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#mk spoilers
mothercetrion · 7 months
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:’)
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fsfghgee · 8 months
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Mr. Boon, these young men are too innocent and sweet to be in Mortal Kombat
I am taking them home. And until you make sure they have a stable and full of love home, I will take care of them.
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skellizo · 2 years
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AS IF I WASN‘T IN ABSOLUTE LOVE WITH HER ALREADY
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scalproie · 7 months
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kuai liang have you ever been on a fucking sofa
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fialukaffee · 10 months
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MY BABY BOI MK LEsGOOOOoOooOOO--
*fall asleep*
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mrcspectr · 2 years
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“You were just a child, it wasn’t your fault.” OKAY BUT LIKE THE EMOTIONAL IMPACT OF THIS, because this is a situation where Steven’s whole world has been turned upside down, and his sense of identity and personhood is in question because “you made me up?” But he understands Marc’s pain in that moment, and now everything about Marc Spector suddenly makes sense and EVEN THOUGH Steven’s hurting too, Steven’s wondering and questioning his purpose and whether or not his existence even matters anymore, he knows in his bones that they didn’t deserve all of this.
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fuddlewuddle · 2 years
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MCU comedy peaked when Steven Grant told Arthur Harrow he looked like Ned Flanders.
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clonecaptains · 2 years
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MOON KNIGHT 1x06 → “Meet my friend, Jake Lockley” 
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fsfghgee · 5 months
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Perhaps I'm alone in this, but the way that their villains counterparts stick together is the cutest ❄️🌪️🔥
The cutest thing in that battle
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I just wanted to put on record.
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ntaras · 8 months
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Father.
spoilers for the newest mk game
i’m very upset at the way they treated bi-han as a one note villain, and hate how they made out his father to be a good man. so, here’s a fic aka some anti sub-zero father propaganda.
the fic is centered around bi-han's relationship with his father
warnings for abuse, implied murder of an infant, and implied death during childbirth
if you see any typos don’t mention it to save me from embarrassment please
word count: 2.5k +
1. Sister
There’s a hand on Bi-Han’s throat. It’s not choking him, but it could if it wanted to. He could thrash and flail in the hand’s grip, but every time he whips his head in order to get away, the grip tightens. It’s mocking him, telling him how his last breath is in its palms. Eventually, Bi-Han learned it would never kill him. It would just make fun of him. It wasn’t any better for him.
But he’s lucky, isn’t he? The very hand that could kill him, also protecting him from death. Evidence of its power to take away life lies in the corpse of Bi-Han’s mother. He can’t see her, and he can’t feel her hands anymore. Even if the hand of his father left an awful pit deep in Bi-Han’s soul, his mother could show her son her hands, and that warmth exists even in the coldest parts.
The hand clasps his shoulder, cold skin- bitter.
“Oh, my son, what will we tell your brother?”
Bitter. Bi-Han hates bitterness. Not the taste, but what he is. It’s a taste too close to the hand around his neck. It’s a taste possessing him, a black tar attacking his soul.
“Bi-Han, did you hear me?”
Hear? What did Bi-Han hear? Just hours ago, when he walked towards the room where he heard his mother screaming and abruptly fell silent, he heard more crying. Though as loud as the screams his mother let out, they were still smaller. He was ushered out by two men standing guard by the door. He didn’t hear the crying again.
But he’s lucky, isn’t he?
“Your mother’s gone, and a sister- you would have had a little sister.”
The very hand that could kill him, also protecting him from death. Lucky, blessed boy, to not be a daughter.
“She’s not dead,” Bi-Han whispered.
“Bi-Han-”
He shoved his father’s hand off his shoulder. “She’s not dead!”
“She is dead- both of them. You mother and sister-”
“I heard her crying!”
