WHEN RLY GOOD ARTISTS FOLLOW YOU
WHEN RLY GOOD ARTISTS COMPLIMENT UR ART
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trying on a metaphor

oozey mess
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
dirt enthusiast
we're not kids anymore.
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
DEAR READER
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Kiana Khansmith
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Misplaced Lens Cap

Origami Around
Jules of Nature

roma★
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Peter Solarz

Andulka
Xuebing Du
art blog(derogatory)
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@minipotato83
WHEN RLY GOOD ARTISTS FOLLOW YOU
WHEN RLY GOOD ARTISTS COMPLIMENT UR ART
WHEN RLY GOOD ARTISTS SAY THEY CAN’T WAIT TO SEE MORE
Six Months at Riot Games
I’ve been up all night after reading Kotaku’s article on the company culture of Riot, and its effect on women in particular. Cecilia contacted me as a potential source, but I didn’t commit to providing my experience on the record because I was worried about the ramifications of speaking out. The discourse around this conversation and the reticence to believe the women who came forward has stunned me. I’ve been carrying around a heavy weight on my shoulders since 2014, and I feel it is finally time to let it go. I only lasted six months at Riot before resigning.
In 2014, I left a job I loved and colleagues I adored to take up a post at Riot Games in Dublin. One of their recruiters had reached out to me nearly a year prior, and while I was immensely happy at my current place of work, I had always wanted to work abroad at least once in my life. I was becoming addicted to League of Legends, Riot had a history of great community-centric initiatives, and I felt that if I turned down the opportunity, I would always ask myself, “What if?”
I was initially apprehensive, as I had been told firsthand that Riot could have a “bro” culture at times. So I did my research. I asked the recruiter directly about the mysterious “culture” of Riot, and why conforming to it was so important. I even messaged a handful of women ex-Rioters to ask about their experiences. They all confirmed that Riot could have a “frat party” type atmosphere at times, but didn’t relay stories of overt sexism or harassment.
I took the job in early 2014. I sold my car, packed up all my belongings in a shipping container, committed to a long-distance relationship with my partner, and sent my cats off for the mandatory 30 days of quarantine. I fully committed, expecting to work there for several years at the minimum.
Before I detail some of what I experienced at Riot, first, let me state the obvious. The behavior below is NOT indicative of all Riot employees. The large majority of Riot employees I’ve met have been lovely, and as evidenced above, there are many people who weren’t subject to sexist behavior and harassment. That being said, from my own experiences and that of many others speaking out this week, an unacceptable number of people – primarily, but not exclusively women – have been subject to inappropriate behavior at Riot for years. It is systemic to the company’s culture and needs to be addressed as such.
I’ve outlined some of the most notable negative encounters with Riot staff below. These don’t account for the daily microaggressions and condescending remarks that are too numerous to detail. For transparency, being four years removed from Riot has not degraded my recollection of these events. I am drawing them directly from the eight-page resignation letter I sent to Riot in August of 2014.
Content-Warning: Sexist, racist, homophobic, and transphobic language, as well as mentions of sexual assault.
At Riot, employees are encouraged to play League before/after work, or during lunch. My very first week at the Dublin office, I heard shouting from individuals playing together, calling each other “f*ggots” repeatedly. I was unnerved, but it was my first week and I didn’t know if this was a common occurrence. I didn’t say anything at that time. Eventually, the language would escalate to “n*gger”. No one flinched, and I realized it was considered the norm. Nearly the same thing happened my first day of meetings at the Riot LA office, where two men were loudly calling each other “c*cksuckers” right outside the office of the CEOs.
Soon I began to notice gendered language regularly being used among male Rioters to insult each other. Guys would tell each other “not to be such a girl” and call one another “p*ssies” quite regularly. They would casually refer to women as “b*tches” and say that “all women were crazy.” I also overheard a group discussing how a female professional made it far in the industry, suggesting she “sucked c*ck to get to the top.
My first month at Riot we had an opportunity to talk with one of the CEOs for an office-wide AMA. We were encouraged to submit questions anonymously. I submitted something that had bothered me for some time as a League player. I wondered why – other than the child characters and Yordles – nearly all the female champions had the exact same body type. The male champions were young, old, skinny, athletic, obese, handsome, monstrous, and more – they were unique and diverse. The most prevalent characteristic of female champions at the time was sex appeal. I wanted something more. I wanted to know when we would get a female equivalent of Gragas.
