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All handmade by me. Come get a real piece of art that you can wear at
https://www.etsy.com/shop/LittleMushroomJewels
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

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Andulka

@theartofmadeline

#extradirty
Show & Tell
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i don't do bad sauce passes

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pixel skylines
Stranger Things
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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
noise dept.
art blog(derogatory)

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@dearest-mushroom
Want to know what I can do but AI can't? Give you pretty jewelry, that's what! AI can't string beads or curl wires, but I can!
All handmade by me. Come get a real piece of art that you can wear at
https://www.etsy.com/shop/LittleMushroomJewels
I made Jayce and Viktor in Tomodachi Life. They would be married by now but I keep fucking up the stupid proposal mini-game.
I gave Viktor an axolotl.
Him
my aesthetic is gillian anderson completely forgetting all her lines in the first season of the x files
i would totally watch entire episodes of this
someONE someTHING where we dug up ˢᵒᵐᵉ…thingsome
BODY
SOMETHING
*inhale* THAT I CAN’T EXPLAIN ᴵᴹ ᴳᴼᴺᴺᴬ ˢᵀᴬᴿᵀ ᶠᴿᴼᴹ ᵀᴴᴱ ᵀᴼᴾ
Agent Miles (ahuhuhuh)
Agent
MULDER
I AM STANDING HERE IN
The rain
AND
2. The mud
LOOKING AT TWO COFFINS THAT WE—AGENT MULDER I AM STANDING OUT HERE IN
The rain
AND
The mud
AND
The rain
ᵃⁿᵈ…ᵗʰᵉ ᶠᵒʳᶜᵉ ˢᵘᵐᵐᵒⁿᵉᵈ ᵗᵉʳᵉˢᵃ… ⁿᵉᵇᵇᶦⁿ’ˢ ᵇᵒᵈʸ (nemmin’s body) ⁿᵉᵐᵐᶦⁿ’ˢ ᵇᵒᵈʸ
AND THE FORCE SUMMONED TERESA NEMMIN’S BODY………………INTO THE WOODS TONIGHT
⁽ⁿᵒ, ᵍᵒ ᵃᵍᵃᶦⁿ, ᵍᵒ ᵃᵍᵃᶦⁿ⁾
AND TERESA NEMMIN’S AND THE PUH-
AND THE FORCE…..IT
Summoned
TERESA NEMMINS,,,,
INTO,,,,,
the woods tonight
*crowd goes utterly apeshit off camera*
Hey, I'm sorry to communicate it like this but I'm writing out of pure desperation and I really need your help. I am in a terrible situation. As some of you know I had to spend every single penny I had on medicines and a health emergency this month, and now I have little money left to pay for the place I live. My landlord is calling me over and over, and I have no answer for him. I don't know what to do and I am terrified. I urgently need to raise about $600 to pay him and keep a roof over my head. I'm not asking for a handout but for work. Commissions are my only job at the moment and I charge $80 for full illustrations. If you have a bigger project like visual novels, book covers, anything art related, I can do it and I'll do it wholehartedly! Please hit me a DM if you're interested in commissioning me or have a project you'd like me to work at. Thank you so much for reading and supporting me <3
My Ko-Fi is: ko-fi.com/itolynart
Everyone knows Astarion is 100% a cat person. Hey everyone! I’m opening commissions to help cover my rent this month. DM me for more info and prices. ✨
Baby Viktor gives me the kind of cuteness aggression that makes me wanna kms
THIS BABY SHOULD NEVER HAVE A FROWN ON THEIR FACE ARE YOU KIDDING ME
He just tiny and want to play with him boat😭
we hunt the mighty pasta BEAST
and breadsticks are its BONES
ALFREDO FLOWS inside its veins
its organs are CALZONES
LASAGNA plates its armored hide
and should the hero dare
you'll find the noisome Jaws are strung
with garlic angel hair
The poem is written in common hymn meter (alternating lines of 8 and 6 syllables, usually iambs), so there are many possible tunes you can use to sing it:
Amazing Grace
Pokemon theme song
Gilligan's Island theme
House of the Rising Sun
O Little Town of Bethlehem
Joy to the World
Feel free to add any favorites!
