"What Life Has to Offer" by MintyMimix
How truly infinite the universe was!
An endless expanse of cobalt and crimson forged the lands before Ena as her mind’s eye opened. A curious chirp escaped her maw, and her spiny, skeletal form reticulated as she looked up for the first time.
Floating just above the ground composed of millions of blue metallic plates were her kin. They laughed and played as they flew through the black sky — their Cores flashing with words of excitement.
The joyous glow and buzzes of her brethren beckoned her: come, come new little one; let us bask in the wonders of possibility!
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Judge Comments
bluesidra
Oooooh I really liked this one! Ena feels truly alien, and yet her reasoning is very cohesive. Where do I even start…? The prose was good. There were a few typos here and there, but nothing groundbreaking. The sentence structure and readability were both great, and that’s way more important in my mind. The choice of words was actually rather simplistic, which drove home the point that this is an infant who is still learning quite well.
Now, back to Ena. Soooooo cool! The description of her slowly growing her plates and eyes, the absolutely mind-blowing abstract-ism in the first part, when she was still part of her mother. I love how you took the concept of infinite energy and ran with it, including all the consequences it would bring to the worldview and morality of Ena. The pov also sticks very closely to her, which meant it took me a while to work out what was actually happening when Ena showed her love to the worlds she encountered. God damn do I love having the narration keep me on my toes like that.
The happenings with Rose being relegated to a sentence and a half felt at first a bit… disappointing, because I thought there would come a lot more exploration of their relationship. But in the end, it made a lot more sense to relegate his presence to a sidenote in her eternal life (and frankly, my petty mind feels satisfied when seeing this self-righteous donkey being denied the time of day).
Usually, the thought of a pokemon having to spend its time in a pokeball gives me existential dread, so I was actually very relieved to see Ena take to being locked away so well. It’s a nice way of interpreting her circumstances and I’m glad she took this mindset. And that she hasn’t given up on her world-ending displays of love like the absolute queen that she is.
Dragonfree
Loved to explore a really alien POV here - Ena's Eternatus identity seeps out of every word in this story, and that was a great choice for this contest. The way that she's innocently fascinated by Life, and believes she's simply helping and nurturing it as she destroys planets, and then finally comes to realize maybe Life can teach her things, too, was a lovely little character arc, and the narration strikes a nice twisted chord between deeply creepy and oddly wholesome in its misguided way.
I did find myself not always entirely clear on what the story was getting at, though. It's always a delicate balance trying to write an alien POV while still ensuring a human reader can understand, and I don't envy you for having to try to juggle that here, with a particularly alien Pokémon. But while I certainly got most of it just fine, it was sometimes legitimately hard to get a grasp on what was actually happening. I'm not sure what the bands of light that let Ena see memories actually are, for instance, and Ena seems to explicitly have a metallic body early on only to suddenly be feeling what it's like to have a physical body for the first time, which left me confused as to what exactly her former body was.
I'm not totally sure what you're going for with the square brackets surrounding some words, either. They do call more attention to those concepts, but just the capitalization would have done that too, and it's just not entirely clear to me why all these things need square brackets and others don't. The closest I've come to understanding it is noticing you use square brackets for concepts the Eternatus larvae have only seen and experienced from the light bands, but even then, there doesn't seem to be a shift towards not bracketing things when Ena proceeds to actually experience things herself in real life - Rose, for instance, is someone she only meets corporeally and can't have been part of any memories she viewed, but he still gets square brackets. This is a very minor nitpick, but it is something that was confusing me a bit throughout the story.
The pacing here also bugged me a little. You have loving descriptions of individual scenes from Ena's early life, only for the last bit, tackling her encounters with the Pokémon world planet we're familiar with, to be much more summarized glimpses that feel almost like an afterthought in comparison. It leaves me curious whether you originally meant to tackle Eternatus POV without getting into Rose or the Darkest Day and then changed your mind late in the game. I do wonder if it could have been more effective to expand and flesh out some of that as much as you did Ena's spawning and final conversation with her mother!
All in all, though, I thought this was a lovely entry - a very in-depth exploration of a legendary's POV with a lot of neat details. It had some proofreading errors and I had some niggles and points of confusion, but overall I thought it was successful in what it was trying to do.
Flyg0n
This entry was an absolute delight. I really liked how you honed in on Eternatus' very alien nature, delving into its origins and life cycle, and ‘unique’ () viewpoint. You really effectively use the unknowing POV to great effect here, and the narrative feels well entrenched in their perspective, yet still clear enough to glean a glimpse of the horrors going on beneath the surface.
