.
 

The Twilight Mexican

Ex-SeeD-ingly good
AKA
TresDias
It's more that they referenced the 23 year approximation before the 50 one as they have to exist together to have any consistency. You'd probably have to ask them directly to be absolutely sure which they decided on first since this is more about the equation than the result.
The point is that the 23-year thing was published two years before the 50-year thing, so it wasn't like they had to do the 23-year thing afterward to keep things consistent with a previously published rounded-downward approximation of 50 years. That's what you suggested earlier.

Starling said:
Judging by the contradictions throughout the compilation, I think it's safe to say they don't have the forethought to avoid a discrepancy like that.
Again, it's not a matter of avoiding a discrepancy. The 23-year thing came first. What I said is "If they didn't want us to take the impression that Vincent was shot at least two years after Seph was born, they didn't have to use the 'approximately 23 years' timeframe in the same source that provided '25-30 years' for Sephiroth's birth."

It's a simple matter of judging intent, and unlike some other stuff, there is no possible contradiction to be pointed to with this case. Your/our interpretation of a non-explicit scene transition doesn't trump an official publication. Not when we're discussing canon.

You can argue that our interpretation is more valuable by a different measure, but not by the measure of canon.

Starling said:
It's obvious they have trouble keeping their dates straight considering the consistency issue here.
At least with this topic, yes.
Starling said:
More importantly, those transitions aren't as vague as you seem to think. The OG flashbacks aim to show events more than tell you what's happening, hence being sparing in what it tells you, instead letting you to see for yourself. There's little dialog in the flashbacks and quite frankly, dialog isn't really needed to understand what's being conveyed. Storytelling is a combination of show and tell, where too much show over tell is bad storytelling and conflicts in what's shown vs what's told can lead to inconsistencies the same way conflicting storytelling in different parts of the same continuity is why the compilation has so many consistency issues.
You are making insightful observations. I won't disagree in that much. However, this is much like what we talked about elsewhere recently -- canon isn't interested in whether you or I enjoy the canon or whether we think it's good or bad storytelling. It just is what it is.

Starling said:
Lucrecia disappearing before Vincent was shot flies in the face of Lucrecia being shown to be around after he was shot.
At the time the Ultimania Omega was published, that had not been shown yet.

Starling said:
Also, if that were canon then Sephiroth would have to be born before Vincent was shot.
Exactly right. He was.

Starling said:
The OG and DoC give no indication that Lucrecia is in any way supposed to be seen as grotesque or deformed in any way. The most it gives is that Lucrecia didn't want to be around anyone which seems to be more about despairing over the whole thing with Sephiroth and not being able to die.
The original game isn't explicit about it, but there's no contradiction with it there. Lucrecia says "I couldn't be around anyone" and emphatically tells Vincent three times not to come any closer. Your interpretation of her meaning is that this statement "seems to be" more about something else, but I can remember before the Ultimania Omega had even come out seeing more than one person online post that they interpreted the things Lucrecia said as implying she had become hideous.

I don't remember whether I agreed with them before reading the Ultimania Omega details, but looking back on it now, it certainly strikes me as a legitimate reading. She won't let Vincent get close to her, she's confirmed that Jenova changed her physiology somehow (being unable to die) and she says she couldn't be around anyone.

Starling said:
Lucrecia tells him that she didn't want to be with anyone ...
Small but valuable inaccuracy: she said she couldn't be with anyone. That speaks to ability rather than desire.

Japanese is less explicit than English about some things and more explicit than English about others. Whereas someone might say "I can't be around anyone" in English to mean they don't want to be, the Japanese wording here (みんなのそばにいられなかった) is conjugated in the pastindicative, speaking to what she was capable of -- and she says "I couldn't be near anyone."

For the sake of avoiding further misunderstanding, "near" here is そば/"soba," which refers to physical (not emotional) proximity.

Starling said:
Aside from the dreams she mentions having of Sephiroth, she also says that she never got to hold Sephiroth, as if Vincent didn't necessarily know by that point, which he wouldn't if she disappeared after he was shot.
Do you think her mind was more on trying to avoid "redundant" (if that's possible after not seeing someone in over 20 years) information he may have already known or on her emotional declaration about why "You can't call me his mother... That... is my sin..." when she said that? =P

Starling said:
From the way the flashback is set up, there's good reason to think it all unfolds chronologically.
That was never the question. The disagreement stems from you calling the only official description we have a contradiction despite there being nothing explicit detailed in the game itself about the passage of time in those scene transitions.

