It's true that some androids might not want to live with people. I don't see one in the Ultra series, however. So the androids who live with people mostly have to adapt and learn about humans, or just stay with humans who know about them. Oh well, I like androids in the Ultra series learning to fit in. They are mostly just like aliens trying to fit in with humans - the main difference is (I think) aliens know about emotions.
Yes, it is in human nature to look for reasons why things happen. For me personally, sometimes the protagonist is only as good as the antagonist who opposes him. I would feel like the journey the hero takes is meaningless if the villain is so easy to beat and/or has shallow motivations/is evil for the sake of being evil. On the other hand, a deep sad reason in a villain's past could backfire on me, too, because sometimes it just comes across like the writers are trying too hard to make me feel sorry for the villain (look, he is evil, but look at his sad past - he had a justified reason for his bad deeds).
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Date: 2021-06-01 05:18 pm (UTC)Yes, it is in human nature to look for reasons why things happen. For me personally, sometimes the protagonist is only as good as the antagonist who opposes him. I would feel like the journey the hero takes is meaningless if the villain is so easy to beat and/or has shallow motivations/is evil for the sake of being evil. On the other hand, a deep sad reason in a villain's past could backfire on me, too, because sometimes it just comes across like the writers are trying too hard to make me feel sorry for the villain (look, he is evil, but look at his sad past - he had a justified reason for his bad deeds).