Talk:Ken Kaneki/@comment-28990532-20151223003213/@comment-27204325-20151223063542

That's true, but I think the Quinx experiment had less to do with teaching them how to use their ghoul powers than it did monitoring them to make sure they could still live as humans while carring ghoul organs, watching for any side-effects and checking the overall effectiveness of the surgery. Also, like I said, this group was problematic to begin with. They were trouble-makers, emotionally wounded, withdrawn, unwilling to follow direction, etc. They would have needed help either way. But, at the same time, they were all essentially disposable as test subjects, with the possible exception of Urie.

Now that the kinks are basically worked out, the process can be streamlined to include more promising investigators who won't need to be monitored as closely, just trained to use their ghoul powers the same as they're trained to use quinque.