1) The shinki will express appreciation for this information, but won't be able to tell Archer anything else based on it.
2) Some of the spells found in Mitsui's house are leftovers from the forest. Other spells look like the one that Mitsui gave to Zelda, Shun and Hibiki. To our knowledge, the charm given to them was not placed in Tokyo Daijingu -- rather, Hibiki took possession of it in order to take it apart for further analysis. Archer would therefore not find anything hidden in that shrine after shadowing Zelda.
3) It's not a very secure password, though it's long enough that it would be annoying to brute force (it's the name of a family of showy, venomous fish popular in aquariums.) Upon getting into the computer, Ginia will find that Mitsui seems to have collected a ton of travel guides, as well as a great deal of research on world religions, modern and ancient. However, there doesn't seem to be a lot of specific information. His email and Twitter passwords are not saved on his computer, so they won't be able to get into his accounts, but she will be able to access old emails; many of them are work-related or to what seem to be acquaintances/coworkers, complaining about work. He's subscribed to several mailing lists, with a distinct conspiracy-tinged flavor (unexplained mysteries, unsolved crimes, cults and conspiracies.) He's also emailed family, though those messages are mostly stilted birthday or holiday greetings.
Overall, the impression created by the data she'll find there is of a reasonably intelligent man with a lot of resentment, no meaningful close friendships, and a real interest in being on the "inside" of the "secret conspiracies" he believes control everything. It doesn't, however, reflect much inside knowledge or specialized expertise. For example, his calendar has a number of past meetings on it, identified with single letters, that correspond to the past meetings they've observed him taking; there aren't any meeting dates set more than a few days after the date they copied his computer's data, though.
no subject
2) Some of the spells found in Mitsui's house are leftovers from the forest. Other spells look like the one that Mitsui gave to Zelda, Shun and Hibiki. To our knowledge, the charm given to them was not placed in Tokyo Daijingu -- rather, Hibiki took possession of it in order to take it apart for further analysis. Archer would therefore not find anything hidden in that shrine after shadowing Zelda.
3) It's not a very secure password, though it's long enough that it would be annoying to brute force (it's the name of a family of showy, venomous fish popular in aquariums.) Upon getting into the computer, Ginia will find that Mitsui seems to have collected a ton of travel guides, as well as a great deal of research on world religions, modern and ancient. However, there doesn't seem to be a lot of specific information. His email and Twitter passwords are not saved on his computer, so they won't be able to get into his accounts, but she will be able to access old emails; many of them are work-related or to what seem to be acquaintances/coworkers, complaining about work. He's subscribed to several mailing lists, with a distinct conspiracy-tinged flavor (unexplained mysteries, unsolved crimes, cults and conspiracies.) He's also emailed family, though those messages are mostly stilted birthday or holiday greetings.
Overall, the impression created by the data she'll find there is of a reasonably intelligent man with a lot of resentment, no meaningful close friendships, and a real interest in being on the "inside" of the "secret conspiracies" he believes control everything. It doesn't, however, reflect much inside knowledge or specialized expertise. For example, his calendar has a number of past meetings on it, identified with single letters, that correspond to the past meetings they've observed him taking; there aren't any meeting dates set more than a few days after the date they copied his computer's data, though.