Full scansion:
◡ – / ◡ – / ◡ – / ◡ – we hunt the mighty pasta BEAST ◡ – / ◡ – / ◡ – and bread/sticks are / its BONES ◡ – / ◡ – / ◡ – / ◡ – ALFRE/DO FLOWS / inside / its veins ◡ – / ◡ – / ◡ – its or/gans are / CALZONES ◡ – / ◡ – / ◡ – / ◡ – LASAG/NA plates / its ar/mored hide ◡ – / ◡ – / ◡ – and should / the he/ro dare ◡ – / ◡ – / ◡ – / ◡ – you'll find / the noi/some Jaws / are strung ◡ – / ◡ – / ◡ – with gar/lic an/gel hair
metrical form: common hymn meter (iambic tetrameter + iambic trimeter, or iambic heptameter) rhyme scheme: ABCB
This is some Lewis Caroll-tier shit
Y’all. It’s a shanty.
Sea Salt flavored Pasta Beast just dropped, come n gettit~
i get so hungry whenever this post starts picking up notes again RIP me
Why he do this?
Why that his face? Why he stare into your soul?
Realizing that I am not employing enough of my free will to become a nuisance at work
Me watching this:
I’m not letting this rot in the tags
VERY LONG ANALYSIS OF THE ANTI CAITVI ARGUMENTS
[It is a strange, modern phenomenon where some viewers treat a complex piece of art like a courtroom trial where they are the prosecution, rather than an emotional journey they are meant to experience.]
MISUSAGE OF THE WORD "TOXIC"
The "toxic" label is a frequent debate in the Arcane fandom. While everyone is entitled to their interpretation, this label often stems from a misunderstanding of the difference between toxic dynamics and high-stakes external conflict. Here is why that classification feels like an exaggeration.
Conflict vs. Toxicity. In a truly toxic relationship, the harm usually comes from within—manipulation, a desire for control, or emotional abuse. In Arcane, the pain Caitlyn and Vi cause each other is almost entirely a result of systemic pressure. They are two people from warring classes trying to bridge a gap that their entire world is trying to widen.
The Burden of Trauma. Both characters operate under extreme trauma: Vi views the world as a fight for survival after years in prison, while Caitlyn is realizing the "justice" she believed in is built on oppression. Viewers often mistake their clashing coping mechanisms for toxicity; however, these clashes are realistic portrayals of how trauma survivors interact rather than signs of a poisonous bond.
Mutual Growth and Respect. Caitlyn challenges Vi’s prejudices, while Vi opens Caitlyn’s eyes to the reality of the Undercity. Unlike toxic relationships that stifle growth, their bond forces both to become more self-aware and empathetic. While volatile and tragic, their connection lacks the patterns of abuse required for the "toxic" label.
In many fictional romances, the "goal" is to change the partner — to "fix" the bad boy or "soften" the rigid leader. But Caitlyn and Vi don't actually try to change the core of who the other person is. Caitlyn doesn't want Vi to stop being a brawler; she wants to give her a reason to stop fighting. Vi doesn't want Caitlyn to stop being a leader; she wants her to be a leader with a soul.
In many modern fandoms, there is a trend toward "Moral Purity" in fiction. If a relationship isn't conflict-free it is labeled "toxic". These viewers often mistake tension for abuse. They struggle to digest a story where two people can deeply love each other while simultaneously being part of systems that hurt one another. For many viewers (particularly in the US), the visual of a police officer and an oppressed citizen is a "triggering" image that overrides the nuances of the characters. To these viewers, Caitlyn isn't just "Caitlyn"; she is a symbol of state violence. Therefore, Vi loving her is seen as "Stockholm Syndrome" or a betrayal of her roots. By labeling it "toxic", they are often making a political statement about the real world rather than a literary analysis of the show.
By the end of the show, they aren't healed but they are aligned. Caitlyn and Vi are more like two people holding onto each other in a storm. The storm is damaging — but their grip on each other is the only thing that isn't.
