Some notw doodles of Kvothe, Ambrose (ew), and Denna. Made this in a magma with @stivya :]
92 notes
·
View notes
today i will finish iron flame
1 note
·
View note
Alright I'm a few episodes behind on Dungeon Meshi but I didn't realize the new unimaginably upbeat cutesy opening was implemented the episode Falin was kidnapped and turned into a chimera
Like. Damn that was an impactful time to change the opening
8 notes
·
View notes
i'm reading through chapter 3 and snorting to myself every 10 minutes. I am truly my own target audience
4 notes
·
View notes
if i’m going to be honest (and maybe a bit careless) i think the episode with 20,000 frames might be the divine tree arc. i’m looking at the trailer for no reason in particular and i’m noticing just how much attention it’s being given. like i’d say 50% of the trailer is emphasizing it. even in the first two openings (i’ve forcefully ejected the 3rd op from my mind to enjoy it when s3 airs) they always foreshadowed the broccoli tree. not to mention some clips look like they have a lot of frames
31 notes
·
View notes
mm okay this is a thought i had on the bus like all great thoughts so this might be incomprehensible but im thinking about taob zuko and hakoda's relationship to duty, how there's such a vivid parallel from the very start of their duality. there is zuko and there is the fire prince. there is hakoda and there is the chief. thinking about how book 1 is a journey of duty and humanity. over 19 chapters, zuko is taught about humanity, how it doesnt have to be exchanged for duty, how both can exist within him simultaneously. he begins as prince zuko. he is abrasive and hateful and he fights the water tribe every step of the way, but by the end, he is just zuko. he chooses the water tribe over himself. he loses his firebending. he leaves the red ribbon behind. but hakoda? hakoda's journey is the complete opposite. where he teaches zuko the strength of humanity, hakoda sees in zuko someone facing the same burdens of duty that he faces, and zuko teaches him things about leadership without even realising. the importance of duty in the face of turmoil, the responsibility on their shoulders, the cost of their wrongdoings. the moment they were placed in control of the lives of others, they lost the right to total humanity, and while zuko's journey and age allows him a reprieve of that duty so that he can embrace humanity in its entirety, hakoda continues to carry that load. in chapter 1, he makes an objectively illogical, emotion-led decision to keep zuko alive and bring him aboard, a decision that is even stated in the story to have only worked because it was zuko instead of literally any other firebender. by chapter 19, hakoda makes the decision to leave zuko behind despite almost having it confirmed that fong took him, because he knows that his duty lies with his tribe, that he has dozens of lives in his hands regardless of what his heart wants.
book 1 is about zuko learning to choose humanity over duty, but it is also about hakoda having to choose duty over humanity.
41 notes
·
View notes
sitting here like 'i need to reread the reigen manga' girl. finish the mob psycho manga first.
4 notes
·
View notes
i need a month off work so i can finish reading all the fanfics and books i’m almost done with but won’t finish 🙃
1 note
·
View note