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#kill em a with kindness
winkle-pickers · 2 months
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Year of the Dragon
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incorrectr27quotes · 3 months
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Kawahira: Tsunayoshi-kun has a lot of qualities I find horrifying. But the worst one by far is how thoughtful he can be.
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kirby-the-gorb · 5 months
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dumblr · 6 months
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Kill them with Kindness.
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rosesfox · 1 year
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evangeline is such a dear character to me. i love how, even after everything she's been through, she still has the courage to be vulnerable. i admire the way she has faith in people and gives chances to those who don't deserve it (after all, otherwise it wouldn’t be faith.) i see people saying that she is immature (oh wow, she is seventeen and people are comparing her to characters that are hundreds of years old!) or too innocent, but the truth is that she was only raised by good people who believed in kindness and in love. she is this kind of person and that's not a problem, i actually think it's very brave.
love how the fandom understands jacks and sees him as a deep and layered character, but evangeline is amazing too. i wish the fandom recognized her more since i constantly see people ignoring her or treating her like less.
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team-violence · 10 months
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Very important Team Violence announcement.
As some of you may know, there were raids not long ago on Team Calm bases in Alola and Johto. Many Pokemon were taken from those bases and saved from Team Calm's clutches. While many trainers have taken to adopting the rescued Pokemon, many are also in shelters.
The reputable shelters that are housing Ultra Domesticated, or UD Pokemon are all at capacity. These shelters are the Goldenrod Sanctuary in Johto, Fallarbor Ranger's Shelter in Hoenn, the Akala Pokemon Center for Adoption and Care in Alola, and the Cyllage City Pokemon Shelter in Kalos. To help ease this burden, I have several UD Pokemon at my lab that are temporarily in my care.
These shelters need help. From June 30th to July 2nd, (OOC edit: Moved to July 7th to 9th) I will be hosting the Kill Em with Kindness Fundraiser outside of my lab in Fallarbor. Any and all funds raised will be distributed equally to the shelters listed above to help care for the UD Pokemon.
The Kill Em with Kindness Fundraiser is a chance to meet and adopt several UD Pokemon. All UD Pokemon at the fundraiser have a clean bill of health, and are up-to-date on vaccinations. There may be some extra care required for these UD Pokemon, but that is unfortunately the nature of UD Pokemon.
Any visitors who wish to adopt a UD Pokemon will be asked a few questions to assure they can provide these Pokemon the best care. Individual care instructions and notes will be provided with each Pokemon.
And if you just want to play with the Pokemon or meet them, you are more than welcome to just stop and say hi.
Please stop by, or make a donation, or just spread the word. The shelters are doing everything they can to house the UD Pokemon and provide appropriate care, and they need your help to give every Pokemon the best life they can. And if you live near these shelters, they are also accepting volunteers. Any help to these shelters goes a long way.
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pcktknife · 7 months
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Okay.
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dustyhyena · 1 year
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i like to think they get along surprisingly well
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bonniesfamiliar · 2 months
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Everything you said about the robins is wrong. Tim became Robin because dick encouraged him too because he was so angry at Bruce about Jason. There is no “angry Robin” they were all happy and quippy in the suit.
I respect your opinion but I have my own opinion on the robins so have a nice day!
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flawlesselana · 2 years
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peachdoxie · 6 months
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The other day someone was rude to me in a Reddit comment where they misread what I wrote as hostile, so instead of being rude back, I explained what I actually meant and apologized for the confusion, and then they responded with an apology, explaining that English isn't their first language and other people in the thread were being rude to them (which I saw), so they assumed I was too but were grateful I took the time to explain, and let me tell you, I got far more smug satisfaction about being right from that exchange than I have from any attempt I've made to troll people who are rude to me online. I've been riding that high for days.
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incorrectr27quotes · 4 months
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Reborn: I sure know how to pick ‘em, don’t I?
Tsuna: Well, you know. Our perceptions are always colored by what we hope… and what we fear, what we love. We do the best we can.
Reborn, scoffing: I’m afraid my best wasn’t good enough with her… For the first time, I felt like I couldn’t read people.
Tsuna: You know, you had no trouble seeing through me.
Reborn: [huffs out a laugh] It’s a good thing I like being alone.
Tsuna: You know what, Reborn? You’re not alone. Okay? [opens his arms in offer] Come on.
Reborn: Tsunayoshi.
Tsuna: You’re my partner. Okay? Come on. It’s an Arcobaleno hug. Take it.
Reborn:
Reborn: [takes the hug]
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nat-20s · 4 months
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my general feelings on the whole "happy ending vs sad ending" debate I occasionally see is mostly "nice dichotomy idiot, what lies outside it!" aka an ending should make sense to a show. It should fit the context that has been given before it. I think neither happy nor sad endings are inherently better than the other and I LOVE a bittersweet ending. All that being said for me, personally, I do think a massively tragic ending requires more of a buy in for me. Heavy Plot Contrivances to make a sad ending tend to annoy me at best while Heavy Plot Contrivances allowing for characters to have fun and be happy I'm like hell yeah let's go. Escape the dooming of the narrative <3.
