#still not sure if i want to post the rest of my dmmd art from twt but ill probably post that minao one . maybe. we'll see
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carve me out
#dramatical murder#koujaku dmmd#shiroba#aoba seragaki#koujao#ok this one is from like. june? it did surprisingly good on twitter#still not sure if i want to post the rest of my dmmd art from twt but ill probably post that minao one . maybe. we'll see#my art
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âI heard your voice, so I came... Aoba-san.â
Hooo-boy, if that doesnât get me emotional every single time. Call it my bias for eccentric bundles of sunshine and softness, or my crippling weakness for the secretly-handsome-and-devastatingly-earnest type, but you canât change my mind: Clear is, hands down, DMMDâs best love interest. Character development-wise, thematically, romantically, he nails every trial thrown at him, gets his man, and proceeds to break your heart in the tenderest, sincerest way possible. I am hopping with Huge Fan Energy, so this post is gonna be unapologetically long and self-indulgent and grossly enthusiastic. Yeeeee.
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Look, DMMD meta analysis has been done to death, I get it. This game is old. But I think it stands as testament to its excellent production that itâs still a game worth revisiting years later â especially during these times when social contact is so hard pressed to come by and we all rabidly devour digital media like a horde of screeching feral gremlins. (Have you seen Netflixâs stock value now? The exploding MMO server populations? Astonishing.) Itâs pure, simple human nature to want to connect, to cling to members of our network out of biological imperative and our psychological dependency on each other. As cold and primitive at that sounds, social contact also fulfills us on a higher level: the community is always stronger than the individual; genuine trust begets a mutually supportive relationship of exchange and evolution. People learn from each other, and grow into stronger, wiser, better versions of themselves.
Yeah, Iâm being deliberately obtuse about this. Of course Iâm talking about Clear. Clear, who is a robot. Clear, who is nearly childlike in his insatiable curiosity regarding the human condition.
And itâs a classic literary tactic, using non-human entities to question the intangible constructs of a concept like âhumanityâ â think Frankenstein, or Tokyo Ghoul, or Detroit: Become Human, among so, so many works in various media â all tackling that question from countless angles, all with varying measures of success. What does it mean to be human? To be good? Who are we, and where do we stand in the grand scheme of things? Is there even a scheme to follow? ⌠Wait, what?
Jokes aside, there are so many ways that the whole approaching-human-yet-not-quite-there schtick can be abused into edgy, joyless existential griping. Nothing wrong with that if itâs what youâre looking for, except that weâre talking about a boysâ love game here. But DMMD neatly, sweetly side steps that particular wrinkle, giving us a wonderfully grounded character to work with as a result.Â
Character Design â a see-through secret
Letâs start small: Clearâs design and premise. Unlike so many other lost, clueless robo-lambs across media, Clear does have a small guiding presence early on in his life. It takes the form of his grandfather, who teaches Clear about the world while also sheltering him from his origins. It means he learns enough to blend sufficiently into society; it also means that Clear has even more questions that sprout from his limited understanding of the world.
Told that he must never remove his mask lest he expose his identity as a non-human, Clearâs perpetual fear of rejection for what he is drives much of his eccentricity and challenges him throughout much of his route. As for the player, the mystery of what lies underneath his mask is a carrot that the writers get to dangle until the peak moment of emotional payoff. Even if itâs not hard to guess that thereâs probably a hottie of legendary proportions stuck under there, thereâs still significance in waiting for that good moment to happen. And when it does, it feels great.
His upbringing contextualizes and affirms his odd choice of fashion: deliberately generic, bashfully covered from the public eye, and colored nearly in pure white - the quintessential signal of a blank slate, of innocence. Contrasted with the rest of DMMDâs flashy, colorful crew, Clear is probably the most difficult to read on a superficial scale, not falling into the fiery, bare-chest sex appeal of a womanizer, or the techno-nerd rebel aesthetic that Noiz somehow rocks. Goofy weirdo? Possibly a serial killer? Honestly, both seem plausible at the start.
