Amazing Digital Circus Final Episode Theory - "Pomni in Space" - I figured It Out And They Didn't
4-8-2026, 2:25 P.M. EST
Good wonderful-afternoon all,
I was hoping to borrow use of my own blog to deploy a theory I had, on a nerdy nerd show that has fallen into my purview. For any friends and family from life that have found my blog, feel free to ignore. I had tried, as most digital nomads of this age oft do, to post this content on Reddit, but the subreddit I haplessly picked (r/TheDigitalCircus), bans all posts on accounts younger than 5 days old (without telling people that prior), prevents mod-mailing to accounts younger than 5 days (giving anyone up to five days' to steal your groundbreaking essay), has no discord or other means to litigate off-platform, and then Reddit adds your full essay into their plagiarism-checker to ban you for your own stuff for trying to fiddle it and repost elsewhere. The sock-account-quasi-real-account that I made for this purpose got deleted by Reddit proper and those appeals can take forty days, so I am left bereft and as another unlucky sucker participating in this variant of an American Humiliation Ritual. There is no societal upside to intelligent writing anymore.
The below is the drafted version that I planned to put on a general theory board afterwards. I may add a supplementary image of some nature to this essay at some point but the rest is effectively set and any future alterations to the syntax will likely be documented somewhere. Please feel free to see below and honestly I kind of would like credit if someone steals my ideas from this dead blog, since there's seemingly no shot that I'll get a hundred Reddit or generic internet-points proving that I was first. Please feel free to comment your thoughts or else reach out to me if you'd like to discuss, although some of the old social media references that I may have made in older posts (Twitter) are no longer used by me.
I was hoping to pop-in and add my fan-theory for the final
upcoming episode of the web-show “The Amazing Digital Circus,” as something to
generally talk-about and share. I posted a nearly-identical version of this
content on r/TheDigitalCircus just a few minutes ago but wanted to reach out in a
couple of different spaces. The below contains heavy spoilers to The Amazing
Digital Circus (a free webseries on Youtube) and I would highly encourage that
anyone here first watches and is currently caught-up on that show up to the
current episode at time of writing (completing episode 8).
As a prelude, I am halfway embarrassed to post this theory,
fully-aware also that it is likely *not* how this series is going to pan out,
though it did strike me as perhaps a fun creative exercise to share at least,
especially while we're all in this fun period of guessing how it ends. I think
various voice actor testimonies have indicated thus-far that the final episode
will likely be out-there in the sense of adding a lot of new material and I’ve
sort of tried to meet that challenge. It should go without saying, but the
below intentionally contains several spoilers to everything seen in the show
thus-far and potentially the ending itself. The working title for this that
I've headcanoned for this is the "Pomni in Space Theory," in-part to
differentiate this from the "Soma" theory that people are passing
around on the boards (which I don't think will be wholly the case for this
show). I’m halfway embarrassed to post this, though it might make for a fun
creative exercise to share at least. Feel free to comment your own thoughts and
ideas below too. Apologies in advance if this is an improprietous format or
forum for this type of thing as well, I am relatively new to creating full
Reddit posts as well as this subreddit in-general.