The senior staff liked the question so much that they requested I ask it live, rather than anonymously. I was apprehensive at first because I was so new, but I also understood that this was an important opportunity to directly challenge someone in a position of power who could make a change. Unfortunately, the response boiled down to “giving the players what they want”, to which I rebutted that Riot was big enough to influence player perception of what characters are cool or fun to play. I was very disappointed by the response, which felt dismissive of the issue. (As a side note, I was happy to see Riot’s efforts to diversify their female champions these past few years.)
After the meeting, I realized I had put a target on my back with some of the men in the office. I didn’t even make it to my desk before a male colleague came up and told me that “women don’t want to play unattractive champions. They want to feel beautiful.” I was stunned. A woman behind us audibly laughed at the fact that he was informing us of our gender’s gaming preferences. A few male coworkers also asked why I would like to see an “unattractive” female champion, or a plus size female champion, because “no one wants to look at that.” These were several of dozens of conversations I would have on the matter.
Things only got worse the longer I stayed at Riot. I didn’t go out with colleagues after events because strip clubs seemed to be a common destination. Asking me what age I lost my virginity at was deemed appropriate conversation during a team dinner, and employees I didn’t know prodded into how my sex life worked in a long-distance relationship.
I felt out of place in my direct team as well. Our Jira sprints were named things like “thong.” I was the only woman on that particular team, and so a senior staff member named us the “Bros and Ho”. I immediately tried to shut that down, but it was used for weeks regardless.
Rape became a punchline to jokes quite frequently, including one instance where an employee went on for several hours about how he was going to rape his male colleague, who was his hotel roommate. He was graphic in exactly how he was going to rape his roommate, who was a new hire, and it was obvious that the individual in question was extremely uncomfortable.
While on a team outing, the same senior staff member messaged a new employee’s girlfriend on Facebook asking if she was “DTF” - shorthand for “down to f*ck”. He thought it was a funny joke. The new staffer didn’t feel comfortable challenging him, even though his girlfriend was very uncomfortable and called to ask why she was being harassed by his boss.
Then came the final straw. At a work dinner, it came up that I thought I’d been paired in a hotel room with a male Rioter. It turned out to be a typo in the name, and, as was standard, I was paired with another woman. A senior staff member proceeded to repeatedly call me sexist for not being willing to room with a man I’d never met before. At first, I thought he was kidding, but he continued to make arguments to his point. I explained why I would be more comfortable sharing a room with another woman, and told him I wasn’t enjoying the conversation and would leave if I was continued to be called sexist. The conversation continued, with him eventually saying that my unwillingness to room with a man was the same as not hiring a woman due to her gender. I left the table in the middle of dinner, unwilling to take any more after six months of such behavior. I submitted my resignation shortly after.
My biggest concern with Riot – putting my own experiences behind me – is the inappropriate and sometimes predatory behavior that some staff exhibited towards fans. I frequently pushed back against comments and scenarios like these but found I was one of the few that would speak up. Rioters are often seen as celebrities with dedicated fans, and it is easy to abuse that power.
I regularly witnessed lewd comments about women passing by at events, discussing their level of attractiveness, whether someone would sleep with them, and guessing if they were the age of consent.
Several times I heard male employees bragging and sharing intimate details about hooking up with players at events, including a cosplayer we worked with in an official capacity. Several male colleagues even asked me to “hook them up” with cosplayers.
When I brought up the inappropriateness of a young League cosplayer having silly-string unexpectedly sprayed across her chest during a video piece by a third party – the gag being that he had ejaculated on her – I was told I was the “comedy police”.
I overheard at least a dozen employees comment on how cosplayers only make costumes for attention and ask “is this even considered a costume?” when a very famous cosplayer recreated a scantily-clad female champion. I showed them that she was one-to-one with the splash art. They begrudgingly conceded that it was an official outfit. This is obviously highly hypocritical.
At least three times Riot Dublin employees made inappropriate comments via work email about a female cosplayer’s breasts (one they regularly worked with).
While in LA, I had a week of very successful meetings with Rioters to help get a new cosplay initiative off the ground. In a recap meeting, I expressed how happy I was that we were creating such great programming for cosplayers. The senior most staff member responded with “Who wouldn’t want to work with cosplayers? Because Boobs.”