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seadaemon · 1 year
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the-priestess-of-dawn · 4 months
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Grima and Final Blows
The other day I mentioned that I had an essay about Grima to write that I'd been putting off, and between that and all the great essays my fellow Grimleal scholars have been putting out recently, I decided to sit down and finally get it done.
So here you go. An analysis of Grima's difficulties with directly killing people.
Okay, so I’ve been thinking about this for quite some time, because one of my favorite things to explore when it comes to Grima is the gap between their villain act, which they actively play up in front of others in both Awakening and FEH, and their true feelings, which are hinted at in Awakening (particularly through the Future Past DLC) and made even clearer in FEH— their own evil actions are repulsive to them, and they wish they could live normally among humans, but they don’t believe they have any choice but to be the monster that “the fell dragon, Grima” is supposed to be. They are committed to this “fell dragon” character, to putting on a show for everyone, and they are so good at it that it’s easy to overlook that they… uh… aren’t very good at killing anyone important. Not directly, anyway.
Sure, Grima is responsible for numerous deaths. But what is their actual kill count? Well, in Awakening’s main game… zero. (Unless you count Chrom, but, as we witness, that was not a voluntary act on their part; Validar took control of their body. You could also make the argument that Grima “claiming the sacrifice” at the Dragon’s Table counts, but the problem with that is, although it’s obvious that Grima accepts the life force of the Grimleal members as a sacrifice, it’s not at all clear whether or not Grima personally kills them. Although it’s possible that they did off screen, it’s also possible that Validar killed them, or that they were ordered to take their own lives; there’s no reason Grima would have had to lay a hand on them.) In the Future Past, it’s… one, maybe one and half (Naga’s spirit, and Tiki, but only in body. More on this later.)
And it’s not as though Fire Emblem shies away from showing villains directly murdering people, Even in Awakening itself, the intro to Chapter 9 shows Aversa killing a Plegian soldier for delivering an unsatisfactory report, so it wouldn’t have been out of place to let Grima stab a few NPCs as a show of brutality. Especially seeing as Grima is the evil dragon final boss. As early as Mystery of the Emblem, we can see Medeus killing his cleric hostages to restore his own health if you fail to rescue them before trying to defeat him, and as recently as Engage, we get a whole cutscene of Sombron eating Hyacinth. Fantasy violence my beloved <3
Anyway, the point is, Grima could have been written to be much more violent and I don’t think anyone would have complained. Instead, though, Grima repeatedly— and consistently across the series— tries to avoid engaging in direct combat.
Let’s start with what Grima does in the main game of Awakening. We know that Risen pursue Lucina into the past, because we see them fall out of the portal with her in Chapter 1. We also know that those Risen, as well as the others that are appearing throughout the land, are not being directly controlled by Grima, because later in Chapter 13, as the Shepherds are leaving Plegia after meeting with Validar, Aversa, and the Hierophant, they are pursued by more skilled Risen, and Frederick notes that “Either they are learning our ways, or someone is commanding them…” So… It seems that sending the Risen—with or without specific orders—to attack while Grima is not themself present is a favored tactic.
But what about when Grima is present? Take a look at the Endgame: Grima chapter. Yes, you eventually get to engage Grima in direct combat. But not immediately. What Grima does first is…
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Grima attacks the Shepherds with dark spikes from a distance, reducing everyone’s hp to 1. Now, here’s what happens next: Grima attempts to possess their past self, Robin hears the voices of their friends and breaks free, Naga heals everyone back to full health, and then the fight against Grima begins… Except actually, the Shepherds have to get to Grima first, because they’re at the top of the map and they’re not budging. Naga warns them that “Grima’s servants will beset [them] to no end.” and she’s not kidding. Grimleal reinforcements will spawn infinitely, and they can hit pretty hard. Even with everyone starting at full health, it’s possible to lose units to these Grimleal soldiers if Grima isn’t defeated quickly. Can you imagine what would happen if Naga hadn’t healed the Shepherds first?
Well, I’d guess that they’d probably all die to the Grimleal without Grima having to face them up close. Which was probably what Grima was going for.
This isn’t the only time Grima tries the dark spikes trick, either. Grima attempts this exact same move in the Future Past 3 when they face Lucina, Severa, Laurent, and Gerome.
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Grima announces “With the next blow, I will kill you.” and then demands that they hand over the Fire Emblem as well as the gemstone they hold. The threat is very real. But…
Given that at 1hp, a gust of wind could take the kids out, would it not have been easier and faster to kill them and just loot their bodies immediately? And yet Grima lets the kids have an extended discussion about sacrifice, and even suggests that Lucina would indeed buy a little more time by running… Again, I cannot stress enough that Grima should be able to finish them off in one hit at this point.