I could add further evidence underlaying this theory-sketch
(and can probably litigate things further, after this initial post, a bit),
most of my evidence is sort of interwoven in my sketch / write-up, although
underlying this is also a confidence that I have that the show is going to
shoot for the *best ending possible* (and thus, that can serve as a valid place
to work backwards from), and that the villain from the last episode would face
very valuable and confident redemption (without necessarily removing
responsibility either). For the “best ending,” I think the only things that
would register in the hearts-and-minds of fans in a real energizing way as “the
best” would be A), the various “abstracted” characters regaining their
humanity, and / or B), that the core cast escapes the Digital Circus. My
overall theory is based around guessing that both happen. In terms of villain
redemption, I think the “save-state theory” that has gotten passed around in
this type of discourse (effectively that the dead A.I. Caine might be restored
to an earlier version of himself) is less redemption than it is pragmatic
avoidance, and kind of deprives the viewership from knowing that he won’t
deteriorate into megalomania again (which signs of it always existed
very-early-on, with a god-complex as early as in the current timeline of
Episode 2 in the Candy Kingdom, and potentially, at-face-value, as early as
when he was meddling with Scratch and his memories).”Caine comes back but
relinquishes his system admin privileges, leveling with the characters that he
had an excessive temper-tantrum and is sorry” is also a ridiculous theory
in-my-eyes and would rob the audience of certain lasting satisfactions; in a show
that is largely about relationships, requiring the evocation of sysadmin perms
is like requiring a literal act-of-god to get along—the mother of all plot
devices and writing cheats, from my very-limited standpoint and current
perspective. What people are tossing around as “Soma theory,” which is namesake
off of an incredibly bleak but introspective other creative work (Soma is a
videogame), posits that the Digital Circus cast are all inside of a computer
hurling through space, which is an idea visited in at least one point in the
game Soma. While I think this is not necessarily a terrible outcome at face
value, 1) I think it wouldn’t sit well with many of the fans if that did happen
to be the case, and 2), it also faces small logistical quandaries (does their
computer-rocket autopilot? Will it fall into the sun’s gravity at some point?)
that it’d seem the show would have to focus a lot of bandwidth to both
introduce and satisfyingly exposition and assure-us-on by the end, and 3) I
think that revelation would be quicker, shorter, and less climatic than other
things the story could do from a writer’s standpoint.
This all isn’t to insist that my below theory is right, my
write-up is admittedly in-left-field, but I did want to add just add that as
another paragraph of preface (especially since this subreddit seems to ask for
it) before leading into my 2,000+ word write-up.
Some of the vaguest inspirations, and fictional works that
have had me guessing on the finale of Digital Circus, come from a bunch of
shows, games and film that are either just in my mind or might objectively hold
similarities to Amazing Digital Circus (such as Undertale, the Danganronpa
games, Farethere City, Project Hail Mary, Gnosia, and of course Soma). I tried
to throw ideas fairly far-out there, partly in-spired in-light of Caine's V.A.
Alex Rochon implying that the final part may include several elements that were
not exactly telegraphed at-all or foreshadowed, when he was [discussing the
series on Tom Fawkes' Episode 8 reaction Youtube stream](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvGJTgV0Lu0).
Please feel free to share your own thoughts in the comments and apologies in
advance if this is not the best forum or format to share fan theories of the
upcoming episode 9.
Amazing Digital Circus Theory: Pomni in Space:
Earth has faced a pending calamity, and is found to have
mere decades, if not less, before a mass extinction event wipes out life as we
know it. On a last-ditch effort to save humanity as we know it, a pioneer crew
of 30 voyagers bravely trek a maiden voyage in a colony-sized or
expeditionary-sized spacecraft, to the only other habitable planet in the
universe that scientists believe to have located. They hope to bring back a
solution to the impending mass-casualty event on Earth, or, failing that,
confirm in-person the viability of the second-planet for humanity to colonize,
so that they might return to Earth and prepare a massive human exodus onto the
new planet if safe.
The technology to complete the required long-distance space
travel has been proven viable on small-scale, though the distances required are
still light-years away. The only solution arrived at is to place the traveling
humans in temporary stasis, for the years that the voyage takes place. But
while technology can preserve a body for years without aging, early testing
indicated that, without combined measures, the body would be left braindead and
comatose.
Galvanizing humanity's efforts, the pioneer expeditionary
voyage is staffed with the entire lead talent, as well as a stable version of
their best technology, of the company "C&A" (Cyrogenics &
Astrobiology). Their role, as-important and sophisticated easily as much as the
rest of the spacecraft put-together, is to create a virtual world, to stimulate
the minds of the passengers for years until the ship reaches its destination.
Every member on the crew has their own reason for joining; the terminally-ill
Scratch joins on aware that his expertise may be necessary for this journey as
a sacrifice to humanity, although undergoing years of sustained Cyrostasis,
under their world's current medical theory, might shrink or eliminate his
progressing brain tumor, potentially solving both problems at once
(so-to-speak). The crew on the maiden voyage has several members of elite talent,
but also a smattering of crew members of other backgrounds, with a
colony-mindset and diversification underlaying even this first expedition.
