>>3473315>they're the same, just the android is a far more primitive version of the biological one.but it would be cruel and unthinkable to me to treat a living being like an approximation of anything, particularly one who has the same emotions and thoughts as your waifu. That was my reasoning for being ready to accept the unfortunate possibility that Veko clone is plausible in the manga. She may not have been the original (prior to the flashback proving it) but as a perfect copy, the same bleeding heart that I came to love would still be beating painfully in her chest, Ilblu would have even duplicated her soul perfectly. I'm not strong enough not to love her, even with the knowledge that the original's soul is swimming around at the bottom of the abyss somewhere. What can I do about that? Kill myself and try to find her with mine? What of the clone, who is going to give her a good life? Besides, there would be nothing in life binding me to the original so our spirits would likely never find each other let alone intertwine; there is still time to form such a bond with the second.
I know that a clone in our world would be somewhat different though, because in my case the clone would genuinely be who I fell in love with in the first place, just without realizing she was one. The flashback arc only cemented that love further, but that past girl would not have been my waifu, just a girl whose memories and experienced my waifu carries as her own.
I still don't think I could resist loving her the same if she were perfectly recreated yet again in our world either, though. The heart is not a rational thing, you could not override its natural reaction so easily as throwing logic at it. Do you think it's possible to convince yourself to stop loving someone because 7 years have gone by so all their cells are replaced making the old one technically dead? At the end of the day, your waifu would be in front of you and you can't make it feel otherwise.