being in the supernatural fandom is so funny. there are pages-long essays about characterization, metaphors and picture. there is a lot of crack. the fandom is divided whether you ship world's biggest age gap or incest. one of the main actors has an ao3 account and has probably read the fanfiction. another one of the main cast made his own fanfaction and turn it into a tv show. your favourite characters dies, you laugh bc it wont last, the stay dead for a little bit too long and you start to get worry, they get resurrected and damn, these writers dont know when to stop, its the third time they died and came back, fucking commit to it. we all hate the writers and producers. literally invented queerbait and we all fell for it. a random character from a totally unrelated show is canon bisexual and wow, we are trending. you want to defend your fav character and your main obstacle is your fav character (you gaslight yourself into "all fault is on the writers not my baby"). we out-trended the us elections and contine to trend on every anniversary of that day. we discuss which season is the best like they arent a recycled plot we already seen. the show was meant appel to conservaties and the fandom is made of gay people somehow. the main characters are alcoholic murderers that do extremely questionable stuff every season and we love them for it. someone outside the spn fandom finds out you are in and they look at you like you are insane and you cant even blame them.
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Cloud has been one of my favorite JRPG heroes since ages ago! He's such a complex, deep, and relatable character, so I went out of my way to portray his powerful spirit in a single image! 👏💖
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PC and Steam Deck players, it’s time to take to the clouds! 🌥️
✨Sky is coming to Steam on April 10th!✨
With this special milestone comes a bunch of exciting announcements, such as:
🧊 The Companion Cube comes to the event shop
🧣 The Journey Pack will now be available on ALL platforms
💕 Double Hearts
🕯️Treasure Candles Bonanza
🤫 And the moment you’ve all been waiting for…the return of a very special dancing Spirit!
🫂 Last but not least a huge heartfelt thank you to all the PC beta testers and demo players! Your feedback has been incredibly valuable in helping the team get prepared for this moment.
We can’t wait to welcome all the new moths to our Sky family 💝
More information can be found here 👈
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silly final lair comic based off of a user's text post who used to go by maraguanwocky but must have changed their @ since and I can't find the blog nor the post anymore ToT
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i wish apollo justice was bad actually. i wish it sucked so i could discount the entire post-trilogy series and not give a shit about any of the characters but unfortunately they had to write one incredible game and then follow it up with the worst most character assasination-y ass shit theyve ever produced. jesus h christ
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Animorphs rambling incoming:
i don’t think people who haven’t read Animorphs understand that Animorphs is the quintessential “childhood trauma in a sff setting” narrative. but people need to understand. because at its core, past the simplified synopsis (six kids gain the power to turn into animals so they can fight the aliens that are infiltrating Earth by sneaking into people’s brains!), Animorphs is a war story. it’s not a story about a war that just so happens to star children--it’s about child soldiers. Applegate and her co-authors made a choice to refuse to dress it up as “kid superheroes save the day!” because they wanted that message to sink in.
it’s hard to really convey this fact about the series with any number of words because you really need to read it yourself, you need to experience the crumbling of naivete and slow erosion of morality and steady piling up of casualties over ~1.4 million words. but... between the moments of levity, goofiness, and genuine fun (which the series is full of! they’re welcome breaks from the many grimmer scenes) the message of the cost of war, the way it destroys children, is always present. it’s sobering.
even outside the war context, it’s all the little things: symptoms of PTSD like rachel’s increasing aggression / jake’s listlessness and depression / everyone’s hypervigilance and self loathing; the hopeless of knowing as a child that no one is coming to save us; that moment in #19 where marco is desperately trying to lift the team’s spirits by Using Humor To Cope but every joke falls flat; the repeated scenes of different animorphs mourning the people they used to be and the world they can never return to; i could go on and on--it’s all of these things that are emblematic of childhood trauma in general. try as i might, i can’t think of any other series that does what Animorphs does with extended narratives of trauma, period. that’s why i’m nuts about these books. that’s why i think everyone needs to read them.
thanks for attending this impromptu TED talk.
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