Errors arise very quickly after the spacecraft has left
Earth (or else, on a return voyage back to Earth). The stability of the
creative A.I. meant to manage this digital world has already gone silent. It
has been killed by a latent virus hiding within the code. The C&A
scientists immediately cut the entire system off from receiving any further
information about the outside world, and erase any data received by the first
A.I. either completely or to the best of their abilities. A sub-program and
backup A.I., intended as a children's model for the same space-travel purposes
with its own dataset, has broken out of its own containment, realizing certain
system errors, and attempts to take over all roles previously held by the main
system (though this extra piece of knowledge may not be known by the on-board
crew at this time). It takes on aspects of the blue A.I. and ultimately also
faces (and is plagued with) the same corruption threat and volatilities.
It is determined that the level of corruption that the
system is facing, as well as logistical problems preventing them from returning
to Earth (now well-away from orbiting it) and re-starting launch after
troubleshooting there, is that the C&A science team would entirely enter
into the program and fix it from the inside. This fails. The on-board space
crew also sees the level of "active players" in the system, and receives
massive alerts and errors effectively when one player vanishes (is abstracted
and quarantined), and, with dwindling hopes, they send more and more people
into the corrupted system. Pomni is likely the last crew member not within the
system, and with no other hopes, also enters into it, putting the helmet on and
(as everyone else had) quickly realizing that exit from the inside is not as
simple as taking it off. Potentially, the ship is entered into hyperspace as
soon as it detects no further cognizant voyagers on the ship; potentially, its
course back to Earth may not even be steerable from the ship until its first
passage is completed. Pomni enters the circus.
Several memories are manipulated, either by the virus or by
Caine likely in prevention of attack vectors by the virus. The no-swearing is
likely a (harmless) carry-over from being a children's A.I. software.
Forgetting their own names might be the virus, attempting to remove all of
their senses of belonging to better ostracize, isolate, and ultimately kill the
humans. Like Kinger remembering his wife in the current timeline, memories
involving love and belonging are something that the virus (and honestly Caine
himself) has no control over, and under the right circumstances, an absolute
weakness of the virus.
Caine is distraught on losing any further or expanded
macroverse data, but the virus is furious, and is doing its best to kill
(abstract) people left-and-right out of a petty and evil nature, maybe with a
more practical goal of creating enough of an issue for the humans that it (and
the spacecraft) is returned to Earth, where it gains other opportunities to
infect more powerful equipment to the point of being unkillable. Caine's only
real directive is to make sure that the minds within the circus are stimulated,
and doesn't know (and is as-likely potentially in-some-measure opposed) to the
visiting people finding any means to forcibly re-awaken. Aware (and with enough
remaining memories) of the virus problem the minute they got there, and while
everyone else was still safe, Scratch was looking for this, but was forcibly
impeded and failed. Incorporating what we know, the Blue A.I. likely also has a
relation to the cellar, and potentially remnants of its code may exist down
there, abstracted, before the characters ever arrived. It is plausible that the last two years' of each
characters' memories (or six months even) were wiped (locked-away) on arrival.
Kinger in episode 8 seeing a program folder of 30 "brainscans" is
more difficult to reconcile with this theory, although it could be that the
system is outputting every effort towards convincing them that they are
only-digital, and that there truly is no-escape. Bubble noticing that Kinger
has the ability to operate as a sane person, under the right conditions, in
episode 6 (with Kinger's horrified reaction by Bubble being there) is likely
very significant, and likely is linked to "Able" immediately having
things in his dialogue towards ultimately estranging Kinger from the group in episode
7 (if the other five had fell for it). Able trying to get the group to distrust
Kinger was likely a ploy by Bubble to try and better get Kinger on the path to
abstraction, as the lead threat #1. Under any scenario, I think we'll find out
that Caine's own memories (beyond simple verbal suggestion) had been heavily
manipulated, and flat-out corrupted, by Bubble.