THE REAL HATE TOWARDS A FICTIONAL CHARACTER
There is a fascinating psychological phenomenon in fandom where fans of a "villain" or "anti-hero" feel the need to demonize the "moral" character to justify the villain's actions. If Caitlyn is a n#zi then Jinx’s violence against her and her city becomes righteous revolution rather than the actions of a deeply traumatized, mass-murdering anarchist. It is absurd to call a character who is actively trying to reform the system from within a n#zi, while cheering for a character who gunned down a Council, displaced thousands, and spent years as the enforcer for a drug lord. Some fans use Caitlyn as a punching bag for their real-world frustrations with authority. If you can label a character as the ultimate evil, you don't have to engage with the nuance of her journey or her grief. It’s much easier to hate a "privileged" than it is to acknowledge that the "underdog" has become a monster who causes more pain to her own people than anyone else. It is frustrating because it flattens the complex writing of Arcane. When fans turn it into a "Good vs. Evil" binary where the cop is always bad regardless and the terrorist is always a victim, they are essentially watching a different, much shallower show.
MISREADING OF THE CHARACTERS
The tragedy of the "Caitlyn as Scapegoat" arc is that it worked on the fans just as well as it worked on the people of Zaun. They see the rifle, they see the uniform, and they stop looking at the human being who is breaking underneath it all. It makes the "Oil and Water" theme even more profound—it’s not just about their backgrounds; it’s about the fact that their world (and the fandom) will never let them just be two people. They are always forced to be symbols. Caitlyn and Vi’s relationship is revolutionary precisely because it refuses to stay within those traps. Vi sees the woman behind the Enforcer uniform; Caitlyn sees the woman behind the "trench-rat" stereotype. Their partnership is an act of defiance against the entire world. By staying together, Caitlyn and Vi are essentially telling both cities (and the cynical audience) "We refuse to be the weapons you want us to be". The fans who call them toxic are the ones who refuse to look past the uniform. They are the ones stuck in the very labels the show is trying to dismantle.
The "Class Traitor" vs. "Oppressor"
The labels "Class Traitor" (for Vi) and "Oppressor" (for Caitlyn) are the ultimate tools of dehumanization.
Calling Vi a class traitor ignores her agency. It suggests she owes her loyalty to a "side" rather than to her own heart or her own vision of what Zaun could be. It punishes her for wanting peace instead of eternal vengeance.
Labeling Caitlyn as an oppressor ignores her character and her sacrifice. She gave up her seat of power to try and fix the damage she and her ancestors caused. Not to mention she almost gave up her life in the battle.
When people use these labels, they are saying that "your birth defines your destiny". But the core message of Arcane —and specifically of CaitVi — is that "your choices define your destiny". Forcing them in two boxes is a very shallow way to consume a show that is built entirely on the idea that no one is just one thing. It is definitely frustrating to see such a deep work of art analyzed superficially.
Try to remember that the writers spent nine years crafting these characters. They didn't write Caitlyn to be a one-dimensional moustache-twirling villain. They wrote her as a person trying to find a third way in a world that only offers two bad options. Look at the way Caitlyn’s hand shakes or how Vi’s eyes soften. Those are the details the writers put there for the attentive viewer, not for the people looking for a reason to be angry on Twitter.
MAIN CHARACTER SYNDROME
People love a "Cool Loser". Jinx is visually iconic, she has graffiti, and a punk-rock rebellion vibe and her trauma is presented in a very stylized, loud and sympathetic way. Caitlyn, however, represents The System. When she is suffering she is still percepted as a soulless Establishment. It is much cooler to root for the person blowing up buildings than the person trying to figure out how to govern the wreckage. The fans who call Caitlyn slurs are often prioritizing vibe over volume. They like the rebel aesthetic, so they must make the person holding the rebel accountable into a monster. They excuse Jinx’s atrocities (because she’s "oppressed") while vilifying Caitlyn’s mistakes (because she’s "privileged"). They treat Arcane like a simple "Down with the Man" story, when it’s actually a "Everyone is trapped in a burning building" story.