Starling said:
Given that Vincent mentions Sephiroth being born between the part where he objects to the start of the experiment and the one where Lucrecia collapses, it would seem that her collapse is meant to be taken as having taken place either right before or at some point after Sephiroth was born. That Vincent was shown arguing with Hojo following the scene where she collapsed indicates that we are meant to infer that the unintended complications causing Lucrecia to collapse in that manner prompted Vincent to renew objections more insistently than before, which is when Hojo shot him. This would place Sephiroth's birth not long before Vincent got shot and experimented on.

I told you I interpreted the flow of events the same way you did. I'm still willing to accept that it didn't mean what we took it to mean when a source closer to the staff who created it tells us so.

Starling said:
To further support this, Vincent knew Lucrecia had a son named Sephiroth, which means either the name was brought up before Sephiroth was born or Lucrecia gave birth shortly before Vincent was shot.
Orrrrr she gave birth several years before he was shot, as an official source has told us. Knowing the name indicates nothing precise about the timeframe.

Starling said:
Considering the reports made them out to be obsessed about Genesis being what they strive to live up to and the whole Tsviets are the hellspawn of G thing makes it seem like Genesis himself was a key factor in what their experiments were trying to achieve. Sephiroth is basically the superior version of what Shinra was hoping to achieve with Genesis, so you'd think they would've used Sephiroth as the template for their experiments instead.

Why they keep going on about Genesis with little to no mention of Sephiroth shows a distinct preference for Genesis despite how little time passed between their conceptions. Basing their goals around the experiments involving Genesis is one thing but going so far as to gloss over the progress involving Sephiroth and to use Genesis specifically for the Tsviets is another.

It's an aspect of Deepground's history that simply doesn't match up.
It's odd. There's no disagreement to be made about that. Everything about Deepground is odd, though, including why the scientists down there responded to the Jenova Project by turning a hospital into a horror show in the first place. 

Starling said:
I think this leaves room for Deepground to gain interest in Genesis or his project at a later point than his birth, even if they did so before he joined SOLDIER. After all, he was initially considered relatively normal so there wouldn't be much reason to be interested in the project until some noteworthy result drew their attention to it, in which case that Genesis exists would still be a way they'd likely reference it.
You've probably already seen it, but now we have a reference that refers explicitly to this shift in Deepground's focus happening as a response to Genesis being born.

Starling said:
An Ultimania entry you haven't heard about before that apparently goes against something you understood to be canon isn't really something you take someone's word on, especially since the Ultimanias have been somewhat dubious in their clarifications on canon at times as game guides seem to do.
In the absence of us having a longstanding antagonistic relationship of some sort, I find this instantaneous refusal to believe odd, to be frank. Again, though, all you had to do is ask for clarification.

Starling said:
Misunderstandings like this generally waste time for both sides involved so it's in everyone's best interest to avoid them. Like I said before, a page number doesn't mean much if I can't find the page.
For all I knew, you owned a copy of the book. You'd hardly be the only FFVII fan on this site who owns an Ultimania without knowing Japanese.

I cited my source. That was my only obligation, and particularly all I felt like doing since I was posting from my phone. If you needed or just wanted more details, you only had to ask.
Starling said:
I made it pretty clear I wasn't finding your source and that the only thing I could find corresponding even partly to what you were going on about was the early material stuff.
You made it clear that you thought my source came from the Early Material File section of the book. I then made it clear that I was talking about a different section of the book entirely.

If another step was needed for the discussion to move forward, it was really on you to make sure I knew it.

Starling said:
So was missing stuff like the page you referenced just because no one got around to it then?
Pretty much. There are a million things in a single day that could come between a translator and material they aren't being paid to do -- including, for that matter, translating something that seems more interesting.

Starling said:
A note that a particular entry is the same as another save for some different or other would be ok too as an alternative to retranslating the same thing barring correcting an error in the previous one.

...

I kinda figured by the time someone got familiar enough with a language to translate it they'd be fluent enough to only really struggle with the culture specific stuff or at least assess whether or not new information is present in the untranslated text as they read through it.

For myself at least, establishing that much would still require doing some amount of work.

Even for someone more adept at this language than me, though (like hito or hian), these profiles all start to look the same at a glance. You know every profile ever for Cloud is going to say "An ex-SOLDIER of the Shin-Ra Company, blah blah blah, anti-Shin-Ra organization AVALANCHE, yak yak yak, childhood friend Tifa, blah-dee-dah, flower girl Aerith, yakkity yak, Sephiroth, something something something dark side, battle to save the planet."

