An artist's depiction of an Extended Unit Death
Quote from name:Stacy Keibler
Also, he changed his avatar mid-game. Posted about it, but still.
He changed his avatar every Day cycle for my game to make a point about it, so take that with a grain of salt; granted, he
was mafia in my game, but that wasn't his motivation for changing his avatar.
Quote from name:Stacy Keibler
Seeing as there were no hits night 1, I think we got it right when we lynched Aristo. I know many of you probably believe this already, but I had to sit down and take the time to cross reference everything for my own peace of mind. This said, I believe the cylon killing power is down to 1 per night, plus a seductress, plus a mole, plus an unknown traitor. We may have gotten lucky and lynched mole or traitor already, but I kinda doubt it.
I don't think Aristocrat was a Cylon Hitman. No Cylon would have counter-claimed Demon and expect it to pan out in their favor, especially since the Scientist was alive at the time. It would be a dumb move, and the only reason Aristocrat counter-claimed would be for revenge for last game (something he said he wouldn't do), or because he thought someone else was trying to fake-claim with his role.
Based on Aristocrat's death (the way his character behaved was emotionless and robotic), he was a Cylon. This contradicts his early actions, however, as a Cylon wouldn't put themselves in the spotlight so hastily, especially on a counter-claim where one person has to be lying. Now, another interesting thing to note is that Aristocrat, starting after N1 ended, was insisting that either he or Demon was the Traitor (for balance reasons). Then the next night, he kills the Scientist (whether he knew Inferno's role or not); he didn't seem to talk to anyone about his target, so why would he take a stab in the dark? It's actually quite simple when you add it up.
The Cylons wanted to get rid of either Aristocrat or Demon, so they sent the Mole to try to incriminate Aristocrat (to get fake clues to come up in the night post, or on the chance the Scientist tests him), but instead woke him up as the Traitor. Now Aristocrat insisted that either he or Demon is the Traitor because he knew it to be true, and he wanted to look less suspicious by making this "obvious" assertion. When it came to N2, he couldn't use Paranoia anymore (since he loses the ability once he wakes up), so he killed a random Townie to help out his team.
I've ran the scenario in my head several ways, and this one makes the most sense. Aristocrat was a Vigilante and the Traitor, and was woken up on the first night. I checked with Devlin to make sure this was possible (since Aristocrat was jailed on the first night, I thought he couldn't be woken up as the Traitor; turns out the Mole can do it).
It should be noted that Aristocrat sounded willing to jump on my TiKels bandwagon on D2 in private, but for some reason he didn't cast his vote to try to save himself.
Looks like other people got through clue analysis already. I did notice, however, that there are a decent number of references to stars in this game. I know this takes place in space, but Devlin's previous game didn't seem to make these references. There are no physical stars in anyone's avatars, but Stacy Keibler, rayNimagi, and NudeRaider (I think?) have
movie stars for avatars.
I have a feeling the goat segment is a clue of some sort (though honestly, it could just be clever/fun writing by Devlin); I couldn't think of anything on my own, but the tie to payne doesn't seem very plausible. I thought I was a genius for remembering
this topic, but apparently nobody chose goat milk. (That topic made me decide to try almond milk, by the way, and it's actually pretty awesome. Vanilla almond milk and cereal were made for each other.)
It looks like the way you phrased your vote didn't count, poison, meaning you're tied with Kame still. And between the two of you, I have more reasons to vote for Kame.
I vote Fire_Kame.