Talk:Koutarou Amon/@comment-27788670-20161023130259/@comment-27247962-20161023183501

^It might reduce his character or it might increase the importance of Takizawa and Saiko's character through what Amon shared with them. As an important character Amon is equally capable of giving other less important characters an important goal or ideology to follow, which makes those characters much more relevant all of a sudden. (Because I still don't know how remotely relevant Quinx are, they have nothing authentic, everything started with Kaneki and everything ends with Kaneki for them, unless another way is shown to characters. Like Amon is showing Saiko now.)

Live is sometimes pointless and unresolved. To have a character leave in a state of incompleteness is beautiful on it's own. Even though the standard manga would try to end every character as 'resolved' as possible. I don't think that is particularly needed in this type of story.

Donato's ties with Amon aren't the only thing that make him relevant anymore. Now that he is officially affiliated with the Clowns, he already has taken another interesting position in the story. Wether he confronts Amon now or not, is purely to make the story seem more 'resolved', which isn't a necessity for me. Because to be fair here, it's purely our curiosity rather then their confrontation having something to do with The Clash of The Two Kings which is the core of the plot at this point.

I agree with the last part, so you certainly aren't the only one. But it doesn't change that what we say are empty words, wether it's majority or only a small group. What fans crave for, is still not a good enough argument to base things on. And that's how I like it best.