For as messy as Crisis Core may be, I will give it one thing!
Starting the game with Sephiroth saving a life from a fire (Zack from Ifrit) only to end up taking lives away with one still lives rent-free in my head to this day
AnasAbdin

PR's Tumblrdome
No title available
Sweet Seals For You, Always

JBB: An Artblog!
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
h
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
i don't do bad sauce passes
tumblr dot com
One Nice Bug Per Day

pixel skylines
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Stranger Things
Xuebing Du
Three Goblin Art
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
trying on a metaphor
almost home
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Australia

seen from Sweden
seen from Netherlands
seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from Uzbekistan

seen from Germany
seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from Italy
seen from Italy
@hisemeraldgaze
For as messy as Crisis Core may be, I will give it one thing!
Starting the game with Sephiroth saving a life from a fire (Zack from Ifrit) only to end up taking lives away with one still lives rent-free in my head to this day
Sephiroth (appreciation post) ✧ Final Fantasy VII Rebirth
Send me “🌺” + a plot idea you’ve been wanting to write which you think might fit our muses. no rules, just the first thing that comes to mind!
What could you possibly want?
FFVII Rebirth introduces something never extensively explored in the original game or in the compilation of Final Fantasy VII: Sephiroth's anger towards Professor Gast’s experiment and the contempt he came to harbor towards ShinRA as an organization.
(Herein lurk spoilers.)
While the latter is something the fans have glimpsed on and off throughout previous installments, the second part of the Remake amplifies it ever so more. What began as admitting that the company had fabricated his legend and expressing a desire to live a normal life in Ever Crisis gradually transforms into a lack of clarity regarding his reasons for fighting in Before Crisis (as prompted by Elfe), followed by an open disgust towards Hojo's and Hollander's experiments when confronted with Mako pod entities during the hunt for Genesis. Sephiroth and Zack's ordeal during Crisis Core events appears to undercut his willingness to stay, as he famously considers leaving the corporation right before embarking on the ill-fated Nibelheim expedition.
FFVIIRb picks off where we left off, painting a more complete picture of Sephiroth's dissatisfaction with ShinRA overall. Interestingly, one of the discarded sequences from the original game featured Sephiroth hinting at his lack of affection for his employer as early as the truck ride.
Narratively, the sequence spans the gap between OG and Crisis Core's departure cutscene, implying that Sephiroth used the time on the road to reflect on his current and future connection with ShinRA. His companion, however, does not appear to understand why he is bringing the topic up. What distinguishes Rebirth is the suggestion that Sephiroth came to view the entire ShinRA system as a problem, rather than just a few rotten apples. He no longer singles out Hojo, but rather the entire ShinRA branch, indicating that something's wrong with the system. When "Cloud" casually inquires about the problem with the Nibelheim reactor, Sephiroth responds that it is "people who run it," adding that this particular site is controlled by the Research and Development department. In addition, in response to "Cloud's" fair comment regrading the lack of transparency in company's operation, he rather sarcastically suggests to bring the issue with the President, thus implicitly conveying the futility of the endeavor.
When the party encounters Mako pod residents, one can detect genuine rage in his voice. While Sephiroth had previously shown bitterness for the test subjects during CC, it was tinged with disgust/pity rather than wrath. And once again, I’m grateful to Tyler Hoechlin for broadening his range in this particular segment.
"Cloud's" reaction to the contents of the pods, however, came off a little weird. The confusion appears out of place, because Zack had seen it all before — he had been there to watch the aftermath of Hollander's work; is it really odd that ShinRA's chief R&D scientist spearheaded the entire thing? Perhaps, unlike Sephiroth, Zack treated it as a rotten-apple issue, rather than a systemic issue. Or maybe this is an example of Cloud being an unreliable narrator, having conflated his own experience with that of Zack, which also explains Zack being sort of too green for the First Class throughout the Nibelheim portion of the game.
The shift in Sephiroth's perspective, from singling out Hojo's misdeeds to viewing ShinRA's itself as a systemic problem, is further highlighted during the mansion segment. This is no longer a strictly Hollander or Hojo issue. Human experimentation formed the fundamental core of what ShinRA is now, and those were approved from the very top. As Sephiroth puts it with barely concealed disgust, as soon as the company realized what had fallen into their hands, they became ambitious.
