#I don't think a poll would be constructive but just know I'm gonna wait a bit for this to collect info
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I wanna test something... without looking it up, what is your understanding when I say " this character has endometriosis "?
#reply in comments or rb reply I do not mind!#I don't think a poll would be constructive but just know I'm gonna wait a bit for this to collect info#for a smidgen context- I have endometriosis. I'll explain later *why* I'm asking this ☆#no wrong answers plus absolutely lmk if you also have the condition! if you wanna
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*deep breath* Okay. In that case, buckle the fuck up.
For all I know, there might be canon lore or word from the creator that entirely debunks this idea. If so, please feel free to tell me directly! I love discussion with other fans, and don't take it personally if a theory i back turns out to be incorrect!
(and honestly somewhere along the way I realized I DO NOT have the spell slots necessary to put my full thesis down, so sadly you're only getting the cliffnotes and some shitty visuals I made instead.) But before I get into it, I'd like to put a warning for those tempted to keep reading: This is the sort of pretentious plot twist spoiler that (depending on your tastes) might make the experience of MILGRAM a lot less fun for you just by knowing/considering it. As such, please use discretion before clicking on the read more. But! I don't think it'll spoil anything to state the basic premise.
The truth is deceptively simple: MILGRAM is a work of fiction set up so that us, the audience, get to influence the characters present in the narrative, thus directly influencing everything that happens, via the cast/crew reacting to our decisions according.
At this point, I wouldn't be surprised if you some of you think I'm joking or wondering how that in any way counts as a theory.
Part 1: A Cosmic Horror Story(ish) by Any Other Name
In which case, lemme shift the spotlight from the audience's perspective of Milgram to the character's experience of it:
While they don't realize it, the characters of MILGRAM are intentionally constructed beings, within an intentionally constructed universe. Which isn't to say that they, as characters, don't have thoughts and feelings. Their lives and experiences and crimes are just as real as everything else around them. But! Seeing as all of that is fictional, that's... debatable, at best.
They were all created (for the purpose of entertainment) by a force/entity that is basically all-powerful within their universe, but is almost entirely passive in nature. Or to put it another way: It's the cast/crew of MILGRAM that makes this whole narrative exist, but they're always gonna stay in the background of the story. The focus is always on the characters and how they deal with all this.
Past the force that created them, there is one other group of entities that exists outside the character's universe. It's these beings who actively engage with them, through means that go beyond the physical. ie; that us, the audience!! We vote, engage in theorycrafting, and talk about the characters to the point where oh shit they might be going a little insane from hearing us, actually.
Part 2: Other Helpful (and Very Shitty) Visual Aids, Without Context

Part 3: "Wait, so that means we shouldn't have been vot-" Lemme stop you there
With all this in mind, the conclusion most people would immediately come to would be "So this really was just the creators redoing the Milgram experiments, and our only ethical option is to not vote at all!"
Which, no.
Though we might largely have the most direct say in how things go down, the creators can still weigh in if we refuse to play by their rules.
For example, where you here when Haruka's 2nd Trial vote went down? Because, while I wasn't, I have seen the comments people posted during and after that time period.
That is to say, people were trying really hard to get him to a 50/50 tie stall, thus breaking the system - it was only right near the end that the poll hard shifted towards guilty.
Something similar (but a lot more shitposty) happened with Mikoto's first trial vote, too; apparently, the unspoken consensus was that everyone wanted Mikoto to be exactly 69% guilty (lol, never change folks). But, guess what? Right at the end - small shift towards innocent. Tragically ending The Meme Dream for everyone involved.
For all that we, the audience, are mostly in control of where things end up, the creators are more than willing to step in if we stop playing by their rules or don't take things seriously enough and shift votes one way or another depending.
Which means that all not voting does is put it in the creator's hands to decide - and, in that case, they could end up making the choice that you don't like.
So, for all it can feel icky for us voters to be C'thulu to the characters, depending on your outlook, trying to influence them can still be pretty important.
#ask#anonymous#MILGRAM#MILGRAM project#I don't have the energy to write out my five bajillion page essay on the details#also edited the tags and added an image after i felt a bit better about this#now please DO feel free to discuss this with me
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