Oni matrix: Difference between revisions
(→Detailed translation: "good cop/bad cop" apparently refers to Griffin) |
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|0 kurai i sho-rai 9 oni ka-ko no | |0 kurai i sho-rai 9 oni ka-ko no | ||
|i-i kei-kan 22 waru-i kei-kan | |i-i kei-kan 22 waru-i kei-kan | ||
| | |10 ka 10 se 1 | ||
|3 bu-ra-mu 3 ko-ru-ta-na 1 | |3 bu-ra-mu 3 ko-ru-ta-na 1 | ||
|fu-ru ko-n-ta-ku-to a-ku-shi-yo-n 1 | |fu-ru ko-n-ta-ku-to a-ku-shi-yo-n 1 |
Revision as of 18:14, 23 May 2017
The Oni matrix is a visual element that was used in artwork for Oni's promotional material. It appeared in Oni's 1999 trailer a few months after the release of The Matrix, a movie with a well-known Japanese influence, which made use of a thematic element consisting of green characters (mostly numbers and kana) scrolling down the screen (as seen in the last few seconds of the trailer). The Oni matrix likewise consists of numbers and symbols, though it only uses 0s and 1s for numbers and it uses all three of Japan's scripts: kanji, katakana and hiragana. It would be clear just from looking at it that Oni's matrix image was inspired by The Matrix, even if the actual file name of the promotional image didn't say "matrix" in it.
The Oni matrix is found in the trailer, the notepad (mentioned below; start here to find links to all the images), a mousepad, various box art, etc. Below are some translations of the text.
Translation attempts
Dave (1999)
Either Dave was not familiar with Oni's tagline ("A dark future... an uncertain past... no one left to trust."), or he intentionally chose to give a naive translation of the phrases taken from the tagline when he encountered them, perhaps to point out the weakness of the Japanese used by Bungie.
“ | I don't know if this has been covered before, but perhaps this is of interest.
I got out my Oni notepad tonight (the freebie from the Action Sack) and the faint Kanji (Japanese characters) caught my eye. Behind the image of Konoko there are faint vertical lines of Japanese text faintly visable. Faintly is the operating word here. There are several words seperated by ones and zeros in each line. After squinting at these line for a while, I managed to translate a couple of them. Now these lines repeat, both within the "sentence" and also across the page. So while there looks like there are about 20 lines or so, there are only six unique "sentences" that I can pick out. They are: kiki (this is the Oni kanji repeated twice) ... kurai shorai (dark future) kako no aru onna (a woman with a past) furu kontakuto akushon (full contact action) buramu (blam) korutana (cortana) warui keikan (bad cop) |
„ |
demos_kratos (2011)
I think d_k's main focus was the existing translation by Dave, and he probably didn't go over the original image character by character, but he did discover that there was more to the appearance of "Cortana" than just the name.
“ | One thing I can say for sure - They don't know Japanese. Or at least they didn't when the promo was made. First: While being literally correct it is way too complicated for such an easy phrase. I'd say shinyou dekiru hito ga nai. |
„ |
Iritscen (2014)
Summary
I finally decided to give this a more thorough look than I did in 2011, since no one else has broken down the image character by character and actually shown their work. My translation could be summed up as:
- Oni / a dark future
- the past of a certain woman
- no one worthy of trust
- full contact action
- good cop, bad cop
- Blam / Cortana
- Cortana is coming!
Previous to this, no one seems to have noticed the "good cop" in "good cop, bad cop". Details below, for the dedicated.
Image analysis
There are 42 columns and about 28 rows in the image (that's seven-tastic!). They are not contiguous writing, unlike the old Japanese style of writing vertically right to left; each column is unconnected to its neighbors. The sequence of columns repeats halfway through, and each column repeats a string twice. So only one-quarter of the image is unique. Here's a masked image that shows the unique portion of the image.