And thatâs the funny thing, because as damn hard as he tries to physically cover himself up from society, Clear is irrepressibly true to his name: transparent to a fault. Heâs a walking, talking contradiction, and itâs not hard to realize that this mysterious, masked stranger⌠is really just an open book. By far the most effusive and straightforward of the entire cast, his actions are wildly unconventional and sometimes wholly inexplicable. But given time to explain himself, he is always, always sincere in his intentions â and unlike the rest of the love interests, naturally inclined to offer bits of himself to Aoba. It doesnât take the entire character arc to figure out his big, bad secret â our main character gets an inkling about halfway through his route â and whatâs even better is that he embraces it, understanding that his abilities also allow him to protect what he cherishes: Aoba.Â
So what if he doesnât fit into an easily recognizable box of daydream boyfriend material? Heâs contradictory, and contradiction is interesting. Dons a gas mask, but isnât an edgelord. Blandly dressed, but ridiculously charming. Unreadable and modestly intimidating â until he opens his mouth. Even without the benefit of traversing his route, thereâs already so much good stuff to work with, and sure as hell, youâre kept guessing all the way to the end.
Character Development â from reckless devotion into complaisant subservience, complaisant subservience into mutual understanding. And then, of course: free will, and true love.Â
At its core, DMMD is about a dude with magic mind-melding powers and his merry band of attractive men with â surprise! â crippling emotional baggage. Each route follows the same pattern, simply remixing the individual character interactions and the pace of the program: Aoba finds himself isolated with the love interest, faces various communication issues varying on the scale of frustrating to downright dangerous, wanders into a sketchy section of Platinum Jail, bonds with the love interest over shared duress, breaks into the Oval Tower, faces mental assault by the big bad â and finally, finally, destroys those internal demons plaguing the love interest, releasing the couple onto the path of a real heart-to-heart conversation. And then, you know, the lovey-dovey stuff.Â
Hereâs the thing: as far as romantic progression goes, itâs really not a bad structure. Thereâs room to bump heads, but also to bond. The Scrap scene is a thematically cohesive and clever way to squeeze in the full breadth of character backstory while simultaneously advancing the plot. In this part, Aoba must become the hero to each of his love interests and save them from themselves. Having become privy to each otherâs deepest thoughts and reaching a mutual understanding of each other, their feelings afterwards slide much more naturally into romantic territory. They break free of Oval Tower, make their way home, and have hot, emotionally fulfilling sex or otherwise some variation on the last few steps. The end.Â
That is, except for Clear.Â
Clearâs route is refreshing in that he needs none of these things â the climax of his emotional arc actually comes a little after the halfway point of his route. When Clearâs true origins are revealed, he comes entirely clean to Aoba, fighting against his fear of rejection but also trusting that Aoba will listen. Itâs a quiet, vulnerable moment, rather than the action-packed tension we normally experience during a Scrap scene.Â
That doesnât mean itâs prematurely written in â it simply means that he reaches his potential faster than the other characters. Because of that, heâs free to pursue the next level of his routeâs development much, much sooner in the timeline: he overcomes his fears of his appearance, he confesses his love to Aoba, he leaves the confines of a largely dubious master-servant relationship and allows himself to be Aobaâs equal. Clearâs sprite art mirrors his emotional transformation all the way through, exposing him to the literal bone â and Aobaâs affection for him doesnât change a single bit. Beautiful.
The whammy of incredible moments doesnât just stop there, though. I donât exactly recall the order the routes DMMD is ideally meant to be played in, but I believe Clearâs is meant to be last. And if you do, I can guarantee that it becomes a hugely delightful gameplay experience â in order to achieve his good ending, you must do absolutely nothing with Scrap. It doesnât just subvert our player expectations of proactively clicking and interacting with our love interests; it grabs the story by its thematic reins and yanks it all back to the forefront of our scene.Â
In every route besides Clearâs, Scrap is a tool used to insert Aobaâs influence into and interfere with his targetâs mind. Using his powers of destruction, Aoba is able to prune whatever maligned thoughts are harming his target; in any conventional situation, using Scrap is the right choice.Â
But one of the central problems in Clearâs route is his conflict between the impulses of his conditioning and his desire to live freely as a human would. Breaking free of Toueâs programming is what initially made him unique; growing beyond the rules imposed by his grandfather is what makes him human. In the final conflict scene, Clearâs decision to destroy his key-lock is an action of true autonomy, made with perfect understanding of the consequences and a sincere, selflessly selfish desire to protect someone he loves. In order to receive his good end, you have to respect his decision. It doesnât matter which option you pick â by using Scrap, Aoba turns his back on every positive choice he made with Clear and attempts to exert his authority over him. This is Aoba becoming Toue; this is Aoba trying to reinstate himself as âMasterâ right as he approved Clear as his equal. Thatâs blatant hypocrisy, and it doesnât matter if Aoba is trying to do it for Clearâs âown goodâ â thatâs not Aobaâs call to make. If you truly wish to respect Clearâs free will, you will stand by. This is the truth of the moment: Clear has no emotional blockages that Aoba needs to fix. Believe in him, just as he believed in you.