During one event, a first-time cosplayer came to our booth crying because someone had commented negatively on her weight in relation to the character. Another coworker and I consoled her for nearly 30 minutes, and she left, feeling much better. After she left, a fellow Rioter called her a “fatass” and asked why she would try to cosplay the character she chose. I was in shock but told him how inappropriate that was to say about our fans, especially those passionate enough to make and wear costumes. Cosplayers have also been called “tr*nnies” and “attention whores” by Riot employees at events.
In meetings, I was told that we shouldn’t put cosplayers on stage to play League live, because they are mostly women, and therefore not very good at the game.
Further examples of disrespect include when I argued that we shouldn’t let a cosplayer in blackface on our stage for a parade, keeping in mind that Riot is a global company. I was repeatedly called racist by my colleagues, who tried to convince me that it was an acceptable practice and I was overreacting.
This is not a comprehensive list. These were only the very specific examples I could draw from when I drafted my resignation letter at Riot. After word got out that I quit, I was contacted by several other women from the office, asking to meet. I was told more horror stories, discovering that some of them had been physically touched, cornered in shared vehicles, and faced professional retaliation for turning down advances. They asked for advice. I told them that they needed to speak up too.
The reason I didn’t share any of this before is because I felt trapped. I am not proud of myself for staying silent. After I quit, I was stranded in Ireland with my entire life in an apartment, no job, no car, and not even a cell phone, as it was immediately taken away from me once I resigned. I needed to get back to the United States somehow. Riot was my best bet, and I worried that if I didn’t agree to their mandates or went public with anything that I’d ruin my chance of getting home. After six months of near-daily misery, I was exhausted. I signed their agreements. I needed to get out. I recognize that I put myself at legal risk by disclosing my experience now. After years of regret and the thought that these practices could still be going on today, affecting countless others who also feel alone and outgunned by a company they were once excited to be a part of, I am willing to take that risk. I want to work towards a better and more inclusive industry and show solidarity with the other women who have come forward.
I left Riot feeling like a failure. I felt like I wasn’t tough enough to stick it out or make a positive change at the company. I had been very public about my new adventure in Ireland, and all I could post about the return home was an agreed upon “culture fit issues’ statement to my social channels. Friends and followers could tell that something was wrong, but I couldn’t expand further.
To be clear, not everything from my time at Riot was negative. I became good friends with several of my co-workers and loved interacting with fans. Riot is a massive company that employs thousands of people. There are going to be women at the company who’ve never experienced sexism or harassment from their colleagues. I am very happy that they have found a safe working space with their particular branches or teams. That being said, these harassment-free experiences don’t invalidate the experiences of women like myself, and the dozens of others I personally met while working at Riot, who struggled with fair and respectful treatment on a daily basis.
The in-depth article on Kotaku and outpouring of other stories from both current and ex-Rioters finally gave me the courage to speak up, despite my concerns about professional or legal ramifications. I should have done this four years ago. I tried to facilitate change while working at Riot and after my departure. I’m hoping the groundswell of voices will now finally cause real, meaningful change within one of the most influential gaming companies in the world.
Two final notes:
To the many good eggs at Riot: I’ve seen many of your posts. I understand your frustration if you have not been witness to this type of behavior, or experienced it yourself. That being said, you can support your company and the individuals who have come forward. Your anger shouldn’t be directed at the subjects of this abuse and maltreatment, but rather the individuals who perpetuated these acts in the first place. Please keep an eye out for your peers, and hold others accountable for their actions.
To young women hoping to work in gaming: Gaming can be a tough industry, but please don’t let conversations like this drive you away from pursuing your passion. The more we dissect and discuss these situations in a public forum, the more steps we take to making the industry a more inclusive place. As tough as gaming can be, it is equally welcoming and rewarding.
Eden’s Zero: What Improvements To Look For List
So as we are all aware, the release of Hiro Mashima’s third work, Eden’s Zero is fast approaching. All we have been given in it is a color page and a few vague tweets, so the contents of the first chapter is far from being fully capable of judging. That said, upon release I intend to review the series, as is the nature of my blog and reviewing Hiro Mashima works is how I got started on Tumblr.
