Talk:Beka

Beka might not be his name
When Bayek said "Beka would be pleased" upon recovering the book, the logical deduction would seem to be that the name of the old man is Beka. However, evidence to the contrary is that he refers to the old man only as "old man" throughout the quest. When paying his last respects to the man's dead body in the temple, he still addresses him directly as "old man", never Beka. If he knows the old man's name is Beka, why would he exclusively refer to him only as old man apart from the one moment he said "Beka would be pleased"? I therefore thought that perhaps Beka is the name or alias of a deity that Bayek meant would be pleased he was returning the holy text to the right person or that Beka is the name of the old man's daughter whose name is also unknown. Sol Pacificus (Cyfiero) 19:40, December 15, 2017 (UTC)