It certainly is going a place. Fortunately the next page will have simplifying things, soon.
Meanwhile (heh) in Schlock Mercenary, the
current story seems to be about one-way mind uploads again. A concept which has always been fascinating to me. I saw it explored in two different short stories, a while ago.
One was a lot like this: FTL was only practical for minds, so people would be well-payed to send "themselves" off to work on an offworld colony. Like the earlier "downlifts" in Schlock Mercenary, this often resulted in dissatisfied copies and cheerful "originals".
Another was someone simply copying himself into a simulated reality to test his craftsmanship. Repeatedly. Many, many times. You see, there was a hardwired option for simulated sentients to "opt-out", and for some reason all his clones got pissy and terminated themselves, rather than help. The story starts after he disables that option.
He didn't disable the option, he took an amnesia drug and put on an interface. He simulated the experience of being simulated (with the help of his girlfriend, who played the "real" him in the scenario)
Anyway I'm excited to see this explored some more. The war for Earth was one of my favorite storylines. I like all the extreme-stakes precursor stuff, but it's starting to feel tiring and slow. This story moves that plot along, but by exploring a very creepy concept on a personal level.