![]() She's a child, and doesn't look freaky like the adults, she looks pretty much like all the other protagonists in the series. Greatest thing I can point to is The Pretender. Six and Mono both become monsters at one point, so it wouldn't be out of the question that they really are children and most of the adults become monsters. I think the Six, Mono, The Runaway and such are the same species as the monsters chasing them (except for obvious exceptions like leeches). What are the 'monsters' generally, as compared to the protagonists of the series? It could be reflective of how Six was literally a soulless abomination at that point or just the effects of being in whatever that place was for as long as she was. I wasn't sure, but the fact that Six literally became a monster while on the inside, along with Mono becoming a monster. SuperHorrorBro Mike believed the Tower was responsible for the way everyone looked in the series. Why is Six a monster in the 'television world'? Meaning, Shadow Six is Six's disembodied soul, and without being remerged to the Six we see in the ending, along with the entirety of LN1, literally has no soul inside of her. In general, they seem to be the souls of those kidnapped by the Thin Man. She did smash up that Bully in LN2 when they could have snuck up on it, as a form of revenge for what happened earlier. Not sure about the 2nd game.īut if I had to take a crack at these questions. So it could fit, depending on which character, but I'd assume most of the characters in the first game would fall under Gluttony, while. ![]() Not sure about them representing sins, though apparently Hunger was the theme of the first game and The Lady could potentially be considered vain/prideful. How is Six associated with wrath? What are the 'shadow figures'? Why is Six a monster in the 'television world'? What are the 'monsters' generally, as compared to the protagonists of the series?įair enough, the eyes could represent the viewers and being watched. ![]() Some questions I have, assuming a theory like this is generally true: At the end of the game he is 'inside the television world' being viewed by lots of people (flesh and eye blob), and he is famous, but his 'sin' has made him miserable, I assume. His sort of 'obsession'(?) with the tv screens is like an obsession with fame, and hurts Six. At least from what I remember, he seems to first appear in Little Nightmares II watching a television screen, and it seems to me like that motivates him to go to seek out the 'broadcasting area' (so maybe that shows that he wants to be famous/'a hero'). If Mono is associated with pride (glory, ego, vanity), then I think it kind of fits nicely with some of his actions. I don't know if there's a strongly established order of the seven deadly sins, but it seems to me like there's a general order of: ![]() If Mono and Six are each associated with one of 'the seven deadly sins', with their names indicating the sin that they are associated with (Six = 6th sin, Mono = 1st sin), then I think the televisions and the fleshy-eyes thing seem to make more sense. I think the flesh with eyes might be partly meant to represent people 'watching' the tv (watching Mono and Six in the case of the ending of the game) after Mono falls, he becomes the center of attention by, in general, people like those who seemed to obsess over the tv screens throughout the game.
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