I've been following since the pony days, and even though I know nothing about TWST, I still like reading the funny comics you do about the anime Disney boys c:
I do miss Tim tho :(
thank you! :D :D :D I have NO idea how my posts must come off if you have zero knowledge of Twst (aside from giving an extremely biased view of what it actually is about) (guiltily stops drawing Lilia for thirty seconds). but I appreciate that people still find joy in them anyway!
and Tim still shows up every once in a while! perhaps even...somewhat recently? :)
239 notes
·
View notes
y'all remember this post?
yeah. i redrew it for fun! a whole lot has changed in two years!
265 notes
·
View notes
dan and phil and the queer joy that is radiating from this new era on the gaming channel is my roman empire. the older i get the more i realize how important it is to see older queer people that are happy
388 notes
·
View notes
The weirdest thing in totk so far has been finding out that there was an intended method of finding mineru where you were supposed to get hints steadily on who the fifth sage was and you weren't supposed to just force your way through zero visibility thunderstorms for the sake of exploring and then getting jumpscared by a talking construct head and realizing you just triggered a major plot centric quest early to mid game with only two other sages
721 notes
·
View notes
I don't think Dr. Ratio betraying Aventurine was actually planned.
It honestly came across to me as Aventurine trying to convince himself that it was the plan in order to feel like he had more control over the situation than he actually did (and to convince others of that, playing off the moments of vulnerability like they were just an act so no one tried to examine what was really going on with him phycologically).
His anger and fear seemed far too genuine to have been fake.
And on Dr. Ratio's end: if he had also planned this from the start, what use would his message of advice have had? If there were no hard feelings involved between them, why would he have said something so emotionally charged, to be read only when Aventurine really needed those words?
It seemed like Dr. Ratio's way of apologizing for what he did and making it clear to Aventurine (without explicitly saying it, of course) that he genuinely cares about him.
Tl;dr: I think Aventurine was pretending that Dr. Ratio's betrayal was planned to cope with his lack of control. Also, these two are gay for each other.
97 notes
·
View notes