The experiments are fine, the Retcons are the problem.
I honestly thought the retcons wouldn't be a problem. It was such a minor thing, I thought people would let it slide. Apparently not, so I'll make sure to be more careful in the future.
Andres, I am not attempting to provoke you. If you don't want to respond to the statement itself, that's fine, but you could at least acknowledge the fact that you looked like you were trying to dismiss Stirk there. Because you most definitely were. "I will take what you said into consideration" is, even if you didn't intend for it to be such in this context, code for 'I don't give a shit what you think, stop bothering me'. Particularly when you tell someone they're too invested in it directly previously.
My response will be to explain what I was actually going for and the response to that will either be denial or an explanation that I was doing it wrong. I will not follow this line of discussion further.
Furthermore, if it's so inconsequential, then why are you making such a big deal about trying to go back and revise it? Just leave it as it is.
I'm making a big deal out of it because it's an integral part of Malakath's character: she does (or at least did) messed up things but did so in as positive a manner as possible. That's a big difference from simply "did messed up things".
Everyone else is making a big deal out of it because "You can't do it because you can't do it and that's that!" as far as I can tell.
Subjectively it's consequential and that gives me reason to do it, but objectively it's inconsequential and that's why I didn't think people would have a problem with it.
You're a god. You're not required to be nice.
I have no idea what your point is here. Are you saying that just because my goddess isn't legally required to have a personality that she shouldn't? That goes the same for all gods.
the thing is that, well, yeah, ooc revisionism is NOT okay, there's a reason that edits IC are barely tolerated. What you say is how you are perceived because your statements literally define reality in this case. You gave no hints whatsoever IC that you'd made this a "special" human in some way. What you said is "I make a human at the bottom of the ocean." So you got a human at the bottom of the ocean. Humans have nerves, so he/she had nerves. You can't rely on the other players (or the GM, for that matter), to assume things that aren't reasonable to assume.
The plan was to bring it up when it came up then people would go "Oh ok" and then move on.