Every time I’ve been asked weather I’d review the entire series, I said that I’d review the first chapter and if it didn’t make a strong first impression, it would’ve set the tone for the series and I’d likely not want to read the rest of it. That being said, I’ve changed my answer, I will review the first 3 chapters of Eden’s Zero, before I decide if the series is worth it. The reason I say 3 chapters is that now in the manga industry (at least in shueisha) that a successful series can be determined in its first 3 chapters. While this might seem difficult to believe, but its not crazy when we think about it. The first 3 chapters are usually give extra pages to tell more story and often the first 3 chapters feel like their own self contained narrative, that if the series were to end, then we would have a level of closure.
Look at the first 3 chapters of Fairy Tail,introduction to Natsu and Lucy, we see fairy Tail, they go on the mission to save Macao. If the entire series of FT were to end after chapter 3 we would still have this short adventure that satisfied people’s time spent reading. For people who’ve gone to Hiro’s earlier work of Rave Master, the first 3 chapters were also simple: Haru meets Shiba, gets Rave, has doubts about being Rave Master, Gets attacked by Shuda, answers the call to adventure and leaves his secluded island to fight demon card. Another self contained narrative that if the series were to end, we still got a sense for this world and characters.
This is why I am willing to read 3 chapters. That said, this is still just e giving Hiro Mashima a chance and someone like him, who has published 2 series, his previous series leaving in a very poor fashion, needs to be held to a standard to improve. Basically, I’m giving Hiro the chance to prove that this’ll be different from FT and that this criteria isn’t just for him, but any series I start reading.
Keep reading
happy easter from the united states :)
what is going on in America
how tf are those staying up
Just so we’re clear...
Humour is this:
Happy versus a chair whilst the rest of the team are fighting demons and monsters!!
Humour is not this:
A woman who objectifies a man so much she deems it acceptable to have sponges, towels, stuffed toys etc with his face on which she implies that she uses for her own enjoyment.
Or this:
A woman who is blatantly rejected, but ignores the feelings of the ““one that she loves”” just so that she can be happy.
Comedic relief is this:
Natsu, Happy, and Plue making fools of themselves in front of the guild!! how funny!!
Comedic relief is not this:
A woman who would rather drug a man to force him to love her rather than simply accept that they are not meant to be.
Or this:
A woman who openly and unabashedly admits to trying to sleep - either metaphorically or literally - with a man who rejects her.
The definition of comedic relief is:
humorous content in a dramatic or literary work intended to offset more serious episodes.
And the definition of humour is:
the quality of being amusing or comic, especially as expressed in literature or speech.
The definition is not, “To make people feel uncomfortable whilst normalising stalking, emotional manipulation, sexual harassment, drugging, and abuse
I just wanted to clear this issue up
//what do you mean i draw him too much nOBODY ELSE WILL SO I’M STEPPING UP TO THE PLATE,,,,,,,,, anyway, leather jacket bad boye is here
911 yes that’s the man
legit just stole my heart, the fraudulent activity here is off the charts
I would ship Sting//ue, Fr//axus and Gra//tsu.. if the fandom didn’t push them into yaoi genre and abuse their characters. It especially hurts to see Natsu and Freed get mischaracterized as they belong to my favorites. So sorry I really can’t ship these ships. – submitted by anonymous
hey nalu/gruvia fans…
what the fuck makes y’all think that this
is acceptable? what makes y’all think that it’s okay for you to overrun gralu and natza and nali edits, amvs, fanfics, posts, to the point that there’s more hate than love for what the creator made?
if i left a comment on a nalu animation saying “ewww! nalu should die!!” your fandom would rip me apart- and rightfully so. if i left a comment on a gruvia amv telling the author that gralu was meant to be and gruvia was stupid, your fandom would gut me alive. and rightfully so.
but somehow you, by virtue of your twisted minds, have decided that your asses can bitch all you want at other people and it’s somehow ok?
no. it’s not. and don’t give me that “well SOME nalu fans” or “AN ANTI SAID XYZ” because there is absolutely no comparision in size. you can go to a nalu animation and find hundreds of comments talking about how much they love the ship, but the gralu animation that the comments above came from? mostly shitty nalu and gruvia shippers whining that the animator didn’t ship their bullshit.
you’re out of control. you need to hold your fandom accountable.
don’t reblog people who insult artists or animations. don’t spread hate on properly tagged posts. call out the people that you see doing this shit. then maybe one day you’ll stop seeing these posts.