The use of words and brackets, mixed with an almost child-like naivete is quite chilling, and leans nicely into a sense of cosmic horror. It's rather refreshing and frightening because in this case, Eternatus just wants to help! Such a shame silly creatures on these little planets don’t want mothers' love...
I really liked the slow building, from Ena’s hatching to devouring, to finally encountering a world of pokemon, who were the first to be able to fight back against her. It all finally comes to a peak when Rose’s machinations lead her to be struck down and captured by the Galar protag.
I think most elements of this story are really solid, from character voice, prose and plot. It also captures the ‘legendary theme’ quite nicely for me. The only part that held me back just a little was the ending. While it was very cool to see it be a sort of ‘canon compliant’ backstory for Eternatus, I did find myself hoping for a bit more. It slots neatly into the game's story, and provides perspective on Eternatus in a great way. But it doesn’t go beyond this.
By the time it got to the end, I actually found myself wishing for a bit more conclusive ending, or to at least go beyond the game's story. I get the sense that maybe Ena’s perspective on devouring worlds is being affected by their human friend, and I definitely understand the decision to opt for a more open ending. Yet at the end of the day, I rather wonder if Ena coming to a stronger conclusion, whether a wrong or right one, might have had more impact.
Still, this entry was very impactful and well executed, and definitely stuck in my mind with its flavorful language and creative lore.
Negrek
Hey, Minty! I'm filling in for auspicious here; feel free to reach out to him for informal feedback if you'd like. My opinion was not considered when scoring the entries, but I wanted to be sure you got as many reviews as everyone else.
I love that you picked one of the more alien legendary pokémon and then really leaned into that otherworldliness with this entry. It makes sense that a spacefaring pokémon with such strange physiology would view the world very differently than what we're accustomed to, and I thought you got that across very well. This approach stood out among the contest entries, and I thought it demonstrated great use of the theme.
In general I enjoyed what you did with the xeno POV quite a bit, with the light-based communication and the communal development as larvae that transitions to a solitary spacefaring existence. I thought the image of the Mother Etrnacore just before Ena leaves it was particularly striking. We do love aliens being alien. I also thought you did a good job with the unreliable narrator aspect of the POV; it makes perfect sense that Ena views her own actions and desires as naturally good and beneficial to all, and I think you did a good job of selling her perspective as what she would naturally think while showing indirectly that she's a mass murderer, heh. It gave the story a bit of a creepy-cute vibe that I found really entertaining. There were a couple images that felt out of place with the xeno POV to me--it's always hard for me to understand characters gasping when they don't actually breathe, for example--but overall I like the approach you took with the POV and enjoyed seeing how you think life as an eternatus might play out.
It's interesting that Ena is noted as being a bit eccentric and out of step with her siblings--maybe the others gobble up planets without feeling particularly bad about it, rather than thinking they're bringing joy and love to the planets' lifeforms with the dynamax/eterna energy phenomena? I kind of wondered how the other eternatus relate to life, if Ena is the odd one out.
It was fun to discover that this is actually kind of a backstory fic, since the eternatus POV here is specifically that of the eternatus from the Gen VIII storyline. Unfortunately, those bits didn't feel as fleshed out as the initial setup of Ena growing up and bouncing from planet to planet. I think it could definitely be fun to explore how an eternatus would even interact with a trainer (transmitting information through sound waves, how bizarre!) and how "life" could end up teaching Ena and being like a mother to her, but the story kind of rushed through that bit, simply stating that Ena was content to bide her time and do what her trainer wanted. I really wanted to see more there, since it feels like such a big change, and the brief summary we got wasn't very satisfying to me. I think the story would have worked fine either if you spent more time fleshing out Ena's time in Galar and showing a bit more about how her experience with humans changed her perspective, or if you cut the Galar bits and left this as a story about how eternatus live in their natural habitat (maybe with a cute ominous ending where Ena's arriving at a new planet filled with an exciting new form of life called "pokémon"...). As it is the last couple scenes feel a little tacked on, which I think gets in the way of what you were doing in the beginning rather than enhancing it.
You did have a fair number of typos, tense slips, and other small technical erros throughout this story; it might have benefitted from another read-through or beta feedback to get things reading a little more smoothly. Also, I wasn't quite sure about the words in brackets. My guess is that these would be words relating to planetary concepts that Ena wouldn't have experienced as a larva, such as soil, plants, the ocean, etc. However, there were times when you'd have words like "forest" or "ash" that wouldn't get the bracket treatment, and I wasn't sure whether that was because I was misunderstanding what words were supposed to be bracketed or because you'd missed some.
In the end I thought this was a very striking story that made good use of the theme. I wanted a bit more from some parts of it, but as an exploration of eternatus I think it holds up well. Glad to see an entry from you, and I hope you had a good time writing this!
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