" ...G-Greetings, I'm FortuneFoxy! Want to know what is your lucky charm?"
"Great! This might sound a bit too crazy, but here I go!.."
- FortuneFoxy
Well, never knew I can make my first and ever smiling critter oc since it's easy for me to draw.. but here it is! He'll be important to my AU btw..
INFO:
( Contains spoilers
to Chapter 3 btw! )
↓↓↓↓
- FortuneFoxy's debut started on before 10 days til The Hour of Joy. Supposedly a replacement for CatNap( though Playtime CO will had to make him mentioned that CatNap will be just sleeping at the stars.. )
The episode started taking place to a afternoon walk on Sunnyside TownRoad, where Dogday, CraftyCorn and KickinChicken were just adventuring off the town til they come across a lonely fox around the streets.. looking at something, his Star Charm.
And yet the three decided to help the fox! So in order to find his StarCharm, they had to find and stop Wreckin' Wolf for not letting him selling the Star Charm( my second oc that I will make later, and he is FortuneFoxy's enemy on his first debut. )
Then the critter group began to chase down Wreckin' Wolf, but FortuneFoxy predicts in his own mind that his enemy will be accidentally bumped onto the wolf's parents, angry, til the two scolded him and yaay!! The wolf is defeated, now FortuneFoxy got his own Star Charm back!! And then FortuneFoxy was told by Dogday thinking that he'll join the Smiling Critters group... And so, FortuneFoxy went excited and agreed to join!
Anddd the debut episode comes to an end.
But did you know who suggested this? Andrew, aka my player oc.. He was told by a certain designer that they thought about him making an new character.. even though Andrew doesn't know why.. and just go through it anyway. Let's just say Andrew is a very creative man..
But he won't know when the real FortuneFox is gonna be real soon..
The real FortuneFox coming soon, STAY TUNED FOR MORE..
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it’s so funny to me that people used to try to warn me “if you go on t it won’t make you androgynous it’ll just make you look like a man” because 1) i do want to look like a man, that is famously a major part of being a trans man but also 2) t literally has made me androgynous?? like they were wrong on both counts. i got most of the looking-like-a-man changes that i wanted (deep voice, broader body, hair all over my body including my face) and i also give every single cis person in a five mile radius a stroke every time they try to figure out my gender. the assumption that trans men wouldn’t actually want to look like men and the assumption that cis people are good at correctly gendering us once we’re on t are both weird as hell.
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something. about. the horror of being sent on an impossible (death) quest and obligations and hospitality politics. the trauma of not having a home, and then the trauma of being in a house that becomes actively hostile to you, one that would swallow you whole and spit out your bones if you step out of line. all of this is conditional, your existence continues to be something men want gone.
it's about going back as far as I can with the perseus narrative because there's always a version of a myth that exists behind the one that survives. the missing pieces are clearly defined, but the oldest recorded version of it isn't there! and there's probably something older before that!! but it's doomed to forever be an unfilled space, clearly defined by an outline of something that was there and continues to be there in it's absence.
and love. it's also about love. even when you had nothing, you had love.
on the opposite side of the spectrum, this is Not About Ovid Or Roman-Renaissance Reception, Depictions And Discourses On The Perseus Narrative.
edit: to add to the above, while it's not about Ovid, because I'm specifically trying to peel things back to the oldest version of this story, Ovid is fine. alterations on the Perseus myth that give more attention Medusa predate Ovid by several centuries. this comic is also not about those, either! there are many versions of this story from the ancient world. there is not one singular True or Better version, they're all saying something.
Perseus, Daniel Ogden
Anthology of Classical Myth: Primary Sources in Translation, edited & translated by Stephen M Trzaskoma, R. Scott Smith, Stephen Brunet
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