[JoongDok/ORV] A solution
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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[JoongDok/ORV] A solution
Look at my 100% canon-compliant meme boy
Play Ghost Trick: Phantom Detective, Where Absolutely Nothing Happens And All Is Well (Trust Me, I'm An Expert - I Can Read)
"Men Aren't Better Than Women: Both Genders Are Inferior To Me" is a 1991 book by Dr. Ivo Robotnik (better known for other work). Though its primary purpose is clearly to stroke the author's own ego, it is generally regarded as a comprehensive, well-constructed, and accessible work of contemporary feminist theory, and is still commonly-cited to this day.
Most of the critical complaints have been about the tone; in a review from 2005, Professor Victoria of Spagonia University said, "The constant self-aggrandizement undercuts the idea that its subject ought to be taken seriously. Also, wasn't the 'feminist' line from the Sonic Heroes manual a mistranslation of 'womanizer'?"
In 2026, Dr. Robotnik released a new edition updated for the preceding 35 years of developments in feminism, with the subtitle changed from "Both Genders" to "All Genders."
They will find eachother in every universe
give! her! the! ketchup!!!
(commissions open for pokemon paintings)
Dreamt the new official pronouns for nonbinary people were la/he and FFXIV players lost their MINDS.
The reviews are IN!
The anthem of nonbinary FF14 players:
curiouser and curiouser
Love this Miku so much... here is my take - googoogaga733
Happy Black History Month, Melinoe is black now
sprung to this so fast you would've never known I have been struggling with motivation for the past couple weeks
One of my favourite aspects of Agott's character is that she isn't a genius or a prodigy, actually. A lot of the time, a character like her would be naturally gifted, but we can see from the kinds of awful comments the people around her made that Agott was not "gifted" when compared with her mother or others in her family. And this means that every astute observation she makes, every light bulb that goes off in her head, every perfect sign and ring she draws is a result of the actual effort she put into her studies. Agott genuinely deserves the acclaim she gets from her peers because she works hard to be that good.
It's tragic that she feels the need to do so at all, but still, she's not the typical "snooty high-class girl who's so good at everything and berates the new girl for being beneath her", this is a girl who genuinely had to work her ass off to get to where she is seeing this new girl who got everything she worked so hard for with seemingly no effort. And it's really notable that even though Agott sets Coco up to fail and is unfairly harsh on her at the beginning, she never tries to outright sabotage her. She expects Coco to fail, but since Coco continues to pass based on her own merit, well, that's not something Agott can really argue against.
Agott being written like this makes Coco's admiration of her make a lot more sense, as Coco also constantly feels the need to prove herself out of guilt, and Agott is not just skilled, she puts 110% effort into everything to do with magic. It all builds nicely to her eventual apology. They're both really similar in that sense, and Agott reminding Coco to make magic for herself makes her dive back into the magic that she herself loved as well, independent from the notion of redemption and the imposition of expectations.
this is your periodic reminder that werewolves canonically exist on the First
Because Shadowkeeper.
I had proof even, before e10 was released! I can’t tell you how validated I was by the latest tier, because it brought to light the werewolf thing, which very few people talked about (and I got more than a few weird looks by insisting it was a real thing).
The most obvious is the “A Beast Among Men” fate, with the boss Lugarhoo, a canid looking boss:
Once upon a time, Lugarhoo traded obedience to the Shadowkeeper for the power to rend his foes with tooth and claw. Now freed from that pact, it may appear that little remains of the elf he once was-but, in truth, the thirst for violence was always at the heart of him.
The fate “Cry Not Wolf” spawns warg enemies:
Though the wargs born to serve the Shadowkeeper’s fell purpose have long since cast off the chains of that fate, they resent what remains of mankind quite as much as did their erstwhile master, and are eyeing Radisca’s Round as a venue to vent their ire.
The fate “Deadly Nightshade”, the ultimate end to the fate chain, says this, and has wargs as one of your enemies:
In its newfound duress, Nightshade has turned to forbidden magicks to impress wargs into its service. The renegades’ goal, however, remains as it always has been-to sow blood and chaos.
In Il Mheg, you can find a quest named “A Tale of a Tail” from Kenn Beq, an amaro in Wolekdorf (emphasis mine):
Kenn Beq: Before I came to be here, I was in Lakeland. Kenn Beq: There I lived amidst men for many years.In the time before the Flood, a great battle was joined at the Source. With my master upon my back, I charged into the fray against the forces of the Shadowkeeper. Kenn Beq: Countless many fell that day. Though I was fortunate to escape with my life, I did not escape wholly unscathed, taking grievous wounds at the hands of enemy soldiers who had assumed wolf-like forms. Kenn Beq: Such were my injuries, it was believed I would never walk again, never mind fly. Yet my master never forsook me. He nursed me back to health, feeding me a nutritious diet of green glider tails, and I eventually made a full recovery. Kenn Beq: Seeing the tail now, I cannot help but be reminded of those golden days. The days I spent with the elvenfolk. Thank you, young one, for giving me the chance to relive them.