The final episode likely begins immediately from where we
left off. With the entire world now dim and dark, the characters are able to
collaborate further with Kinger which likely immediately recalls other things
and moves the plot forward. Under this theory, they still do not have memory of
their names recalled at the start of episode 9. Kinger (or at least his insane
self did) has recalled that the color Blue (the blue A.I.) is the most similar
color to darkness (the cellar and abstraction), which is likely caught by the
characters and propels further investigation. Eventually a temptation is
presented to keep Caine dead. Possibly out of selflessness, maybe out of
pragmatism, and likely led by Pomni, they resist from this. Somehow, Caine is
fully redeemed. A final dramatic showdown ensues and the abstractions kill
Bubble. The blue A.I. is potentially restored within the confines of this story
(maybe acting as a quiet an egoless guardian who enacts very little-to-no
intervention on the visitors, or perhaps being a colorswapped likeness of Bubble)
but more-likely it isn't.
In the spirit of full-redemption and in-tone with several
pacifist routes of this genre, the main characters figure out (or otherwise
theorize) that, similar to how a docile abstracted Queenie was approachable by
Kinger, that the abstracted people can potentially be brought *back*. As long
as one has friends on the other side, if one spends enough time with another,
anyone can be saved or brought back. And slowly, continuously, they try this.
The characters continue to go on adventures, likely ones of lower-stakes and at
a relaxed pace, with everyone's input (and potentially conjuring them up for
each other), and with Caine's thousand-all-seeing-eyes, the abstracteds follow
along. The characters, separate from this, also directly spend time with these
abstractions, sharing things with them and being there for them as company and
friends. And slowly, they all come back.
Perhaps even a pathway is established or pursued for Caine
to leave, in-part or in-full (through software migration or literal hardware
transferal, i.e. his whole personality was always ran off of a microcomputer
and is simply movable to an outside-robot), perhaps they even open this up for
Gummigoo. If this is within our lens for “bestest ending” then I think very
little is off-the-table.
With the last person restored, and the space-flight likely
concluded (or near its close), and regained memories, the cast (likely
literally) takes one last curtain-call (perhaps even Caine leaves too, through
software migration or hardware migration into a robot of some kind, and/or
becomes a main and beloved program), with our cast setting the stage to a
close, returning to their human appearances and leaving the circus.
…I *am* aware that the most major problem to this theory is
that Gooseworx on Tumblr [once wrote](https://www.tumblr.com/gooseworx/733026760639348736/ragatha-said-when-she-saw-kaufmo-maybe-theres)
that “Abstraction can’t be undone,” in-context of another fan asking whether a
faster response to an abstracted Kaufmo would have made a difference. I’d
really like to posit that perhaps an abstraction can’t be “undone” (certainly
not like Ragatha was fixed, by snapped-fingers from Caine) but *can* be
“gotten-through,” slowly and under the right conditions, sometimes (like
psychosis). Perhaps an abstraction cannot be undone, but it can be “resolved.”
Admittedly, this distinction is likely a wishful interpretation, but it’s worth
hoping for the best sometimes. [Another post](https://www.tumblr.com/gooseworx/759123486234099712/whats-a-message-you-want-people-to-take-away-from)
that Gooseworx made on Tumblr, coming to mind, that a message they want people
to take away from the show is “That there's meaning to be found in a stagnant
life,” is (respectfully) I think likely both literally true, figuratively true
thus-far, and I think an intentional misdirection. If the above crazy theory is
actually onto something, then that would qualify as a type of “stagnant life,”
being held in-stasis through hyperspace. Though ultimately, I think the events
and the outcome of the final episode are primed to be anything but stagnant,
and the best outcomes possible are in our characters’ futures as they barrel
towards a well-earned hypothetical “true ending.”
Thanks for spending time with this post
This is a token comment on this post, left by the author in the only way that could quickly be figured-out, to semi-permanently timestamp this whole thing in a permanent-yet-semi-removable way. Google says comments cannot have their dates messed-around with in the same way that posts can. I don't manipulate any of these things, but for my own peace-of-mind, my "Pomni in Space" theory was (first) posted 4-8-26.
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