Why do people keep making this assumption, about local beauty standards? Obvious muscles make it harder to look vulnerable. Knees and elbows may also have some impact on pulling off the look, if pronounced enough. Nothing she suggests seem to be inspired purely by local standards, without a shred of logic behind it.
Honestly, it seems more like something meant to be customized to Melia herself, and not something cookie-cutter, to me. Avoiding that is a major point of pride to Delight.
You misunderstand. I'm not saying Delight will turn Melia into a cookie-cutter beauty in that
there are many like her. But the bare fact that Delight is saying "you'd be objectively prettier if you looked physically weaker" and "you have the gawky knees and elbows of an adolescent" and treating those things the way she is...
It's like, Melia is getting a custom program of cosmetic surgery here, and it's customized skillfully
for her, but it's customized according to a specific set of rules idiosyncratic to whatever frame of reference Melia is using. The object of the game is "make Melia the most beautiful woman known to the particular culture that Delight used to learn what 'beauty' is."
The latter works for me. All the better to kick their asses. When it comes to combat/warfare, if you're not cheating, you're not trying hard enough.
Me, I don't want the
annoyance of having to constantly fight an uphill battle to be taken seriously.
For interpersonal interaction, a person's appearance is an "always-on" feature of who and what they are. They cannot switch it off without going to absurd lengths. If you enhance and hone their appearance to the point of being weaponized, that is a
weapon which is always switched on.
Melia is already attractive enough, and has enough of a 'cute kid' factor, that she pretty clearly gains some significant advantages from it. At the moment, the effect isn't an overpowering "always-on" weapon... but frankly, that's the way I like it. Because when you have a weapon turned on at all times, you're blasting your surroundings with it whether you want to or not, you don't necessarily have control of the effects, and you may not even be able to
assess the full effects. You won't even know when someone is too busy doubting your competence to trust you with important information or tasks, because you look like a cutesy child.
If I'm going to obtain a permanent passive effect from some change I can't turn off, I want it to be
unambiguously positive, with effects that I will literally always want. Innate resistance to dangerous magic would be clearly positive. Disease resistance is an unambiguous positive. There are no situations where being more vulnerable to disease or getting blown up by magical energies are good things. The law of unintended consequences can only bite us so hard with a wish like that.
By contrast, there are situations where not being super-conspicuously 'cute' is a good thing, or where super-conspicuous, borderline superhuman cuteness has nominally 'good' effects (like people willing to go to war to protect us) that can still have severe unintended consequences.
...
See, it's noteworthy that just about no one voted for the "romantic good looks" version of the appearance enhancement. I mean, it's not like sheer, stunning, heartstopping beauty of the "Helen of Troy" kind isn't an asset too. Melia could make a lot of use of it.
Why does 'Beauty' have few or zero votes after something like thirty people have voted, if not more? Because as a whole, we don't want to deal with the long-term consequences of
permanently looking like the wet dream of everyone we meet that's into females. It's a power that will act constantly in Melia's life, all the time, always on, with no way to conveniently deactivate it should it become inconvenient.
[Please note this is not me advocating the 'Beauty' choice, this is me making a point about the reasoning that leads us to reject it]
I feel that 'Cute' has some of the same issues. Sure, it doesn't seem like a big problem right now, when Melia is still an innocent weakling for practical purposes, and is still a child dependent on the mercies of adults. But it could become a much bigger problem a few years from now, with a more powerful Melia trying to engage with the world around her as an adult and authority in her own right.
Honestly? I suspect Delight is babbling, a little, while she works. It might be a habit, a sales pitch she's had to make multiple times, and thus goes through while on auto-pilot, and in a similar situation. I've had a doctor do that, only to have to ocassionally correct his spiel for me not having quite the same issues as his other patients. It's not hard to end up with a habitual patter, if you deal with enough people asking for similar things.
Okay, but the babbling still tells us a lot about Delight's attitudes and what kind of changes she's likely to make, especially since we're not in a good position to customize which of her options she goes for. We get to vote for 'Cute,' 'Beautiful,' or 'Neither,' not 'Okay, stop the runny nose and round off her elbows a bit but don't change her muscle mass.' So we can't just discount what she says; her over-generalizations could cause us harm or at least unintended consequences. Like everyone, she's a product of a distinct culture that will lead her to do specific things that may not be exactly as we expect or desire.
Just to check, this is a permanent until undone sterilization right? No other side effects?
And apparently a difficult technique, so does that mean to get it undone we more or less have to come back here?
Not important to the quest(since we aren't going there), but probably something worth verifying IC.
Yeah. I'd be kind of unhappy if it turns out we've agreed to give Melia the vaguely-reversible magical equivalent of a hysterectomy, to the point where only another highly skilled biomancer like Delight could realistically reverse the effects. Even if in-quest there's no mechanical downside to having a character who's been altered that radically, I'd be unhappy.
Especially if there are other side effects.
Eh. The Sonic Amulet is a bit meh. I'm not sure if it would, for example, majorly harm a mutated organism from our original home. It's probably rated for normal, non-magically durable organisms.
It may be possible to upgrade or augment the thing in future.
I've heard public speakers/debaters slip phrases they've used often in other such events seemlessly into their speech. I would guess it's a similar, 'if-then' sort of thing, assuming an accurate premise. She's talking while really looking at Melia's body and figuring out what would be best, and ocassionally using habitual filler while she tackles the problem.
See, I
get that, but the point is, we can't ignore or decline to interpret the words coming out of her mouth at face value, just because she
might not 'really mean them.' If she doesn't explicitly say "nope, changed my mind, those muscles look great on you," it's a safe assumption that her cosmetic surgery is predicated on the idea that muscles are ugly, because she
just said that.