Yes. It's fortune-in-the-middle. You can nearly always establish a post-hoc fiction that fits what happens. (I think
@clearstream's treatment of my example of P1, N1 and P2 is pushing the limits a bit of what I can fit with a system that uses precise durations, but that's a secondary or tangential matter.)
The extra puzzle is that it's fortune-in-the-middle that rests on a mechanically complex and interactive "mini-game". That's a bit different from some other FitM approaches, which tend to retrofit onto a single check.