Though many of the Lin Kuei men knew the Grandmaster for far longer than Bi-Han had been alive, they didn’t grow up with that man as a father. Bi-Han could see how his eyes held the contempt, scorn, disgust, and hate he had hidden away. They were eyes that watched Bi-Han like he was an animal, and his father the hunter. Though his father never took the shot to kill him, he would graze him enough for blood to spill.
His father’s eyes unveiled themself to Bi-Han.
“Who? No one was crying. Your sister was already dead before she could take her first breath.”
“She’s still alive! I heard her-”
The way his father struck him did sting, but it didn’t hurt. Even if blood began coating his tongue, it’s not as bad as the bitterness.
His father gripped both of his shoulders, dragging Bi-Han close to him and unable to escape his hold. Bi-Han kept his face turned away, looking down at the floor. He could feel the tears forming, and he couldn’t face his father with those tears on display.
“No one is crying except you, Bi-Han.”
Bi-Han’s lips wobbled, the question begging to be released from his mouth.
How’d he do it?
2. Tomas
There’s no love in Bi-Han’s father. He can laugh like any other man, his smiles are like any other man, but kindness doesn’t come from simulated laughs and smiles.
But he loves to feign kindness.
Even if killing Tomas’s family was an accident, sparing him from that same fate wasn’t an accident. Taking in a new son wasn’t an accident. Giving him the tools to be a useful son wasn’t an accident.
Tomas was allowed to keep his mother’s knife- he didn’t want anything else from the bodies of his dead family. The Grandmaster had removed the knife from the mother’s hand, grabbed the knife’s sheath, and handed the bloodstained weapon to Tomas.
Night came, and when Tomas fell asleep, Bi-Han snuck into his room and took the knife. For hours, he washed away the blood from the silver metal and cleaned the sheath. Bi-Han couldn’t wash away the blood that still stained Tomas’s fingers without waking him up.
As Tomas became his and Kuai Liang’s brother, Bi-Han couldn’t bring himself to call Tomas his brother. He was sure he didn’t care much for him, the cleaning of the knife was simply because his father didn’t clean it. It was a good deed that no one knew about- so it didn’t matter if Bi-Han did it.
Besides, Tomas was sure Bi-Han hated him. Bi-Han yelled at him once during a sparring session. Tomas clumsily slipped on the mat, and almost stabbed Bi-Han in the arm. Bi-Han screamed the word “idiot” so loudly, it echoed through the halls of the temple. The eleven year old ran away embarrassed, and Bi-Han was scolded by his father, that a future Grandmaster of the Lin Kuei has to keep his cool, even if others are being idiots.
Bi-Han’s way to his room was past Tomas’s room, but hearing his name leave Tomas’s lips, Bi-Han paused and listened to what was being said about him.
“Why doesn’t Bi-Han like me? I’ve been here for a year and all he does is call me stupid.”
“Bi-Han calls me stupid sometimes.”
Of course, Kuai Liang and Tomas quickly became close. Kuai Liang inherited all the kindness of his mother, the bitterness unable to possess him.
“But Bi-Han means it when he calls me that.”
“He also means it when he calls me that.”
“But you’re his brother! I’m not anything to him.”
“Can I tell you a secret?”
“What?”
“I think if Bi-Han really hated you, he wouldn’t have let you have the last egg roll yesterday.”
The moment he heard the two giggling, he made his presence known. “Can the two of you shut up? I want to go to sleep.”
Kuai Liang and Tomas sheepishly glanced at their older brother, Kuai Liang trying to stifle his giggles behind his hand, and Tomas completely red in the face. Bi-Han was ready to continue his way to his room, but once again stopped himself when he noticed Tomas staring at him. He locked eyes with the boy, who quickly looked down to the ground. Despite just laughing with Kuai Liang about Bi-Han, once Tomas met Bi-Han’s eyes for the first time since almost harming him, the tears began to slowly work their way down his face.
Had it been Bi-Han’s choice, Tomas wouldn’t be his brother. Instead, Tomas would still be running around in the woods with his family. He’d still have his mother to teach him how to track animals, how to stitch his own clothes, and she’d be the one to give him her knife.