Additionally, out of the horizontal 21-column sequence, there are six duplicate columns. I have lettered the 15 unique columns with the letters A to O. Also, some of the 15 columns have duplicated sequences of characters. This leaves, by my count, seven unique phrases, when all is said and done. Notwithstanding that I don't actually know Japanese, I've painstakingly identified the characters, and under "Character transcription" below, I reproduce them as text (handy for anyone else's translation efforts), and then in "Detailed translation", I discuss their meaning as far as I can ascertain it and attempt to decode the binary sequences.
Character transcription
A | B | C | D | E |
鬼0100暗い将来1001鬼 | 01過去のある女0101鬼 | 信頼に値する人いない0101 | 11ㇷルコンタクトァクシヨン | カ0101101001100 |
oni 4 kurai i sho-rai 9 oni | 1 ka-ko no a-ru onna 5 oni | shin-rai ni atai-su-ru hito i-na-i 5 | 3 fu-ru ko-n-ta-ku-to a-ku-shi-yo-n | ka 2892 |
F | G | H | I | J |
00暗い将来1001鬼過去の | 良い警官010110悪い警官 | 01010カ01010セ01 | 011ブラム011コルタナ1 | ㇷルコンタクトァクシヨン01 |
0 kurai i sho-rai 9 oni ka-ko no | i-i kei-kan 22 waru-i kei-kan | 10 ka 10 se 1 | 3 bu-ra-mu 3 ko-ru-ta-na 1 | fu-ru ko-n-ta-ku-to a-ku-shi-yo-n 1 |
K | L | M | N | O |
10001鬼0100暗い将来 | コルタナは来るよ100101 | い将来1001鬼過去のある女 | 0ヌ0101サ0101レ01 | 10ㇷルコンタクトァクシヨン |
17 oni 4 kurai i sho-rai | ko-ru-ta-na wa kuru ru yo 37 | i sho-rai 9 oni ka-ko no a-ru onna | 0 nu 5 sa 5 re 1 | 2 fu-ru ko-n-ta-ku-to a-ku-shi-yo-n |
Detailed translation
Now here is a translation, partly based off the previous efforts. For the most part, I've omitted the numbers, as I do not feel that they are significant. There's a random sort of feeling to them as if someone just said, "Binary looks mysterious and cool, right?" and mashed the 0 and 1 keys to provide separators for the phrases. However, there are a few more interesting sequences (E, G, H, L and N) where I do discuss the numbers.
A |
鬼 / 暗い将来 |
oni / kurai i shorai |
oni / dark future |
The first character in the first column is the kanji for "oni". It shows up in seemingly random places in a few columns. Besides that, we have the phrase that has already been translated as "dark future". This is obviously the beginning of Oni's tagline, "A dark future...". |
B |
過去のある女 |
kako no aru onna |
the past of a certain woman |
This phrase is a bit odd, because it's clearly supposed to be "an uncertain past...", but it's not. I've chosen to render it as literally as I can since it's clear that even a liberal translation cannot arrive at "uncertain past". It's strange that "uncertain" became "certain", and somehow the character for "woman" got in there too. In any case, the "certain woman" with an "uncertain past" was the Early Story Konoko, who did not recall her past and eventually found out that Griffin had wiped her memory. |
C |
信頼に値する人いない |
shinrai ni atai suru hito inai |
no one worthy of trust |
As demos_kratos noted, the Japanese seems very stilted here. A literal translation would be "trust with worthy someone not", or when rendered more nicely, "No one worthy of trust". This is obviously intended as the end of Oni's tagline, "No one left to trust". |
D |
ㇷルコンタクトァクシヨン |
furu kontakuto akushiyon |
full contact action |
This is an amusing transliteration into katakana of one of Oni's USPs. |
E |
カ0101101001100 |
ka 2892 |
??? |
"ka 2892" is obviously nonsensical. 2892 is not a number connected to Oni; 2032 is, but that would be 11111110000 in binary, which is not at all similar. It could very well be that the katakana "ka" and the binary are just random filler. I do think it's interesting to note that the 13 digits can be broken into four pieces and then the resulting numbers be converted to letters. For instance, breaking it down as 010-1101-001-100 yields 2-13-1-4, which would be b-m-a-d in the Roman alphabet. It almost makes one think they were spelling "blam", a phrase that occurs in kana form in column I. Moreover, the leading "ka" would make it "kablam". However, I just can't find a way to derive b-l-a-m from this binary. |