Many Jinx stans aren't just fans of her character; they have effectively adopted her abandonment issues as their own. When they watch the show, they aren't looking for a healthy resolution for Vi; they are viewing the world through Jinx’s distorted, possessive lens. Love does not mean being a hostage to someone else's destruction. Vi spent years trying to "save" Powder, often at the cost of her own safety, her own sanity, and her own happiness. By demanding she choose Jinx over Caitlyn, those people are saying Vi’s only purpose is to be a satellite orbiting Jinx’s chaos. They deny Vi the right to have a life, a partner, or a future that doesn't involve trauma.
"THE MONSTER YOU CREATED"
It was Jinx who created Caitlyn of the 2nd season. If she wouldn't commit a series of traumatic things to Cait (from kidnapping her to murdering her mother) we would've never seen a "dictator" Caitlyn in the first place. Jinx didn't just kill Cait’s mother; she killed an idealistic investigator trying to find a peaceful, diplomatic solution. To blame Caitlyn for her "dark turn" without acknowledging the extreme, targeted psychological torture Jinx put her through is the definition of victim-blaming. It’s like setting a house on fire and then calling the person who screams in pain "hysterical".
We cannot ignore Ambessa’s role as the true architect of martial law. She chose Caitlyn because her specific grief was easy to weaponize and her status made her the perfect figurehead. While Ambessa operates behind the curtain, she plasters Zaun with posters of Caitlyn’s face, ensuring every Zaunite sees a Piltovan enemy rather than a Noxian warlord. Caitlyn is a puppet destined to be the scapegoat when the situation collapses.
It's quite ironic that the real life audience is falling for the same propaganda that the characters in the show are. By identifying so strongly with the "cause" of Zaun, these fans have effectively surrendered their objective perspective as viewers. They haven't just empathized with the characters; they’ve actually succumbed to the in-universe propaganda. To a person living in the Sump, seeing Caitlyn Kiramman’s face on a poster is a valid reason for hatred. They don’t see her crying in the shower; they don't see Ambessa whispering in her ear. They just see an Enforcer, a Topsider. The fan DOES see those scenes. They see the grief, the manipulation, and the internal conflict. Decide to ignore all that information just to maintain a "Cops are monsters" narrative isn't just a different interpretation—it’s a rejection of the text. It’s a testament to how well Arcane is written that the political mechanisms are so effective they can actually trick the real-life audience.
THE PROCESSING OF A TRAUMATIC EVENT
Vi was forged in fire. Her "baseline" for reality includes violence, hunger and loss. When a tragedy happens, her psyche has "callouses". Caitlyn, on the other hand, lived a life of high-level protection. In Season 1, her biggest problem was people not taking her seriously as an investigator. When Jinx murders her mother, it isn't just a loss; it is a foundational collapse. Her entire belief system — that the world is orderly, that "good" people are safe, and that justice prevails — is incinerated. A person coming from that "sterile" environment doesn't just grieve; they short-circuit. Vi loves Caitlyn, but Vi’s only tool for survival is endurance. Her advice is essentially "keep moving" or "fight through it." She doesn't have the language for processing Piltovan grief because she’s never had the luxury of a therapist or a safe space.
Caitlyn's collapse occurred within a vacuum. Her father was consumed by his own grief, and her peers, Jayce and Mel, were overwhelmed by their own burdens.
Into this vacuum steps Ambessa. Ambessa isn't a friend; she is a predator. She sees Caitlyn’s trauma not as a wound to be healed, but as a weapon to be sharpened. Caitlyn is essentially a "patient" who, instead of being taken to a hospital, was taken to a gun range and told that the only way to heal was to shoot.
In a legal sense, "temporary insanity" refers to a state where a person's cognitive functions are so overwhelmed by trauma that they lose their moral compass. When Caitlyn is making those hard-line decisions in Season 2, she is in a dissociative state. She is playing the "Commander" because the "Daughter" is too broken to exist.
