🪭🪞🏰🕯️🗡️🗝️
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
d e v o n
Stranger Things

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Jules of Nature

Discoholic 🪩
Sade Olutola

if i look back, i am lost
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
One Nice Bug Per Day
No title available

ellievsbear

★
occasionally subtle
Sweet Seals For You, Always
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
hello vonnie
i don't do bad sauce passes
ojovivo

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Greece
seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Norway
seen from Italy

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Spain

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Poland
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Italy
seen from Canada
seen from Germany
seen from Iraq
seen from Uruguay
@notyournymphetish
🪭🪞🏰🕯️🗡️🗝️
Everyone's all "ohhh 2026 bring back physical media" until I start talking illuminated manuscripts and then suddenly we're not on the same page anymore
Brutus by The Buttress is more a Julia the Elder-coded song than it is a Marcus Junius Brutus-coded song and I will die on that hill
🪭🪞🏰🕯️🗡️🗝️
Just finished Queen of Shadows and I have a question.
Why does everyone in the fandom hate Chaol???
I’ve been avoiding everything about the TOG series to stay spoiler-free (it’s already bad enough that I know Maeve is the big villain 😅).
But here’s the thing: I always saw people saying Tower of Dawn is his “redemption arc,” so I assumed by the end of QOS I’d understand what horrible thing he did… and yet, I still don’t see it?
That man literally sacrificed himself for his friends. He went into that fight fully believing he was going to die. He didn’t know he’d survive and when he did, he ended up paralyzed, unable to walk, and now needs a wheelchair to move.
So… why all the hate? What am I missing?
rip robb stark, you would’ve loved fenrys moonbeam
the queen of terrasen and her bloodsworn
sharing art bc i have no writing😩 but i think this slays (you can see more of my art on my insta @/j.sgrey )
What are your thoughts on Aelin and Manon?
Aelin’s arc is the most heroic in the traditional sense—chosen one, heir to the throne, savior of her people—but Maas does not shy away from imbuing that heroism with real cost, manipulation, and moral ambiguity.
She’s clever, prideful, charming, self-sacrificial to a fault—but also controlling, secretive, and at times deeply unfair to those who love her most.
Her tendency to shoulder everything alone is both her greatest strength and her most frustrating flaw. She builds these elaborate plans in secret, keeps people in the dark, and then expects them to understand when everything is revealed. While it’s often framed as necessary because “no one else could have endured it,” that justification wears thin when you consider the emotional fallout on her court.
The fact that Aelin planned to use Aedion—her cousin, her most loyal ally, the person who loved her most unconditionally—as a breeding tool to produce children with Lysandra disguised as Aelin is deeply disturbing. It’s not just manipulative. It’s dehumanizing.
Even if we understand the political logic—ensuring a lineage, protecting Terrasen, etc.—the coldness with which this plan was executed, without his knowledge, reframes Aelin in a way that’s hard to walk back from.
It doesn’t mean she’s a bad person. But it does suggest she’s a character who believes that the ends always justify the means, even if it means crossing sacred boundaries. And unlike other anti-heroes or gray characters, Aelin is still portrayed as the triumphant, admirable queen—and that cognitive dissonance can grate.
She saved the world. But she also hurt the people closest to her. Both can be true.
Manon’s arc is the most subtle but arguably the most emotionally satisfying. She begins as an agent of death—a creature molded by violence, rigid rules, and bloodline supremacy—and ends up choosing compassion, choosing to unmake the monstrous legacy she inherited.
Where Aelin’s journey is about reclaiming a throne and protecting a kingdom, Manon’s story is about reclaiming self. She starts with no name but “Manon Blackbeak,” no love in her life, no softness, no self-determination. But bit by bit, she builds a soul.
She doesn’t “fall into” goodness. She fights her way toward it.
Manon is cold steel and slow-burning evolution. And ironically, that makes her the more emotionally resonant for many readers. Her transformation feels earned. There are no shortcuts to her humanity. Every act of kindness costs her something. Every shift in loyalty is a battle against her own programming.
And perhaps most importantly: she listens. She learns. She changes based on how others are treated—Elide, Abraxos, even Dorian. She is not immutable like Aelin, who often doubles down. Manon bends—and in doing so, she becomes real.
I admire Aelin. I respect her cleverness, her perseverance, and her willingness to burn for the people she loves. But that moment with Aedion pulled the curtain back too far for me. It made me see how she sometimes views others as chess pieces—even the ones closest to her. It’s not that I hate her—but I mistrust her.
Manon, by contrast, is someone I grew to love. I didn’t expect to. But her story was about learning to feel, learning to choose.
Eos in a nutshell
Manon: Fuck you.
Dorian: go ahead ;)
Manon: Wait, no, that’s not what I-
Manon:
Manon: what the hell sure
Dana Herfurth as Anne of Cleves
Wolf Hall 2.05
y'all are not going to like the person i become when i see katherine howard in wolf hall
Katheryn Howard in Wolf Hall ౨ৎ
*** Spoilers?? ***
The scream I scrumpt when I saw her 🫶🏻
tags ౨ৎ
Summer Richards as Katherine Howard
Wolf Hall 2.05
something about the love being there but it not being enough just drives me insane
-A summary
me 🤝 dorian havilliard bleeding whatever color manon blackbeak tells us to within minutes of meeting her