Most evidence points to the wolf-like forms being the wargs (a bipedal, anthromorphic wolf) instead of being full on wolves. Lugarhoo seems to be the only one that transformed into a full canid, which is likely due to how much magic was pumped into him.
There’s also the circumstantial evidence of the Warg Sets of gear dropping from the Grand Cosmos, the old home of the former Elven Kings. It seems an odd choice of style and gear to drop from there, given how it doesn’t match any of the ghosts or NPCs styles. But with light of how much canon evidence we’re given of the Shadowkeeper transforming people into wolves, having it drop from the place that was once an Elven home makes sense.
There might even be more evidence tbh, this is hardly exhaustive!
Yeah I was mostly going by a lot of these convos and FATES and things as “Shadowkeeper did this” and then E10 came around with that boss and it was nice to see the reminder of this major aspect of SK’s lore!
We don’t get to see it so much in the modern era of the First as just the remnants of that time in wandering mobs and little bits here and there, but they would have been a major thing Ardbert & Company dealt with, and the scars are still all over Lakeland.
@cyborgthepoet here’s a post with some of the warg lore :D
it’s so funny that hydaelyns love for wol is framed as such a gentle and kind thing because it truly is in several aspects but also like she violently physically suplexes you every time you meet her face to face and she loves it. she used to beat the shit out of me on clump penguin and then waited 12000 years to beat the shit out of me on clump penguin rewritten. and that was her life goal she literally held onto existence for eons so she could meet wol again and bodyslam them and then died in peace immediately after she accomplished it
#oh my god hydaelyn’s parental relationship with us #is basically the exact same as Godbert with Hildibrand (x)
EVERYONE PAUSE
Read this sentence from chapter 1 of lout of the count's family for me
"He meets the main character a few times after he gets the scar, and, in a refreshing cider-like scene, gets beaten to a pulp."
"—meets the main character a few times"
I don't think og!Cale immediately got beaten up by Choi Han upon meeting him???
Now look at this from chapter 5.
"Cale threw five jabs before he was hit. Which means, one jab should be okay."
This sounds like og!Cale met Choi Han five times before he got beaten up. Of course, it could have been less and og!Cale just threw in more "jabs" per meeting but I find it interesting that, despite what is generally considered canon in the fandom, og!Cale was not immediately beaten up, and even met og!Choi Han multiple times before it.
To me... doesn't that sound like og!Cale was searching for a sore spot? Something that would throw Choi Han into a fit of anger enough to beat up the son of a count? Seems like his comment about Harris Village might not have been his true thoughts, but his last resort attempt– mocking the dead. To force Choi Han to react.
If my knowledge of canon isn't wrong either, og!Cale was alone with Choi Han when this happened. As if he had predicted that this would send Choi Han into a frenzy and didn't want his guards to try and protect him, or punish Choi Han for it. Since og!Cale also didn't tell anyone about who beat him up or why.
So as far as I can tell... og!Cale didn't mock Harris Village out of nowhere? But was instead a carefully selected choice that he made out of necessity– because Choi Han hadn't risen to any of his other "jabs" and he needed someone to beat him up. Perhaps to get out of going to the meeting with the nobles?
There's still some parts that don't make sense, but I'm going through the novel to double check my knowledge and verify it. For example, Ron says this in chapter 10.
"This is going to be your first time outside the Henituse territory, right?"
This implies that og!Cale has never taken up the responsibility of going to the noble's meeting, and this is confirmed when lcf!Cale goes to the residential manor at the capital and it's described how the servants have never met Cale before. BUT in the novel, it isn't a question on if lcf!Cale will be attending. He just does.
So og!Cale would have needed an excuse every time the nobles meeting came around for why he couldn't go. Now think about this: why did og!Cale get that scar on his side? Og!Cale isn't covered in scars, so why is it that suddenly he does something reckless like that a few days before having to leave for the nobles meeting?
Presumably, it's because he needed an excuse. But it's a scar by the time he meets Choi Han only a few days later, so clearly his father hired a priest so heal og!Cale, or already had one on hand. No injury, no excuse. So og!Cale decided to get Choi Han to beat him up. No one else in the territory would have been able to do it! og!Cale already scared off all the gangsters, who are also too afraid of the count's retaliation when they are found out. Choi Han has no fear of that retaliation, at least when it comes to mocking his dead family.
Note: og!Cale got that scar before meeting Choi Han. Then he meets Choi Han and starts throwing out jabs? This means either og!Cale didn't know that Choi Han was strong but goaded him anyway, knowing no one else would beat him up... or og!Cale already had enough strength to tell that Choi Han was extremely strong, enough that beating up a normal person and beating up a slightly strong person would feel exactly the same to him, and that's why he goes after him. Not because Choi Han would be the only one willing to beat him up in their territory– after all, surely there's at least one or two that would do it? So why Choi Han?
Please add onto this if you remember something relevent because I haven't reread the first 50 or so chapters, and so I don't remember if Cale had to go and tell Deruth he would be the one going to the capital, if I missed it as I was skimming through or if it was said in a later chapter. I must analyze og!Cale through a microscope!!!!
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