So the plan was almost certainly to back off and let the Risen do the actual killing, even though that would be a lot less efficient under the circumstances. And when Chrom and the Shepherds arrive, Grima immediately turns their attention to them, saying “If it’s a reunion you seek, my soldiers shall welcome you on my behalf.” Then they once again pick a spot at the back of the map and refuse to move from it, forcing the Shepherds to fight through the Risen in order to engage Grima in combat at all.
And sure, Grima has some excuses. “I was hoping not to have to flex any muscle,” they say right before the dark spikes attack, as if to justify why they didn’t do it sooner. And of course they taunt Lucina over having to choose to whether to run as her friends sacrifice themselves for her or to stay and fight and die with them. “I must say I shall enjoy this either way!” Yes, Grima, we get it, you’ve made it very clear that you’re an arrogant asshole.
But is arrogance really all there is to it? If we look at what Tiki tells Grima in the good ending of the Future Past, it looks as though Grima’s arrogance has brought their own downfall. “If you had left Mount Prism alone, Grima, you might have stood a chance. Instead, you have brought the Awakening right to your feet.” However, when you think about it… Is Tiki’s continued existence not in itself a result of Grima’s repeated pattern of not really wanting to land a finishing blow? The game states that Grima did in fact kill Tiki… but only in body, not in spirit. This is, according to Tiki, because Robin intervened.
Now, the question I have is… Is it really possible that Robin could have intervened both against Grima’s will and without them having any idea? Honestly, it’s hard to tell exactly how aware Grima is of Robin’s resistance, because they lie about it a lot, e.g. stating that Robin’s spirit perished in sending Chrom back to his own world, even though just moments later, Robin is once again overpowering them. So, keeping in mind that Grima is a liar, was Grima really arrogant to leave Tiki’s body in Ylisstol, and to not make sure that her spirit was fully destroyed? Or was Robin simply able to capitalize on Grima’s propensity towards backing off?
Because surely the only way Grima could be unaware that Robin had acted against them is if Robin hadn’t actually acted against them. I don’t think I believe that Grima really wanted Tiki gone. Naga, sure—longtime nemesis and all. But if Grima had truly cared about seeing Tiki’s existence destroyed… Well, I doubt Robin could have interfered that much.
But maybe it could still be a matter of arrogance. Maybe Grima just didn’t think Tiki’s spirit could do anything with Naga’s spirit gone, and thus didn't care to pay attention to her anymore once she seemed dead enough.
If that’s true, it doesn’t explain why Shadows of Valentia Grima exhibits the exact same habits when fighting Alm and Celica, despite never having been outside of the Thabes Labyrinth at this point in their life. As opposed to the various Terrors throughout the rest of the Labyrinth, which chase Alm (or Celica) down in the overworld to force a fight, Grima is immobile in their room, and will wait patiently there indefinitely until the player chooses to engage. You can even evacuate from the dungeon.
But if you do choose to fight Grima, it proceeds much like the battles against them in Awakening go. The main difference is that they actually will move from their starting position this time, if you position someone in their range. That still requires a fight against (proto-)Risen who are spawning in from the sides to stop your party’s advance.
So… Now it’s starting to look like Grima actively prefers this one particular trick… And it’s a fundamentally defensive maneuver, which makes perfect sense from SoV Grima’s standpoint (they were attacked out of nowhere, after all), but is not really an obvious standout strategy for Awakening Grima, whose taunts and threats suggest an aggression that would be better supported with a more offensive strategy… Consider, too, that Awakening Grima is in fact being even more defensive than their SoV iteration, since they don’t move towards you at all.
With all that in mind, it really, really looks like Grima doesn’t want to fight, especially in Awakening. Not that they don’t intend for the Shepherds to die—on the contrary, they’ve set everything up so that the Shepherds will eventually be overwhelmed—but that they don’t want to land the killing blow.
(And gee, I wonder what might be fueling their reluctance? Being controlled and made to kill your best friend by your own hand wouldn't be totally traumatic or anything, right?)
And then... Funny thing here, I’ve been procrastinating writing this essay for a long time. I originally started thinking about it shortly before the Depths of Despair banner was released in FEH, so imagine my surprise when I saw this characterization hold up in the writing of Fell Exalt Chrom’s Forging Bonds as well… The Grima there says that Chrom was the one to kill the rest of the Shepherds. Now, it’s pretty clear that it was through Grima controlling him, but that’s not the point. The point is that once again, Grima didn't have to do any direct killing.
Look, if it had only ever happened once, I could buy that maybe Grima was just underestimating their opponents, that maybe they thought they could get away without having to put very much work in. But for Grima to operate this way so many times, so consistently, and to their own detriment? No...
Grima doesn’t like direct combat. Grima has trouble even when it’s a fight they asked for.
And when you think about it, that makes their reaction to Robin choosing to land the final blow themself in the sacrifice ending all the more understandable.
“…YOU WOULD… NOT DARE!”
Because Grima would not dare. Grima has always preferred to let someone else land the final blow.
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