At that time, when reading a brief history of human beings, the author guessed that human beings might create life.
Maybe artificial intelligence, maybe other new races.
The protagonist of this film is a game life created by human beings.
The male protagonist Guy is a thinking game life, the heroine is the person who writes the code, and there is an engineer named key who cooperates with the heroine in reality. These are probably the three main characters of the film. Of course, only the decent can't support a movie. The villain is the boss of the company who stole the results of the heroine and her partner. And the heroine also entered the game in order to find evidence of the villain's infringement, got to know Guy, and finally the three worked together to defeat the villain.
Overall, the story is fresh and interesting. But what confuses me the most is the forced HE at the end, and suddenly key is with the heroine at the end instead of continuing with Guy. While it's clear that humans really can't live with the game, this transition is a bit too quick. And explaining why Guy loves the heroine is because the key follows the code he wrote, which also makes me feel that it is not completely reasonable. I think that since game life is already life, he can think by himself. Although the code is the most basic data, I don't think it is entirely caused by the code. Human-created life will be like Pandora's seed and may ultimately be out of control. But that might be going a little too far.
Overall, though, this popcorn movie is fun and innovative, and worth watching in your spare time. But it respects the life of the game, and it is a bit contradictory to say that the life of the game is still determined by the code, so one point is deducted.
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