And still, even at her darkest, Cait's ultimate goal is never "power"—it’s always stopping the cycle of pain (even if she goes about it the wrong way).
The most important part of her arc is that she eventually wakes up. When she looks at the damage she's done, or when she sees the cost of her war, she doesn't double down like a true "dictator" would. She experiences shame and remorse, she calls her actions "mistakes". A toxic person doesn't feel the weight of their choices the way Caitlyn does in the final act. Her decision to step down from the Council is her acknowledging that she was "unfit" during that period of madness.
This is why the "toxic" label is so unfair. It assumes she is acting out of a permanent character flaw (because she is a Bad Person), when she is actually acting out of a massive psychological injury.
THE HIT WITH THE RIFLE
In Season 2, the scene where Caitlyn hits Vi with the butt of her rifle is one of the most polarizing moments in the series. In many viewers' eyes, this crossed a line from "friction" to "abuse". To understand why Caitlyn lashed out, you have to look at her state of mind leading up to the shot. Caitlyn is a person who prides herself on precision, duty, and logic. After losing her mother, she replaced her grief with a singular, obsessive goal: killing Jinx. In that moment, Caitlyn believed with 100% certainty that she had the shot. When Vi physically intervened to save Isha, it wasn't just a tactical disagreement to Caitlyn; it was a personal betrayal. Caitlyn already blamed herself for not shooting Jinx in Season 1. By stopping her again, Vi became the physical manifestation of the "weakness" that Caitlyn believed got her mother killed. The emotional damage, however, is sealed by the dialogue. Caitlyn’s claims that Vi has "her [Jinx's] blood in her veins" meaning that Vi will always choose her sister, but Vi’s retort—"Then why are you acting like her?"—is simply devastating. By comparing the grieving, traumatized Caitlyn to the mass-murderer who destroyed her life, Vi weaponizes Caitlyn’s deepest fear against her. It is a profoundly out-of-place and traumatizing thing to say to someone mid-breakdown, proving that in this moment, both women are using their intimate knowledge of each other to inflict maximum pain. It’s two people drowning in a shared tragedy, lashing out because they’ve reached the absolute limit of their endurance. Crucially, the creators draw our attention to Vi grabbing Caitlyn’s wrist in attempt to let her stay. For someone in the middle of a grief-induced psychological break, this sudden physical restraint (especially from a person who she perceives as a foe in this very instant) can trigger an instinctive "fight-or-flight" lashing out. I believe that it wasn't necessarily a calculated move to harm Vi, but an impulsive reflex to "push away" the person and reclaim the control she felt she had lost. In that split second, Vi became an obstacle to Caitlyn’s closure, and the rifle hit was a frantic, unthinking reaction to being physically controlled during her most vulnerable moment. While not an excuse for the violence itself, the show frames this as Caitlyn’s "rock bottom" rather than a character trait of being an abuser. It is a tragic and realistic depiction of how trauma can cause even the most disciplined person to lash out when their reality is collapsing. However, it is also not an excuse for the viewer to villainize a person's grief or flatten the nuanced writing. To dismiss the external factors and the fragility of human psyche is to ignore the complexity the writers intended; it is choosing to see a "monster" where the text clearly shows a victim reaching her absolute limit.
THE GAS ARGUMENT
"Caitlyn gassed the Undercity" is perhaps the most frequent "fact" used by the hater-base to justify the "war criminal" label. However, the show provides a much more specific (and less villainous) context that often gets lost in the social media shouting matches.
What is the "Grey"? In Arcane lore, the "Zaun Grey" is the permanent, toxic smog that naturally sits over the Undercity due to centuries of industrial waste and lack of ventilation. It is a symbol of Piltover’s neglect. It is what causes the cough that Viktor suffers from.
Caitlyn’s Shimmer-Scenting strategy. Caitlyn does not invent a new poison to kill people. During the Season 2 she used a chemical reactant designed to "tag" or "scent" shimmer. Her goal was a surgical strike on the supply chain: by flooding vents with this agent, she could visually track where shimmer was being stored and moved. Her intent was to neutralize the weapon fueling Jinx and the chem-barons, not to launch a biological attack on citizens.
