Just some pondering about different versions of timeloop stories. I don't really have a point here just trying to put things in writing and see if it jars something loose.
What's confusing about this story is that it appears to be maintained by this kukuni, but we don't know why. It's had probably tens of thousands of loops to get "it" "right" whatever "it" might be. What is the victory it wants? There is some variation allowed (we've seen minor differences in the two loops, and the kids were able to talk without... whatever happened with the weaver happening), but only so much, and then the kukuni seems to send people to the cornfield. But if it's trying to get a particular result it's not getting, it should want variance. Also, in the most recent update it implies it would sacrifice anything, maybe even the whole village, for "victory." It can't be a perfect day for all the villagers if it's willing to erase the villagers. Reaching for some platonic ideal of Perfection/Joy that's unattainable because life is imperfection and imperfection is beautiful yada yada yada...
This does suggest that the loop itself is what the kukuni wants, but... why? Is it just repeating it's "moment" and trying to get stronger? If so, it's either broken in some way that means it doesn't realize it's not working, or it should be incredibly powerful after as many centuries as we think the loop has been going.
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- Groundhog's Day: The classic. In this case, some impartial force is looping events until the "right" result is achieved. There's plenty of variations on this, I'd call it the archetypal template, though a low-fantasy version with no explanation for the loop. Happy Death Day is another favorite of mine in this theme - a girl keeps getting murdered until she figures out how not to be. Usually only one person is aware of the loop.
- Stargate SG-1 - Window of Opportunity - A weird interaction between the Stargate and other alien technology causes the loop. Largely a Groundhog's Day take, with only two people aware of the loop. The solution is for Jack to use the loop to acquire a whole new skillset and translate some alien writing.
- Higurashi: When they Cry: A supernatural being is cycling through timelines in order to find the one where a tragic calamity can be averted. The people inside the loops largely have no idea what's going on, except in brief interstitial bits where they briefly exist between loops that they gradually become aware of. Each loop gives the viewers pieces of the puzzle. Unusually for timeloop stories, while the tragedy remains constant, each "loop" is substantially different.
- Mother of Learning: Oh boy. This one is multilayered and honestly I'm fuzzy on the details. Not actually a "time" loop but a simulation inside a very powerful artifact that happens to resemble a timeloop to avert a catastrophe. Twists include multiple loopers acting at cross-purposes and the ability to learn magic making it abusable for training montage purposes.
What's confusing about this story is that it appears to be maintained by this kukuni, but we don't know why. It's had probably tens of thousands of loops to get "it" "right" whatever "it" might be. What is the victory it wants? There is some variation allowed (we've seen minor differences in the two loops, and the kids were able to talk without... whatever happened with the weaver happening), but only so much, and then the kukuni seems to send people to the cornfield. But if it's trying to get a particular result it's not getting, it should want variance. Also, in the most recent update it implies it would sacrifice anything, maybe even the whole village, for "victory." It can't be a perfect day for all the villagers if it's willing to erase the villagers. Reaching for some platonic ideal of Perfection/Joy that's unattainable because life is imperfection and imperfection is beautiful yada yada yada...
This does suggest that the loop itself is what the kukuni wants, but... why? Is it just repeating it's "moment" and trying to get stronger? If so, it's either broken in some way that means it doesn't realize it's not working, or it should be incredibly powerful after as many centuries as we think the loop has been going.
🤔