Sephiroth's profiles follow a similar structure with almost identical descriptions each time.

I have wasted a lot of time translating something only to realize it was a slight rephrasing of three or four other passages.

And simply speaking for myself again, I simply don't have the time nor live in an environment to get skilled enough at the language to make that process any more efficient for myself than it is.

Are there a ton of words and phrases in Japanese that I know offhand? Sure. There's way more that I can't remember from lack of practice, though, and even beyond that, there are so many kanji I couldn't hope to remember even a quarter of them.

My main strength as a translator is in understanding the grammatical structure and remembering (some of) the standards of conjugation, so even if I have to take the time to look up meanings (which I almost certainly will), the main obstacle I'm facing is time. Deciding how to word something in English or how to convey a cultural nuance is one of the parts I actually consider fun rather than an annoyance.

Starling said:
I'm not expecting anyone capable of doing it to have the time and motivation to do it, I was mostly wondering why it couldn't at least be noted down somewhere that anyone with the time and motivation to do it could choose to do it if they wanted to. Making translations something that multiple people could work together on if they want would probably help make it less of a burden, since it wouldn't be entirely dependent on a single person deciding one day to do it all themselves.
That team effort approach is what was taken with the 10th Anniversary Ultimania translations, I believe, and it did work out rather brilliantly. There just hasn't been such a perfect storm of motivation, skill, availability, and -- dare I say it -- interest since then.

By the way, before I go on, I want to say I know you mean well, and I hope I haven't come across as too antagonistic. I do get offended, though, about what comes across as lecturing someone who has a specific skill about how they're using it.

Even when being paid (perhaps especially when being paid), artists of all types -- writers, illustrators, sculptors, translators, etc. -- are underappreciated, told they don't work fast enough, told they charge too much if they charge, and so on and so forth. I've experienced it and I know a lot of people who have, so it's a tender issue for me.

I often liken it to working on a car. I try not to be too critical of my mechanic because I go to him in the first place because he has skills, tools or knowledge I don't have. I also go to him because I trust him and he's cut me deals before, but if we didn't start from a place of mutual respect, we wouldn't be where we are.

Starling said:
I must've missed that definition. To be fair, what people consider nitpicking and unnecessary criticism is subjective. I often don't mind what's generally considered nitpicking so long as it's done politely or brings up something interesting, as it's good to examine every aspect of an argument if you're going to take it as fact. If an argument can hold up to scrutiny, then it should be able to handle it just fine.
Scrutiny is good. Scrutiny is healthy. What's problematic is separating things from their wider context and dismissing them on those terms.

If you say a war happened because of reasons a, b, c, d and e, then I say "tariffs alone aren't going to cause any wars" without addressing your description of how this factor may have influenced others or set events in motion -- you're going to get upset with me, and rightly so.

Starling said:
From what I've seen, the issues regarding formal debate seem to stem from imposing time limits, pressuring people to provide many quick and easy points rather than take the time to carefully think about the topic and come up with more detailed arguments. Even in regular discussion someone who knows what they're doing could easily use time limitations or the illusion thereof to force the other person to rush their points without putting as much thought into them or the first person's arguments, guiding the discussion in their favour. Of course, the same can be done if someone is allowed to bring up too much at once, so careful moderation is still needed. Still, when formal debate was touched upon in one of my classes, emphasis was placed on quality of arguments as well as objectivity in determining which points were made best and we were given a reasonable amount time to prepare our arguments, as well as the opportunity to research our subjects rather than put on the spot. Both classes of my year got the same topics, which were fairly even, as shown when we ended up with opposing results based on the quality of the arguments put forth. After all, it's hard to make a point if it isn't argued well, meaning quality of arguments will always be an important aspect of debate whether formal or informal. I'd say it was a very good learning experience.
I've no doubt it was. My experience with it was as well.

It can be fun, and it can certainly facilitate developing argumentation skills, but it's highly flawed due to encouraging too much focus on the wrong concerns.

Starling said:
Arguing that SOLDIER originally didn't include Jenova cells based on Ultimania quotes not bringing it up assumes that Jenova cells weren't used because they weren't mentioned, which I believe qualifies. At best it means both are possible until sufficient evidence is given to prove or disprove one over the other.
It doesn't qualify, no. The point in making an observation like that is to establish an overall pattern or presentation of details.

Again, such things need to be responded to as they have been delivered -- as a synthesis, not as one-off scraps.