Why the haters interpretation is oversimplified. The "she gassed people" argument treats the event as if she launched Zyklon B into a residential neighborhood. Caitlyn targeted industrial zones and shimmer refineries. The tragedy is that in the Undercity, the industrial zones ARE the residential neighborhoods. People live on top of the factories. This is where the "Ambessa Trap" comes in. Ambessa encouraged a "by any means necessary" approach. Caitlyn, blinded by her obsession with Jinx, convinced herself that the civilian "collateral damage" was a necessary evil to stop the greater threat of Jinx’s chaos.
Was it a wrong thing to do? Yes. It shows Caitlyn's descent into the very cold, utilitarian logic that she used to despise. Was hurting people her villainous intent? No. It was a tactical military operation gone wrong because of the systemic horror of how Zaun is built. The show isn't saying she's a hero for doing it; it's showing how grief can make even a good person adopt the methods of their enemy.
THE MADDIE SHENANIGANS
Is perhaps the most misunderstood arc of Season 2 because it is often viewed through the lens of romance, when it should actually be viewed through the lens of trauma and control. To understand why Caitlyn went for that fling, you have to look at what Maddie represented to her in that specific, dark moment of her life.
The "Anti-Vi" Choice Caitlyn didn’t choose Maddieto "replace" Vi; she chose Maddie because Maddie was the opposite of everything that was hurting her. Vi represents the Undercity, the complicated past, and the "Oil and Water" struggle. Maddie represents the "Piltovan Ideal"—she is a subordinate who follows orders, respects the uniform, and offers a safe, uncomplicated reflection of Caitlyn’s own world. Being with Vi requires Caitlyn to confront her privilege, her grief, and the war. Being with Maddie allowed Caitlyn to stay in her "Commander" persona. It was an escape into a relationship where she didn't have to explain her choices because Maddie already agreed with them.
The "Subordinate" Dynamic Haters call this "predatory," but psychologically, it's about agency. After the Council explosion and her mother's death, Caitlyn felt completely powerless. In her grief-stricken mind, she gravitated toward a dynamic where she held the power. It wasn't about "grooming" Maddie; it was about Caitlyn desperately needing one part of her life to be orderly and totally under her command. In a world where chaos (Jinx) killed her mother, Caitlyn retreated into the ultimate symbol of order: the hierarchy of the Enforcers.
Validation of the "Dark Self" This is the most tragic part. Vi challenged Caitlyn. Vi told her when she was going too far. Maddie didn't. Maddie looked at Caitlyn with hero worship. For a woman who felt like a failure, that worship was like a drug. It was a hollow validation. Caitlyn went to Maddie because she couldn't face the reflection of herself in Vi’s eyes — a reflection that told her she was losing her soul.
MORE VILLAINIZATION
There are some ideas navigating the world wide web that Caitlyn "left Vi on the streets" after the break up. This is one of the most cynical and, frankly, insulting takes regarding Vi. It treats a woman who survived years in a brutal prison and a childhood in the Sump as if she were a helpless socialite. Vi lived on the streets and in the Lanes long before she knew Caitlyn existed. The idea that she "needs" a mansion to survive is laughable. As we see when they break up, Vi immediately returns to her "roots"—the underground fighting pits. She doesn't need a "sugar mommy"; she needs a purpose. She walked away from the Kiramman mansion because it wasn't her home—Caitlyn was her home. Vi is a survivor of Stillwater. She is arguably the most self-sufficient character in the show. If anything, living in the mansion was a constraint for her, not a luxury. When they are apart, Vi isn't begging for money; she’s drinking and fighting. She’s self-destructing, yes, but she’s doing it on her own terms.