F |
暗い将来 / 鬼過去の |
kurai i shorai / oni ka-ko no |
dark future / demons of the past |
While the first phrase is reused from A, the second part is intriguing. Is it just a misplaced "oni" kanji next to a broken part of the phrase "kako no aru onna" from B? Is this a lucky accident like Konoko's name, or was this an intentional formulation? |
G |
良い警官010110悪い警官 |
ii keikan 22 warui keikan |
good cop 22 bad cop |
The first part of this phrase has been missed until now. "Warui keikan" is definitely "a bad cop", but it actually was intended to be read as part of the American expression "good cop, bad cop", which is found in the game's early story. Also interesting is that the binary wedged between the phrase is longer than the other binary sequences besides E and L, and that it comes out to 22, which is close to the age of 23 that was intended for Konoko in the early story, according to this image. |
H |
01010カ01010セ |
9 ka 9 se |
??? |
I have omitted the "01" after the "se" because I think it's simply another "01010" that's cut off. "9 ka 9 se" is probably gibberish filler like E probably is, but I took a couple different approaches to trying to translate it. One was to try to piece together a word from the syllables "ka" and "se", as well as from all the free-floating syllables in the text, as found in E, H, and N: ka, se, nu, sa, re. When that failed to turn up anything useful, I read the number 9 as it is pronounced in Japanese, "kyu". Oddly, one reading of "kyuka kyuse" could be liberally interpreted as "leaving one's former name". I'm not sure if this is a coincidence, as it seems far too clever compared to the fairly naive use of Japanese in the rest of the matrix. |
I |
ブラム / コルタナ |
buramu / korutana |
Blam / Cortana |
Besides being a trademark Bungie phrase (also see the sidebox on Blame! for the same kana), "Blam!" was the code name for Halo, which is the game with the AI companion Cortana. I suppose this was a case of a little marketing cross-pollination. |
J |
ㇷルコンタクトァクシヨン |
furu kontakuto akushiyon |
full contact action |
Though paired with a different (probably random) number this time, 3 instead of 1, this is a duplicate of D. |
K |
鬼 / 暗い将来 |
oni / kurai i shorai |
oni / dark future |
Though paired with different (probably random) numbers this time, 17 and 4 instead of 4 and 9, this is a duplicate of A. |
L |
コルタナは来るよ100101 |
korutana wa kuru ru yo 37 |
Cortana is coming! 37 |
As already caught by demos_kratos, this is a fuller reference to Cortana than the one in I. There seems to be a superfluous "ru" in there, but maybe I just don't understand enough about Japanese syntax. I don't see a significance in the 37, but since I am not very familiar with Halo, and the number is unusually long, I am including it. It's probably just padding, though. |
M |
い将来 / 鬼過去のある女 |
i sho-rai / oni kako no aru onna |
??? |
At first this seems to be a random mishmash of the phrases from A and B to serve as filler, but, like F, there seems to be a potential meaning to the phrase "oni kako no aru onna", which could be translated loosely as "the haunted past of a certain woman". Possibly just a coincidence. |
N |
0ヌ0101サ0101レ01 |
0 nu 5 sa 5 re 1 |
??? |
This seems to be more kana-plus-numbers gibberish like in E and H. I brought it into my decoding efforts on H, and also considered reading this phrase using the pronunciation for 5, "go", but came up empty-handed. |
O |
ㇷルコンタクトァクシヨン |
furu kontakuto akushiyon |
full contact action |
Though paired with a different (probably random) number this time, 2 instead of 1 or 3, this is a duplicate of D and J. They should have translated more of the game's USPs! |