I kind of have an idea that the queen represents Alice’s logic and reason. Shes trying to control Wonderland, control Alice’s madness through reason, trying to take it by force. She is also fleshy, kind of similar to a human brain, or that might be reaching a bit. It also helps that she’s portrayed as a younger Alice (not her sister as most think) representing a young, sane Alice. As shown here, she reveals thoughts Alice never thinks of and helps clear her mind to the true issues plaguing Alice and Wonderland. She even says that if Wonderland disappears, she will still be there. Even if Alice’s memories and madness are destroyed, her logic, reasoning and problem solving will still be there.
A theory: Queensland looks the way it does because the Queen of Hearts represents Alice's Id, the deepest, darkest and most primal aspect of her mind. When she visits the Queen, she is visiting her inner child.
I think honesty the Red Queen is one of the best characters in this game, if not the best (besides Alice herself, of course). She has a truly magnificent design and the change in her voice to show you that she has mouths all over the castle...brilliant! My admiration of this game and it's genius simply doesn't seem to cease! (Why the hell am I so obsessed with the concept of Wonderland? I must be mad...Oh well. We're all mad here...)
When you look at the whole story, you understand the others before actually told you much... The carpenter tell Alice to consider that she may have been misled, but by whom? And Caterpillar tell Alice she's running away from reality.
both stories are good. The first one showed that this 'red queen' was alice all along and a manifestation of her guilt that was destroying her mind. In the second game it's an outside force that's destroying her mind instead which is why she reverts back into madness even after leaving the asylum. I like both stories but for me the shock of finding out Alice herself was the reason for wonderlands destruction in pt1 was better. Plus every character represented parts of herself good and bad.
The Cheshire Cat is supposed to represent Alice's id : the inaccessible part of one's psyche, which contains one's primary instincts. This theory makes sense for several reasons : if the Cat is Alice's id, he is the embodiment of her desire to escape insanity, and possibly of her desire to finally be able to live a normal life : that would explain why the Cheshire Cat acts as an ally of Alice. Furthermore, Alice's Wonderland avatar is meant to be her ego, the