It is actually being slowly created to feel and think like one to believe he is turning into one in the society that he is living in by the phoniness of the unhealthy mortal conditions of the manupulitive system that we are all part of in our participation in making us think that we need this and that with all kinds of drugs to be pleasurely entertained, to feel good in the cesspool of it's sin to assimilate our minds on a monstrous path to survive between becoming monsters or helpless useful idiots to them in this dog eat dog mentality that our cultural society was created to live in it's competition. I had gay friends before when I was a preteen, teenager, and young adult and sometimes they are more honest than straight people.Ī person who became aphatetic to the point that whatever he touches he can't feel anything anymore, thinking scared that he is becoming a monster that was not naturally born in him. You will know if they are really your buddy or pal when you come out to them. Regarding the person who commented below, why feel a monster? How will you know that they would turn their back on you unless you revealed who you really are. We're pretty big gamers ourselves, so we couldn't be more excited. Infinity Blade has been massive and we felt the song fit perfectly with the tone and visuals. “Ĝhair has always been on the cutting edge of mobile gaming. It will be used in-game, and will be triggered during "crucial battles" within the game's engine and core gameplay. "Monster", like all of Imagine Dragons' appearances on soundtracks, is a brand new song written specifically for the soundtrack, this time in collaboration with Chair Entertainment for their 2013 title, Infinity Blade III. Being someone that fights for good, he is haunted by his memories of his past self and sees himself as a monster with the burden of Ausar coming to him. Each time Siris dies and is reborn, his memories of Ausar begin to emerge. Siris fights as the "good guy" this time with his new deathless girlfriend Isa. Siris accidentally frees the Worker thinking him as an ally, but is betrayed and the Worker plans to destroy the world once more. Later, Ausar and Galath both betrayed each other with Ausar imprisoning Galath and Galath wiping Ausar's memory and rebirthing him as a child with vague memories of his former self with the name of Siris. Ausar was a tyrannical warlord who killed his wife and along with his former ally Galath, the deathless Worker of Secrets, destroyed the world and its inhabitants and remade it many times. Deathless are mortals who have mastered the technology to bring their "soul" into a new body when they or for their current body to heal from mortal wounds.
The song "Monster" was written by the Imagine Dragons for the Infinity Blade Series made by ChAIR and is about the story of the deathless known as Ausar the Vile.
But it shows me that I'm not alone and that's what I need. But this song speaks to me because of that. The first time I heard it I thought of this reason because, yes, I've been in this situation and I still am. I realize that this interpretation can be viewed as sort of disturbing. They're fighting their very essence, what makes them them, because they've been taught that what they are isn't good. I feel like this song is the result of someone honestly believing that they're the ones wrong with the situation they're in and they're taking a stand against the monster inside them. We could get anxiety, depression, all sorts of fun stuff that we desperately hide in an effort to act normal. We feel like we only have a candle, a heck of a bad light source, to guide us. We grow confused and we want, we need help.
We've been conditioned, trained to think that if we're not like the people around us then we're strange, we're the ones wrong. When this happens we feel like we have to consciously force ourselves to act like the people around us and even when we so that our real personalities, our emotions and things left unsaid want to show themselves. And it can make us feel like what's wrong with the situation is ourselves. I feel like this song could have several meanings but I see it in a way I haven't seen anyone describe it as.įrom personal experience, I know that continued frustration and a feeling of being left out can bring out the worst aspects of ourselves.