The wording also strikes a contrast to how he used to refer to the company in the past; as such, when Angeal deserts, Sephiroth states that Angeal has betrayed “US”, which points at both his personal connection to the person and the fact that Sephiroth likely saw himself as part of ShinRA circle. In the library, however, he distances himself by referring to the company as THEM, thus no longer perceiving himself as a part of it.
More important still is the rage he expresses when quoting excerpts from Gast's notes. The anger is new, never before seen touch. Sephiroth has been portrayed in the moment differently throughout earlier installments — dejected, perhaps overwhelmed, but never angry enough to snarl and nearly flip the table.
And it's wonderful. It's authentic, and it makes sense. It makes you question how much of that rage has been bottled up, compartmentalized, and never fully processed throughout the years. That rage should have existed, but was suppressed by ShinRA, before becoming internalized and sealed.
The scene is extremely on point on another level as well. As the flash of rage passes, and Sephiroth looks away, hiding eyes behind bangs — a gesture previously briefly appearing in Crisis Core.
One could interpret the body language as being ashamed and unwilling to show his composure cracking. Even in this state he KNOWS he wasn't supposed to let anyone see hurt or anger, wasn't supposed to lose cool. The "wonder child" and the "poster boy" is not to be seen as something other than “efficacious” and “collected”. The habit of suppressing displays of emotion or physical/psychological ailment had apparently become a part of himself. It doesn't take a lot of imagination to deduce why the habit persists. The internalized compulsion to live up to the expectations placed on him by ShinRA and the myth it imposed on his character, as well as the internalized imperative not to reveal to someone like Hojo — anyone— the extent to which their acts or words affect him. There's also another layer to this shame — one of being an artificial creation, but that's for another write up.
The anger towards Gast differs greatly from the way Sephiroth went “Why didn't you tell me?” in previous iterations of the Nibelheim incident. In retrospect, Gast's supervision of the project, involvement in Sephiroth's life, and unexpected departure seem like a betrayal. Gast had not only abandoned Sephiroth, who had likely come to see him as a salient figure in his youth, but had also been lying to him all along, until finally discarding him, as Sephiroth might believe. Gast therefore falls from grace, becoming yet another person who misled, attempted to exploit, and eventually abandoned him to deal with the consequences on his own.
my favorite emotionally distraught sexy guy is back ‼️‼️
Look who finished watching her bf play ff7 rebirth!? This girl here! I am so ready to interact more.
All hail Sephiroth, the Cosmic King.
Collared
She had not been paying attention. A fault of hers being that she puts her guard down around Sephiroth knowing he does shit like this.
So when he finished putting the collar on her, she jumped a bit.
"What in hell?!" She felt the collar around her neck. It wasn't just a normal collar either. It was one with the choke chain in front so the other can grab it.
"What did i do this time to warrent this collar?!" She had spun on her heel to look at him.
@hisemeraldgaze
“Oh, let’s go down the list of things you’ve done to warrant the collar to be adored to your neck.”
Sephiroth began to list the several things she’d done wrong within the week, including causing him to miss a meeting with his partners.
“Collared!” (it's an attempt lets be real)
“What is the meaning of this, Emily?” Sephiroth questioned, as he traced his fingers along the collar. He had to hand it to her, she moved rather fast to manage to slip the chair around his neck.
You're not a monster, you're a hero to everyone, including me.
Send “Collared!” to see my muses reaction to yours putting a collar on them!
A green moon passing above dark mountains
"Gun to your head: name a Loveless verse!"
“When the war of the beasts brings about the world's end
The goddess descends from the sky
Wings of light and dark spread afar
She guides us to bliss, her gift everlasting”
So when you join the Silver Elite (Sephiroth's "premiere" fanclub), the NPC tells you that the club started over 20 years ago. Crisis core takes place in "0000", so 2000 for the sake of sanity.
So if Sephiroth is 14 in 1992 (so born in 1978) that means Shinra has been promoting this man and somehow starting an exclusive club when Sephiroth was TWO. When he was a Toddler!
I have another question, what the HELL were the updates the public wanted to see for a TODDLER?!
‘💢⬅’
“You’re grinning? For what?”
"Wanna find out?"
“What in Gaia is wrong with you?”
"I wonder about that. You're pressing me?"
“You’re literally annoying me.”
‘💢⬅’
“You’re grinning? For what?”
"Wanna find out?"
“What in Gaia is wrong with you?”
"I wonder about that. You're pressing me?"
“You’re the one pressing me to the wall.”