Starling said:
Neat. I guess that makes sense since proper names derived from english words seem to be used that way whenever they come up, though it's been a while since I watched anything like anime in Japanese with english subtitles to remind me of that tendency.
Yes, it's done pretty much constantly. "SOLDIER," "AVALANCHE," "Weapon," "mako cannon," "LOVELESS," "Chaos," "Jenova Project," "Sephiroth Copy," "Reunion" -- it goes on and on.

Starling said:
I figure it's more likely they meant conventional as in the standard variety of SOLDIER by the time of the OG, since it's the main reference point for most of the information given. Of course, you'd think that would be an excellent opportunity for them to say something about what way they're supposed to be unconventional. It generally just gives the impression that they're different from the standard SOLDIERs and unique experiments are said to be conducted in Deepground, which is left as the first thing that would come to mind about why they're unconventional. It could also be that they're unwilling test subjects trapped in a secret facility rather than people who joined willingly like the SOLDIERs in Shinra HQ. Essentially, their status as unconventional isn't really indicative of whether or not they're anything like the original SOLDIERs and it makes you wonder if there was ever a time where they would've been considered conventional to begin with.
Fair enough.

At any rate, we know Weiss never had Jenova cells, so there's one. :monster:

Oh, and whoever was in that Dragonfly Vincent sent crashing into Mako Reactor 0's mako stream. If they had carried Jenova, that would have ruined Omega right there.

Starling said:
And the lack of certainty for how similar they are to what SOLDIER started out as means you can't say for sure what SOLDIER was originally like simply based on what's seen of Deepground.
That was never what I was doing, though. I simply made a comment in passing that Deepground SOLDIERs are, by and large, more similar to those original SOLDIERs than the conventional variety (e.g. Zack).

At no point was I using Deepground to establish anything about SOLDIER from the old days.

Starling said:
What Cid says confirms a war but doesn't confirm SOLDIER's involvement in it, more than an approximated time range, or that SOLDIER didn't have Jenova cells unless the timerange is unquestionably, without a doubt before Jenova was found. Alone it just increases the probability that SOLDIER was involved unless something contradicts that.
What Cid said does do is solidify that Shin-Ra was still Shin-Ra Works at the time of that war, and not yet the Shin-Ra Electric Power Company it was known as during the Wutai War. He doesn't speak of SOLDIER, no, but, once again, things like this are to be analyzed together --

-The Ultimania Omega passages speak of a war when Shin-Ra was still a weapons development company
-Cid speaks of a war when Shin-Ra was still a weapons development company
-The Ultimania Omega speaks of SOLDIER being utilized in a war when Shin-Ra was still a weapons development company

Cid need not speak of SOLDIER directly for us to determine a reasonable connection between these wars (i.e. that they are the same war).

Starling said:
Rosso's date of birth doesn't add to SOLDIER predating Sephiroth as he was born before her. It just places Deepground's founding before 1985.
Since we have the definitive quote about Genesis’s birth now, this point of contention seems less relevant, so I'm just going to move on.

Starling said:
Because the compilation is full of contradictions and so information provided from one part has to be compared to the rest, much like how researching requires the ability to find multiple credible sources supporting the information you're using. The Ultimanias are supplementary material rather than a true part of the compilation and so don't hold as much weight as the source material. In order to determine the best way to sort out contradictions concerning information on a particular subject all claiming to be canon, you have to compare what all the sources say, account for the quality of each source and figure out what information best matches up with everything else.
That's my point: When there isn't a contradiction, more than one source shouldn't be necessary.

Starling said:
Ok. What are the chances of Deepground having always had a different emblem than standard SOLDIER? It'd make sense considering their status as something separate from regular SOLDIER and I don't think anything was said about the reasons behind the retcon.
It's certainly possible. I was talking about what struck me as a possible meta reason to attach that symbol to them, though.

Starling said:
Bystanders endangered by the shadow creepers being able to easily escape would be inconvenient for the screenwriters, while having a bunch of children suddenly jump into Cloud's path to force him to crash and make himself vulnerable to attack, is. It's been admitted that the physics in ACC don't accurately reflect how things work in the setting, as they were focusing on the way things looked.
At any rate, we have confirmation now that Jenova cells alone provide physical enhancement.

