I think that the glimpses of Breach we get from the beginning point a lot towards them being a supernatural entity. Thinks like they showing up out of nowhere, and being indistinct shapes or something in that ballpark are very hard to justify physically.
But then Tye realise that they are actually only a few, and they coordinate their efforts with cellphones; all normal stuff. In fact, Tye never witnesses anything supernatural while interacting with them.
The really kicker for me was when Bowden managed to not be recognisably anywhere.
That shows that you can "show up out of nowhere", "be invisible", by simply using the conditioning that pervades the city. You're not invisible, just unseen.
@LucDanton But why would they need them now, if they didn't need them before?
I’m okay with a self-fulfilling Breach made up of, well, people who breach.
I’m not okay with the cities being, and remaining, in their state all this time just due to Breach (both the one in people’s heads and the actual one).
Suppose the cities are overrun by invaders who haven’t heard of Breach — then what?
There’s always the idea that Breach is so powerful/imposing that those episodes might be forgotten. That’s the kind of considerations that make the setting so grim in hindsight.
@LucDanton I suppose they'll have a crisis like the riots near the end.
@LucDanton The avatar that accompanies Tye does mention that Breach fought wars in the past. Yet no one remembers.
Such a culture of forgetfulness is probably harder to keep in present day, though, what with the ubiquitous memory of the Internet.
They have some control over of the Internet that is somewhat stretching of suspension of disbelief ("Go anywhere you want"), but I don't think we can extend that to the point of purging entire episodes from it.
I’m more interested in invasions after the fact. I can’t imagine a garrison of foreign born soldiers paying any heed to the local customs — then what should a citizen do when a soldier breaches? Can’t ignore everything they do.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, I overlooked that.
There’s also the notion that they are few enough not to be noticed (in more sense than one, e.g. they are after all a shadow economy), but powerful enough to have many tendrils. Including access to weird weapons.
@LucDanton Ignoring the question of how the cities came to be, as it is so often (purposedly, I'd say) evaded in the book, I don't feel too uneasy about that, but I agree with you that it is not supported strongly enough.