Round 1 Poll 2
Odin is a God from Norse Mythology. He's associated with knowledge, wisdom and war notably. The word Wednesday comes from his name.
Jagganath is a divinity from Hindu Mythology. He forms a triad with his siblings Balabhadra and Subhadra. Some consider him a representation of Vishnu or Krishna
76 notes
·
View notes
⚠️Vote for whomever YOU DO NOT KNOW⚠️‼️
54 notes
·
View notes
Okay okay part of me has always leaned towards Ivan dying when he has to go up against Till. Because like listennn... Ivan ALWAYS being the one who's looking at Till, while Till is never ever looking back at him just has unbearable affect on my brain. So like I've always imagined him dying with the expectation that FINALLY FINALLYYY Till will truly LOOK at Ivan and really see him for the first time like Ivan has always seen him (Does this mean in a romantic sense? Potentially. Maybe. But most of all just finally seeing how Ivan feels about him and just having THAT realization), but also with the added gut punch that it took Ivan dying for Till to truly realize Ivan's feelings and aooughh. BUT flipping it around also ties into the same ooggily booggily affect that the first option has on my brain. Because having Till die could mean that from beginning to end, after EVERYTHING that has happened, he never looks back at Ivan. The tragedy and pain of that feeling, and you KNOWW that from the very beginning of the round that Ivan would know that if Till dies he'd die never knowing about Ivan's true feelings. Now is this all incoherent rambling that will likely not happen? Yes. But they are like little worms in my brain sooo
9 notes
·
View notes
Round 3 Poll 1
Jagganath is a divinity from Hindu Mythology. He forms a triad with his siblings Balabhadra and Subhadra. Some consider him a representation of Vishnu or Krishna
Osiris is the Egyptian god of the afterlife, agriculture and fertility and the son of Geb and Nut, respectively earth god and sky goddess
77 notes
·
View notes
Very much thinking about how nuts it is that there are builds in Warframe literally called "eidolon-killers". Like, there are these massive, effectively immortal machines(?) just out roaming the plains at night. You know that they were built, or maybe bred?, by a society significantly earlier and likely more advanced than you. Somehow, those guys all died or were killed, but their machines/beasts of burden/warhorses still walk around out there, every night, like nothing's wrong.
Beyond that, these things are powered and protected by power that doesn't quite come from Heaven, but it comes from somewhere in the same place as Heaven. They can't be hurt by any means, they actually have little minions that can be killed, but just stick around as ghosts that continue to attack you. The only way to actually damage them is to get a Tenno, essentially a kid from the same not-Heaven place, and break down the eidolon's barriers. Even after that, it's still ridiculously tough underneath, needing every one of it's main joins broken before actually being able to kill it.
Despite all of this, there are still Tenno out there who practically make it their jobs to kill these demigod-like creatures, to the point where there's a rifle famous for killing eidolons (Rubico). Specifically designed to be radioactive, no less. Thing is, eidolons aren't the only threat, so these hunters, if they aren't comically rich, are probably going to be using that rifle for normal missions, because it's one of their best weapons.
Just imagine if some guy took an elephant rifle modified to punch through a fucking tank without issue, as well as use plutonium rounds, and used it on normal soldiers on a battlefield. That is what happens in Warframe. That is what I do in Warframe.
84 notes
·
View notes