THE JAIL SEX SCENE
Arcane has never been a show about "clean" romance; it’s a show about people being forged in a furnace. The jail cell scene is often called "toxic" by critics, but from a psychological and narrative perspective, it’s a masterclass in "desperate intimacy". Here is why that "dirty" setting actually served their story better than a rose-petal bed ever could. In psychology, there is a phenomenon where people facing extreme mortality, grief or war turn to sex as a way to feel alive. Caitlyn had just lost her mother, her moral compass, and her sense of self. Vi had just lost her sister (again), the trust of the woman she loves and all the reasons to keep fighting. In that moment, they aren't just "having sex"—they are trying to prove they haven't been hollowed out by the world. It’s raw, it’s messy, and it’s a breather from the crushing weight of being symbols for their respective cities.
Caitlyn cannot take back the fact that she hit Vi. Vi cannot take back the fact that her sister killed Caitlyn’s mother. The intensity of that scene was their way of saying: "I know how much we’ve hurt each other, but I still want you." It was an act of radical acceptance in a place designed for punishment.
The choice of the jail cell is incredibly symbolic. This is the place where Vi was dehumanized for years. By choosing to be intimate there, she reclaims the space. In a scented bedroom in a Piltovan mansion, the class difference between a council daughter and a trencher would be glaring. In a cold, dark cell, those titles don't exist. They are just two bodies seeking heat. It is the moment of greatest equality they have ever experienced.
If they had a "traditional" romantic scene, it might have felt like the show was ignoring the trauma they had just been through. A "clean" scene would suggest they were "okay". But they weren't okay — they were breaking. By making the scene desperate and gritty, the writers acknowledged that their love is a battlefield. It isn't a fairy tale; it’s a survival tactic.
The antis love to use the prison cell setting as a "gotcha" because it's visually evocative of Jinx’s trauma. But they ignore the character logic:
Vi isn't a viewer: Vi doesn't have the "God's eye view" of the audience. She doesn't see the scenes of Jinx crying alone or her suicidal ideation. From Vi’s perspective, Jinx is a person who replaced her little sister. When Vi throws herself on Caitlyn in that cell, it’s not because she hates Jinx — it’s because she is grieving the person Jinx used to be. She is lashing out at the world because the situation is impossible. Using that moment to claim Vi "betrayed" Jinx is a total misreading of Vi's pain.
ATONING FOR WHAT'S DONE
Another interpretation that i find very shallow is that Cait "didn't apologize" (for hitting Vi) or "didn't atone for her crimes" (towards Zaun).
The interpretation that Caitlyn must be "brought to justice" in a courtroom is narratively shallow and practically impossible. In a world where the system is broken and the Council is in ruins, who would judge her? A Piltovan court would likely excuse her as "doing her duty", while a Zaunite court would be a "show trial" fueled by vengeance rather than law. In post-conflict reconciliation, throwing one person in a cage rarely fixes systemic damage. Instead of rotting in prison, Caitlyn’s redemption lies in social labor and using her wealth to rebuild the city she helped break. Formal courtroom scenes provide a false sense of closure. The creators of Arcane chose the harder path: life-long accountability. Caitlyn’s choice to step down from power and live with the weight of her mistakes is a more profound punishment than a prison sentence. It serves no one to lock her away; it serves everyone to have her atone through the long, grueling work of restorative justice.
The critique that "she didn't apologize" to Vi ignores how Arcane uses visual storytelling. In the jail cell and the scenes following, Caitlyn’s entire demeanor is one of bowed-headed shame. When she hesitates to touch the bruise she left on Vi, that is a physical apology. In a world as broken as theirs, "I'm sorry" is a weak phrase. Acknowledge of the other person's pain is the real apology. Vi doesn't need a verbal apology because she sees Caitlyn's remorse in her actions. In my opinion demanding a "scripted" apology often comes from the viewers from "the kids table" who need things spelled out rather than felt.
WHY THIS MAKES CAITVI EVEN BETTER
Because Vi has seen it all, she is the only person who can look at "Dark Caitlyn" and not be permanently repulsed. She knows what "spiraling" looks like because she’s seen it in her own sister and herself. Vi doesn't judge Caitlyn for the gas or the rifle strike because she recognizes it as trauma-induced lashing out. In a way, Vi becomes Caitlyn’s "anchor" back to humanity, not because she has the perfect words, but because she offers the only thing Caitlyn needs: unconditional acceptance of her brokenness. Their bond is strengthened not by perfection, but by the fact that they have seen each other at their absolute worst and still chosen to stay.