Starling said:
I ask because if mako is all it takes to make a SOLDIER, mako poisoning occurs with sufficient frequency for it to be known outside of Shinra and it's common knowledge that mako exposure is involved even though Jenova's use isn't, then anyone with the right equipment could basically get some mako, dunk people in them and get their own SOLDIERs on the same level, even though Jenova wouldn't be included. What difference then would Jenova make for the standard SOLDIER? What would make it worth including if only unique cases reap any benefit? What exactly would be stopping everyone with motive to try to make their own army of SOLDIERs that should turn out the same as the supposedly originally mako only SOLDIERs? Wouldn't Wutai have been able to try that if it was so easy?
Fuhito did that very thing in Before Crisis. His army of Ravens were based on stolen SOLDIER data. He didn't have access to Jenova, though, so while it's unclear exactly what he did, it's probably safe to say mako was somewhere in the mix.

Anyway, you know what would happen if someone else tried to do that: Shin-Ra would crush them. Added to that, practical concerns would stop most attempts long before it got to that point.

Just anyone with motive isn't going to have the resources (money, equipment, know-how, army of volunteers able to handle it, etc.) to start producing bootleg SOLDIERs. Fuhito is the only one we know of to have ever done it, so that kind of answers your question right there, as do the unique circumstances (i.e. he actually had the necessary resources) that allowed him to do it.

Starling said:
The Nazi stuff in the lost episode makes me wonder if it had anything to do with why it was never localized. They probably overdid it on the similarities.
I hadn't thought about that, but it wouldn't surprise me. 

Starling said:
If they really only mean 4 people for a SOLDIER unit, then apparent misuse of military terminology aside, I suppose this along with Zack being sent on his own or only accompanied by a few people could indicate that SOLDIER really is supposed to be small enough that it's only deployed as small specialized groups accompanied by regular infantry, Turks, etc depending on what they're being sent to do.
Right, they rarely seem to send more than three SOLDIERs for anything. I can't think of a time when they did. They sent Angeal, Zack and Sephiroth to Wutai at the beginning of Crisis Core, and sent Zack to the Icicle area to back up Essai and Sebastian in Before Crisis.

Beyond that, only occasions with one or two SOLDIERs and maybe a Turk come to mind.
Starling said:
As time goes on and more people grow up with the current state of the internet, the people who spent their early internet years with those dated formats will make up a smaller and smaller fraction of the current day internet users. You may have a point about mobile but I don't see why anyone would want to look up such long FAQs on a tiny phone screen of all things. Phones aren't really meant for more than quick internet searches anyway.
Mobile is the only means of access to the Internet for a great many people in the U.S. and around the world, and is increasingly becoming the primary access device even for people with computers.

Growing up with this convenience and these access habits is going to have a bigger impact than flashy interfaces.

As for looking up long FAQs on phones, remember the search codes I mentioned in the one I linked you to? Longer FAQs are supposed to utilize those.

With nothing but text in the FAQ, even very large ones load pretty much instantly, and then it's a simple matter of scrolling down to the table of contents, finding the search code for the section you want, punching it in and reading the information you need.

That's far faster than turning on and waiting for a computer that's possibly in another part of your house/apartment, or possibly not even with you if you aren't at home.

I personally went more than a year without a computer, having only recently gotten a replacement, so I know it's very much possible to get by without one for the Internet. It makes a couple of things more difficult, sure, but they're not necessary.
Starling said:
As I elaborated, making BC a phone game hurt its ability to be of adequate quality as a compilation entry. That at least part of it is no longer considered canon should be evidence of this. FF4 has the benefit of being made in a way current cellphone technology would have an easier time managing an adequate sequel to than they could manage with something meant to be part of the compilation. That other compilation entries suffer from poor writing just shows that the limitations of a phone game in no way helped the way it turned out, no matter how seriously Japan may take its phone games. It's not the weakest compilation entry for nothing.
For 2004, it was a really high-end product. Even now, it doesn't look that bad, though the gameplay would certainly no longer be up to standard.

FFVII G-Bike, which is more recent and looks great, shows that there's no reason they can't put games out for mobile that match or exceed the quality of PS1 and PSP games if they want to. Even PS2 quality isn't hard to imagine.
 

Roger

He/him
AKA
Minato
Right, they rarely seem to send more than three SOLDIERs for anything. I can't think of a time when they did. They sent Angeal, Zack and Sephiroth to Wutai at the beginning of Crisis Core, and sent Zack to the Icicle area to back up Essai and Sebastian in Before Crisis.
The SOLDIER group that Genesis took to Wutai was huge. We can´t go by any team that includes Sephiroth as the norm, he was a one-man army.
 
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