Would it have been a mercy to kill Tomas also, to die in the embrace of his mother, rather than grow up to be another weapon for the man who claims the name “father?”
Bi-Han swallows his bitterness, and forces himself to find his mother’s kindness. “It was only a scratch. It won’t even scar me.”
He leaves before he can see how Tomas reacts.
Bi-Han almost wants to turn around and march towards his father’s room. In that split second of vulnerability, he yearned for his father to convey that same feeling. It’d never happen, it’s a farfetched fantasy.
But the question once again begged to be released into the open.
How’d he do it?
3. Kuai Liang
Kuai Liang is ignorant to his father’s truth. The truth being that all the fondness he has for Kuai Liang isn’t because he loves him. In fact, Kuai Liang is the son that doesn’t matter. It’s Bi-Han that matters. As his father once told Bi-Han, it’s why he’s so harsh with his darling eldest son. Because his claim to the Lin Kuei matters. 
The bloody noses, the scars, and the occasional broken bones Kuai Liang received weren’t ever by his father. It was always by Bi-Han whenever they’d train together- almost pitted against each other by their father. As Kuai Liang would be ushered to the infirmary, eager to heal so he can continue training, his father would approach Bi-Han and chastise him for being “too harsh” with his little brother. 
He doesn’t care if Bi-Han’s being too harsh with Kuai Liang, just as long as he doesn't kill him. 
Bi-Han isn’t scared of hurting Kuai Liang, but he fears his father’s hand hovering around his younger brother’s neck. The gentlest push could snap Kuai Liang’s neck, and then maybe Bi-Han would also die alongside him. Maybe he’d become something worse. 
Of course his father is aware that the reason he has such a hold on Bi-Han is because of Kuai Liang, and eventually even because of Tomas. Bi-Han is the only one who lives knowing the capabilities of their father’s violence, the other two boys blessed with being the youngest. 
What is it like to be ignorant? As Kuai Liang inherited their mother’s goodness, Bi-Han inherited her knowledge of the truth. She lived a life aware of the terror that was her husband, and was unable to save her children from him. Would Bi-Han be able to save his brothers? What would his mother think of him if he failed? 
If she became angry with him, that would be fine. She could lock him out the gates of Heaven if it meant she could embrace Kuai Liang again. Bi-Han would enter hell, and become trapped with his father for eternity, but hopefully he would become the one to torture his father. 
He’s never felt the urge to torture his father as much as he did right now. 
It’s been ten years since his mother died, today is the “anniversary” of her death. His father always held a dinner in memory of his wife’s and daughter’s untimely demise. Everyone had retired to bed after eating, leaving only Bi-Han and his father facing each other on the opposite sides of the table. 
They watched each other in silence as the servants cleaned the table as fast as they could, wanting to escape the awful tension in the air. 
As quickly as they finished cleaning, they left the room. 
“I was disappointed with the food this year. In all honesty, my appetite was ruined when the rice arrived late. How does plain, white rice arrive late?”
Bi-Han doesn’t respond. His father continues. 
“Though it seems you also agree. You barely had anything, but then again, you never eat whenever this day arrives.” 
Bi-Han doesn’t respond. His father sighs. 
“I waited for everyone else to leave because you clearly have something to say, so what is it? Spit it out, son.” 
Bi-Han still doesn’t respond. His father rolls his eyes. 
“Even Kuai Liang doesn’t throw a tantrum about this- and you’ve been throwing one for the last ten years. Once a year, you decide to throw this little scene with me. He was eight and practically still glued to that woman’s hip, and yet you’re the one still acting like a child.”
“Don’t.”
His father raised an eyebrow at the one-word response Bi-Han gave him. “What? I could at least understand Kuai Liang if he acted the way you’re acting right now, but you don’t have an excuse. Besides, what if Kuai Liang or Tomas were to die? If you behaved like this, that would simply be embarrassing.” 