The path to his heart is, and always has been, clear. Scrap was never needed from the start.
While Aoba might be the main character, Clear is undeniably a hero in his own route just as much. Tirelessly earnest and always curious, he leaps headlong into the unknown and emerges with his newfound enlightenment. Heâs unafraid of weathering trials, even to the point of accepting death, and returns anew from oblivion to a sweet, cathartic ending. Thatâs about as textbook heroâs journey as it gets â if that doesnât make him unquestionably, certifiably, unconditionally human, then I will scream.
And only finally⌠there is the free end. The final CG is like a throwback to our first impression of him: indistinct, purposefully obscured from proper view. But this time, we know better â and so does Aoba. Looks were never what mattered in Clearâs route. If you were patient, and you were open-minded, and you listened⌠well, what we realize now is that Clear was doing the exact same thing for you, too.
From a carefree, aimless robot-man with only the gimmick of âeccentric ditzâ to carry him forward, we get a supremely more interesting character by the end: a man who has graduated from the well-intentioned but claustrophobic conditioning of his childhood; a weapon who has defied the imperatives placed on him by his creatorâs programming; a wanderer who has, through unconditional patience and empathy, discovered love, and striven to become a better person for it. Who was it that ever doubted Clearâs character? Heâs the goddamn goodest boy that ever wanted to be a real boy. Of course Clear is human. And in fact, he does it better than every single one of the actually human love interests. You canât change my mind.
The Romance â kindness is really fucking attractive, okay.
Like Iâve said earlier, I have my Big Fan Blinds stuck on pretty tight. I might be conjuring sparks from thin air. But I think every choice was a deliberate creative decision on the writersâ part, and they deserve all the kudos for it â Iâm just the lucky player who gets to enjoy it. But aside from Noiz (who I also think is a perfect darling as well â I could go on and on about him), Clearâs route is a model example for consent and healthy relationships in VN storytelling. This is reciprocated on both sides: never does Aoba infringe on Clearâs boundaries, and neither does Clear. Theyâre sensitive to each otherâs needs and concerns; they ask for permission and stop when it isnât granted (and when it is, boy do they get frisky â Iâm not complaining!) I donât need to say much more, because I think that consent is both fantastic and yes, incredibly hot (the scene in DMMD is tons more sad, go play Re:connect!). Good writing shows off the massive erotic potential enthusiastic consent puts into intimacy, and Aobaâs and Clearâs relationship is honestly a dream playground. The point is, I think Aoba and Clear genuinely do find equal balance in their relationship by the end of his route (and certainly through Re:connect). If you follow through Re:connectâs storyline, thereâs even more thematic richness that comes through in the form of Clearâs greatest asset: communication. The couple get to discuss the long-term implications of them being together; they both offer concerns, points, and assurances to the other, and itâs just a soft, honest moment not so unlike the worries of a real relationship. Hearing is kind of Clearâs motif sense, but itâs really great to see that Aoba also subtly picks it up, really flexes his own communication skills to better engage with Clear.Â
Point is, Clearâs route spoke to me on a lot of little levels. Design-wise, heâs already got a ton going for him, and his story builds upon it rather than against it, enriching his development and grounding him a little more solidly in the DMMD universe (and in my heart). His route, aside from being emotionally ruinous, carries a pretty solid chunk of world-building (only beaten out by Minkâs and Renâs, probably), and the romance feels organic, healthy, and realistic. Heâs not the only one with an excellent route, but heâs my favorite. If you read through all of this, youâre a real trooper and Iâm extremely impressed. Thanks for tuning in. Peace.
#dramatical murder#dmmd#aoba seragaki#clear#dmmd clear#long ass emotional screeching#lOL I FORGOT TO DRAW IN THE UMBRELLA HANDLE ahA#fixed
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