To me, this last episode, particularly Ashton's talk with the titan, highlights where the nuance is failing.
Matt is attempting to show every possible possible outcome as equally viable, without giving it any downsides.
We don't get an exploration of the pro-god perspective because then we'd feel the consequences of the gods being eaten by Predathos
We don't see how the gods harm mortals because then saving the gods keeps us in that eternal cycle.
There are other forces keeping sealed evils at bay, and other sources of divine magic, so we don't need to rely on the gods here
Maybe the world hasn't had enough chaos, and getting rid of the gods would be good. But maybe there was too much chaos before the gods came.
And all of this really feels like when people say "question the man", but don't follow through on it. The questioning is little more than attitude and defiance because "the man", "the authority", "the throne," exists. This is Ashton.
This being in contrast to chesterton's fence (which I briefly mentioned in a previous post on this topic). It's the concept that before in a previous post, but to go more in depth, Chesterton's fence says you should understand why a law, tradition, or structure is in place before removing it. And this is Imagen's perspective.
Overall, the only feedback we're getting is "here's the benefits of this course of action", woth none of the downsides presented. And that's why Bells Hells has been so indecisive. Imogen and Orym can talk all they want about the good things the gods do, but it's abstract and not present for Ashton and Dorian. Ashton and Dorian can talk about how the gods hurt people, but Imogen and Orym don't have the proof that it outweighs the good they do.
We need to see trade offs here
- Keep the gods around, they still do good, but here's the too much control they have that you can see for your own eyes
- Kill the gods and enact freedom, maybe predathos destroys a bunch of shit, and the gods aren't here to keep many demons and natural disasters at bay
- Chase most of the gods away, keep the demons and natural disasters at bay, but Asmodeus (and almost assuradly Vecna) will circle back
These are the kinds of options we need, that are viable not because they're all net positives, but because we have to weigh the positives and the negatives. Rather than "do what you want, the world will keep spinning"
Bells Hells are desperately searching for answers of what effects their actions will have, and Matt keeps giving them an "I dunno"