Could say the same for stingyu and stingue shippers making fun of other sabertooth ships.
Just so we’re clear...
Humour is this:
Happy versus a chair whilst the rest of the team are fighting demons and monsters!!
Humour is not this:
A woman who objectifies a man so much she deems it acceptable to have sponges, towels, stuffed toys etc with his face on which she implies that she uses for her own enjoyment.
Or this:
A woman who is blatantly rejected, but ignores the feelings of the ““one that she loves”” just so that she can be happy.
Comedic relief is this:
Natsu, Happy, and Plue making fools of themselves in front of the guild!! how funny!!
Comedic relief is not this:
A woman who would rather drug a man to force him to love her rather than simply accept that they are not meant to be.
Or this:
A woman who openly and unabashedly admits to trying to sleep - either metaphorically or literally - with a man who rejects her.
The definition of comedic relief is:
humorous content in a dramatic or literary work intended to offset more serious episodes.
And the definition of humour is:
the quality of being amusing or comic, especially as expressed in literature or speech.
The definition is not, “To make people feel uncomfortable whilst normalising stalking, emotional manipulation, sexual harassment, drugging, and abuse
I just wanted to clear this issue up
Wouldn’t you say this is a great representation of most n//lu/gr//via shippers ? ; Bonus points, the “he didn’t post that XD” was directed at the “I love you” gratsu sketch !
@levysramdomthings Man, I am SO used to that. Do you know how often I’ve seen pro-Gruvia arguments claiming that images of Juvia’s stalking are anime only filler when I know they’re from manga panels? Like, off the top of my head?
reality denial is next level with these ones.
also, that sketch is as canon as anything else on mashima’s twitter. hell, it’s more canon than nothing and tadpole, because mashima didn’t debunk it in the same post!
Know the difference
:))))))
If this aint that one ship I don’t know what is.
(cough) Gruvia
I just realized this about Fairy Tail:
In common irl folklore, iron is considered a fairies’ greatest weakness (can potentially be fatal).
And we all know that Gajeel is the iron dragon slayer.
So one could say that his membership in the Fairy Tail guild is IRONic.
The best joke. Everyone else can go home
Just in case no one has seen this yet, there are Fairy Tail english dub outtakes on YouTube now. They’re fucking amazing
Credit: Kyle Phillips (Fairy Tail English Dub Director and Former Script Writer)
Well, isn’t that a great role model
This comic was actually scrapped, because I kinda hate how it turned out, but since I have nothing else right now I might as well post it.
Bonus:
At least the kids look up to someone
"Do I need to vaccinate you?"
My favorite team. <3
Who are the Top 10 Strongest Wizards in Ishgar at the end of the FT Series? (Your personal opinion)
10. Juvia: Her water body is basically invincible unless you have something that somehow hurts you if you’re a living creature like magulity and anti eternano. The consistency of the water and qualities even change based on the emotion, it’s basically a water logia.
9. Makarov: he somehow survived getting shot point blank, multiple heart attacks, going head-to-head with the Dragon and burning his body out and he still alive.
8. Hoteye: has no range limit on how much of the earth he can soften. Which goes very well with his eyes of have an ability which allows him to see anybody and unlike Jura and his solid rock, it seems a lot tougher to defeat liquid ground and shatter it.
7. Gajeel: He’s got DragonForce now add on his really strong defense, dude’s basically a walking fortress.
6. Minerva: No one other than Erza and her BS has defeated her and her manipulation of space (I guess in the north we saw her on the crucifix but I’m assuming that Larcade did that with his weird orgasm power). She apparently can also compete with a spriggan.
5. Brandish (Yes I know she’s not on Ishgar): Controls mass without limits and no one has legit defeated her that wasn’t because of hayfever.
4. Laxus: dude can take a pounding a buy a machine while most of his organs are somewhat burned away because of antimagic, then stood up to defeat the ghost of Hades.
3. Gildarts: No one has legitimately defeated this man.
2. Erza: Because she’s Erza.
1: Natsu: is undefeatable he has the power of the writer on his side and whenever he needs he can just call upon the power of friendship and win.
