Why don't Selenim and Ar-Kaïm suffer Shouit?
In the French version and the US rulebook, the Nephilim are body snatchers. Whenever the Simulacrum regains control, they enter a state of Shouit ("shadow"). Selenim and Ar-Kaïm don't suffer from Shouit: the Selenim's transformation loses much of their humanity, including the Simulacrum's mind, whereas the Ar-Kaïm aren't body snatchers at all but integrate their Simulacrum's Solar-Ka into their Hearts (that said, their awakening can cause memory loss ranging from only recalling the Simulacrum's dreams to complete amnesia).
Under an awakened or symbiotic perspective, like that advanced by the Chaosium writers in the Gamemaster's Companion (or especially in the unfinished Ex Oculis fanbook), Shouit is instead reframed as a psychological retreat from the occult into mundanity (or perhaps a dissociation in the bond between the Pentacle and Solar Core). In this case, it would make sense that it would then be able to apply to Selenim and Ar-Kaïm. But should it?
Selenim already suffer from psychological issues due to their immortality, only implied in second edition but explicitly referred to in third edition as the Hells, the Limbos and the Abyss (though this was entirely a matter of roleplay), and in fifth edition as the Ahaverus effect (including the brief rule "the Selenim runs on auto-pilot for exty decades"). This is comparable to Shouit already, and makes more sense too because you'd think the Simulacrum would suffer psychological issues from being ageless and having a dramatically slowed metabolism (according to the Codex Selenim, they're medically indistinguishable from coma patients and only consume a fraction as much food, water and oxygen). So I guess they're covered?
Ar-Kaïm already suffer from Khaiba like Nephilim do, and they suffer from Instability. It's easy for their Ka to become imbalanced, release flares of Ka, and potentially explode! From a game balance perspective, they probably don't need the further concern of Shouit. That said, I don't think it would necessarily be that big a stretch to give them something similar: maybe a waking dream-state where they confuse reality and fantasy? That would fit with their connection to dreams emphasized in parts of the French. I'd need to think on it more...
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