Board Thread:Speculation House/@comment-24177652-20150127071507/@comment-24891101-20150127084138

Ah. The face. I'm saying it happens, not that it happens inaccurately. Raven very probably looks pretty much exactly like what we see on screen. I include this element to placate those who object to her apparent youthfulness, which, when combined with the general art style, probably settles that complaint. And adult's faces do change, especially over nigh-twenty years.

Yang's not lucid dreaming. She's not in control of her actions. She therefore cannot be held responsible for what her dream-self does. And in addition to her joy at seeing her mother, she'd naturally also be suspicious. And she'd be resentful. Oh so resentful.

Watch the sequences again; the episodes are embedded in the appropriate pages on this very website. Blake's scene lacks the visual distortion, and the soundtrack is merely melancholy. It certainly did not strike me as eerie. This one did, from the second viewing on (I was at first too focused on the happenings on screen themselves).

Conceded on possible timeframe issues, though I'd still say it's more thematic for it to be the same night.