My Current Thoughts on Fairy Tail
Hey guys. This is a bit of an off the cuff post, but fuck it, I want to talk about this. There isn’t going to be any flash or snark, this just going to be me speaking from the heart.
So we got only two more chapters of Fairy Tail, and the raws of 544 are already out and it’s not good. Like by no means is it good. But I think people are waiting for me to review this chapter, and I will, but it’s not good, but this is not 0/10 worthy. Like is this one of the worst chapters of Fairy Tail? God no! But I do wanna take kinda this time to reflect on this series.
I make it no secret that this arc is awful and before someone does the inevitable “Well if you don’t like it don’t read it”, I hope you realize that I’ve taken the time to list everything positive that comes out of a chapter as well as the bad. I don’t imminently write it off as “This sucked”, but what’s good about the series has kinda been fading for a while now. Now is Fairy Tail the worst manga out there? Fuck no. If you honestly think FT is the worse manga then I dare you to read Freezing or Wolf Guy or Air Gear. I stayed with this series because despite every flaw it had, nothing was ever bad enough in the past to be like, “Wow this is awful”. This series produced a lot of likeable characters, pretty fun world, and some legitimately great moments and arcs. So telling me to abandon a series that gave me all that before this current mess, and before it really got bad, like don’t tell me that.
And don’t tell me that these flaws have been here since the beginning, because I’ve read this series since the beginning, it did not suffer some of these problems. Was there fanservice? Sure. Was there friendship speeches? Yes. But here’s the thing, every shounen series has done stuff like that. Like this is something that wasn’t pioneered by FT. But the difference was like tons of other shounen series, FT knew how to balance those aspects with compelling narrative and character development. Like early on, there was consequences like death and expulsion. There was a genuine edge. Not everything was an easy answer. “because we’re fairy tail” wasn’t the end all answer. But then around like the Oracion seis arc it started to take a lot more of the easy answers.
Like it wasn’t fully consuming the story, but it started to become noticeable. It wasn’t till the GMG that it just consumed the story. It feel back on the lazy elements. And I know tons of people were declaring FT garbage at that time and some still kept reading and I can tell you why I wasn’t blasting the series when that happened, because before this arc there was nothing really horrible. Declaring a whole series trash because of one arc is so damn reckless, because with the story not over and all the stuff that came before the GMG, you know that Mashima would’ve learned and noticed what was happening and he did. 2/3s of tartaros felt like a goddamn apology letter. Like it was doing things similar to the beginning of the story, but then near the end it kinda started falling back on it’s repetative easy answers.
I think that Mashma, just did that because I think he just lose some of his spark. Like he wasn’t going to try and take as many chances. And that sucks. Mashima seems like a very nice guy, he always is working, and damn I give him credit on how much effort he’s put into his art. That what hurts when the story telling doesn’t match the effort being put into the storytellng.
Look Im not going to blame the whole decline in quality on the shippers. Trust me, love the big 4, hate the big 4,but shipping has been around for a while and I don’t claim I can’t see why a guy writing a story is trying to appease the most vocal fanbase. Now do I think shippers are except from criticism? No. But then again, it’s not them writing the damn story. Is the fact a lot of them stick around solely for the ships kinda head scratching? Yeah, but here’s the thing, I’m sure a lot of people have felt that way at one point or another. I fully admitted to getting into the series because of a ship. Ships are one of the most subjective things on the internet.
But, back to this rant, these last two arc are just so bad. There’s no real effort, there’s no real consequences, and it’s just so easy. For the longest time this series wasn’t awful, maybe just hovering around average, but nothing truly bad outside GMG. But Avatar and Alvarez have just been disappointments. Again there is like no effort and that hurts even more because this is the conclusion. So many things are to be wrapped up in the last arc that have had this great build up and it just crumbles. Like it’s so hard to watch characters I like just dick around or this big thing I’ve been waiting for just to be resolved in such a wet fart manner.
Like are these last two arcs enough to call FT a bad series? No. Even with all the shit that’s pulled, it’s not enough to screw over all the beginning arcs and tell someone not to read it, but these two arcs have confirmed that this is a terrible conclusion.
Ugh… Look despite all this crap, I can’t say FT is the worse, but this arc definitely is. Anyway you’ll see my review later but honestly I just wanted to say what’s been on my mind for a while now.