IN CONCLUSION
Choosing the Self Over the Cycle
The core of Vi's arc is reclaiming her identity. For her whole life, she was "Vander's daughter," "The Leader of the Kids," or "Powder's Sister." Caitlyn is the only person in the entire series who sees her simply as… Vi. Choosing Caitlyn isn't "abandoning her sister"; it’s choosing her well-being. It’s choosing a life where she is loved for who she is, not for what she can do for someone else. Every time Vi stands by Caitlyn, she is breaking a cycle of codependency.
The Myth of "Saving" Someone
The "happy ending" where Vi and Jinx live together is actually a horror story in disguise. In real life and in good writing, you cannot "save" someone who is committed to their own destruction. Vi’s entire identity was built on the idea: "I can fix this if I just love her enough". But Jinx’s trauma is too deep for a sister’s love to cure. By losing Jinx, Vi is finally released from the impossible, crushing guilt of a "failure" that wasn't actually her fault. If Vi were to stay by her side unconditionally, Jinx wouldn't suddenly become "Powder" again. She would likely continue to lash out at Vi because Vi represents the "old life" that Jinx has already burned down, and Vi, on the contrary, is trying to resurrect. If they had stayed together, Vi would have spent the rest of her life walking on eggshells, terrified of Jinx’s next episode. That isn't a healthy relationship; it’s a hostage situation. When Vi stops trying to "save" Jinx, she stops treating her like a broken doll and starts treating her like a person responsible for her own choices. It’s painful, but it’s the only path to any kind of closure. Vi didn't betray Powder; Powder "fell down a well". Jinx is a grown woman who murdered Vi’s friends and Caitlyn’s family. Chosing Caitlyn is the most "adult" thing Vi does—it’s her attempting to build a life based on something other than trauma and childhood ghosts.
Caitlyn represents the future. Jinx represents the past. By moving on with Caitlyn, Vi is finally allowed to grow into a person who exists outside of the tragedy of the Lanes. She chooses the person who can sustain her over the person who would consume her.
some of my favourite sign fails <3
me at any given time: can we just buckle down and focus on the task at hand please???
my brain:
my brain: ……….ranibow sprimkle……………
ranibow sprimkle……..
kepchup.
SPINCH
B A N C H
chichen nuggest
b R o G L e
strawbebbies..
this post almost moved me to tears
Tag yourself, I’m spinch or rainbow sprimkle
I’m kepchup lmao
Brogle and rainbow sprimkle
This is so charming I feel punched in the solar plexus and I’m here for this sort of gentle, sweet violence.
some additions from my own collection
World Heritage Post
i have been blessed by ranibow spimkle, may the world heritage posts bless thee aswell
No Smorking. Parma Jawn
@hellsite-hall-of-fame
Ok, so...
I can't label my Baldur's Gate 3 inspired bracelets outright as 'inspired by Baldur's Gate 3' on my Etsy shop because of copyright/trademark law. I know LOT of people on there sell their fan made BG3 stuff, but I don't want to risk a strike.
But...here are some bracelets I made...that just so happen to have some thematic color schemes...and remind me of certain characters...and are available for purchase...
https://www.etsy.com/shop/littlemushroomjewels
And these...
I've got an Etsy shop now!
I've got bracelets, earrings, necklaces, and charms. All handmade. There are only a few listings at the moment, but I've got plenty of more product (maybe too much) to post in the coming days. There's something for everyone, come take a look.
https://www.etsy.com/shop/littlemushroomjewels
Which would you prefer Quaritch do?
Stay with Varang and dismiss Eywa
Meet another Na'vi girl and embrace Eywa
No romance, dismiss Eywa
No romance, embrace Eywa
It's so fucking blurry, but here's baby Lo'ak sucking his thumb and holding his little Pa'li toy. This one frame makes me so maternal.