Bi-Han digs his nails into his palm, his shoulders tensing up. This only urges his father to continue antagonizing his son. 
“You are aware that either of them could possibly die? I thought you would have come to peace with that considering our profession. Do you remember your uncle, my own younger brother? Did you see me weep when his body was delivered to me? No, you didn’t. Even if Kuai Liang’s body was delivered to me, I wouldn’t-” 
“I’ll kill you someday.” 
His father almost misses what he said, the words almost hiding themselves from him. But he heard them, and intrigued, his eyes began to gleam with a wicked glint. 
“Will you now?” 
Bi-Han still can’t look at that man in the eyes, but his body urges the words out of him anyways.
“The day will come when you’re begging me to save you- when you’re finally at my mercy. And I won’t give you any.”
His father laughs- the most genuine laugh Bi-Han has heard come out of him. If he was Kuai Liang, he would be grinning at the old man’s bellowing laugh.
“I’ll look forward to that day, Bi-Han.” 
His father leaves Bi-Han alone at the dinner table. Bi-Han’s throat is dry, sweat pooling at his forehead. That wasn’t torture, that was amusement for his father. It was a circus show his father watched for free. And despite it all, Bi-Han still couldn’t ask the question he’s kept in him for the last ten years. 
How’d he do it?
4. Bi-Han
His father is dying. 
Bi-Han doesn’t care how his father is dying, he only cares about the fact that he is dying. 
The snow has never looked as white as it did with his father’s blood dyeing it. The woods have never been as quiet as it did with his father’s labored breathing. The cold has never touched Bi-Han as much as it did now, with the bitterness leaving his father and the desperation sinking in. 
A hand reached out towards Bi-Han, struggling to keep itself supported it collapsed back onto the snow. 
“He-help me, son.” 
Bi-Han remembers this spot in the woods as the same place Kuai Liang and Tomas began throwing snowballs at him, and in response, Bi-Han kicked the unfinished snowman they built. The woods, at the very least, can offer Bi-Han the memories of fonder parts of his childhood. 
“Bi-Han, please.”
The woods can offer melancholic memories also. If he went further into the woods, he would stumble upon the trees Kuai Liang and Tomas planted- gravestones for the family Tomas lost. Though it’s not as sorrowful as it sounds, as it was the same spot Tomas hugged him for the first time. 
 “I need you to help me, Bi-Han, please.” 
If Bi-Han went even further into the woods, he would stumble upon a cave where a bear and her family took shelter in. The first time he saw the mother bear and her cubs, he rushed back home to show Kuai Liang. For hours, they watched the mother catching fish in the river next to the cave, and the cubs annoying each other. They didn’t return back to the temple until the sun began to set. Those bears probably don’t live there anymore, but a new family has probably moved in. 
“Son!”
How’d he do it?
There’s a hand on their throat. 
How’d he do it?
It doesn’t take much to snap their neck.
How’d he do it? 
There’s no blood to spill, so he won’t have to look at himself in the red mirror. 
How’d he do it?
No guilt. No relief. 
No guilt. No relief.
No guilt. No relief.
All love. 
Bi-Han’s a liar. He doesn’t get a chance to kill his father. He watches his father, instead. He watches his father choke on his own begging and pleading for his eldest son’s love. 
It’s all love. 
It’s how Bi-Han did it- all love. 
The woods have never been more alive, as Bi-Han finally looked his father in his dead, unblinking eyes, and cried.
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starwarsrebels · 2 years
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MOON KNIGHT | 1.06 "Gods and Monsters"
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scalproie · 7 months
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cryptidbait · 3 months
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Thank you so much @tiptapricot for letting me create some concepts for ur AU based off of MK Snowblind 🫶🏻🫶🏻🫶🏻
PLS PLS GO CHECK EM OUT 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
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gophergal · 11 months
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I'm sorry this is just the vibe I'm getting from the scenario
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