percy and thalia look like siblings because they both vaguely look like the nymphs in their father's domains send tweet

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percy and thalia look like siblings because they both vaguely look like the nymphs in their father's domains send tweet
your voice claims for percy are wrong if the voice in question doesn't sound raspy and perpetually exhausted
Being a mythological being, like Zoe or Daedalus, and interacting with Percy during one of his quests must be so unsettling, because you barely know and maybe not even like this kid, but he's still going to have some weird, prophetic dreams, which show him your entire life story.
percy and sally's dynamic makes me go crazy because no one talks about him like. genuinely believing she didn't want him when he was twelve. like he said that by accident because he had been thinking it the whole time?? he loved her so much and knew she loved him back but thought she didn't want him im gonna jump off a roof
so sad rick fumbled the nico and percy dynamic because getting nico's pov was the perfect opportunity to explore the horror of having a major crush on a parental figure
I think at a certain point percy and rachel start both being referred to as the camp oracle
As I make the fight for recognition of my own ADHD, and while I know the saying is that "you can't reason someone out of a belief they didn't reason themselves into"
We gotta talk about the un-ignorables that were written into the PJO books. As much as I love the first series.
Starting with Rick making his protagonist disabled, and that protagonist's love interest a "she's just being mean because she likes you" bully who regularly and consistently insults his intelligence and picks on him for symptoms of that disability.
And we all just.... ignored this, for years.
I've lived my whole life, up until like 3 years ago, not knowing I was ADHD, and the amount of bullying, gaslighting, and skepticism I've faced and continue to face for "faking it" or not trying hard enough or being too difficult---never in my life would I fall in love with someone who is all of those things wrapped up in one person, who publically and privately insults my intelligence, and who everyone else in our lives does nothing to stop.
And this is Percabeth. She's bullied him, shown us her insecurities when he does anything better than her in her POV, isolated him from his non-demigod friends because of her raging jealousy that was never atoned for, and drags him around through her idealized adult life while Percy is written to be moon-struck and wholly complicit and happy in being taken advantage of.
All while also being a victim of childhood abuse by Gabe.
I would say she also isolated him at CHB because we never hear about any long-lasting friendships in CHB between Percy and other demigods (Grover doesn't count, and even then, their relationship seems to have been diminished in later series). Yes, he led the demigods and fought with them, but he doesn't hang out with them or join them in normal games. And many of the demigods seem to have also just reduced him to "Annabeth's boyfriend" in titles, which kind of makes you think she has isolated him by making them all focus on his status as her trophy rather than as a person himself.
(@geemspop on tiktok)
i’m sick to my stomach over this actually
Why did Staff of Hermes convince me Percabeth is going to break up in the future?
The nail in the coffin for me when I was rereading the series in terms of me foreseeing that Percabeth will not make it as a couple in the future was this short story. The Staff of Hermes. Not the Judo Flip in MOA mind you which is pretty controversial or even the ending for The Bronze Dragon which is rage-inducing when I reflect upon it, but this short story.
It spoke to me how distant Percabeth were with each other and in terms of their rushed dynamic, how they are doomed as a couple.
Percy has never really been fully comfortable around Annabeth. Even their most romantic moments in BOTL for instance are tinged with anticipation for violence.
Like the volcano kiss
and Percy crashing his funeral
And of course, this comes up briefly in Staff of Hermes as well
The moments are presented as sweet, but the very fact that Percy anticipates being punched or slapped by Annabeth is revealing. It proves that the judo flip is in character for Annabeth but in many ways, Annabeth got worse as she got older. Given she actually flips Percy over and kicks his leg when he talking to Jason in MOA.
That's not even delving into Percy's major emotional insecurities when he is in a relationship with Annabeth, and how in MOA, he is constantly scared to open up to her about the future and uses the analogy of a "glass sculpture" to describe how fragile it feels to him to accidentally break it. Or even how it feels more apparent that Annabeth uses knowledge as a weapon of power to make Percy feel stupid in the relationship to feel superior.
That doesn't come across as someone who is eager to share information because they want to out of genuine passion, that's someone who uses it as a means of power and control.
The sad thing is for Annabeth's character, it makes way too much sense. MOA is a revealing glimpse into her personality but there was already hints of it in her interview in the Bronze Dragon. She does seem to like Percy, but any compliment she might have for him is backhanded at best and insulting at worst.
With that, Annabeth comes across as genuinely believing Percy is annoying her deliberately.
It reminded me of a TikTok I saw just recently where a woman was chatting with her husband about seeing Thunderbolts but he shut her down as it being just a movie. When she got upset, he said to her in order to try and ease the situation was "I love when you get excited it's just annoying sometimes." It was gutting to hear not to mention she was visibly upset and she excused her own husband's faults as a part of his healing journey. You can imagine the comment section in that video btw.
It reminded me of another scene, in fact just before the Judo Flip where Annabeth was blaming Percy for "leaving". She thought this.
Excruciating...
Not to gonna lie. That floored me when I reread that scene. I genuinely couldn't believe anyone would even think that about someone they loved. It's a bit like a man saying how much he hates his wife. Conflict does arise in relationships, but this seems like Annabeth is torn between loving and hating Percy and it's not the healthy sort either.
Not to mention she also said this later in the same book.
I know the flip was bad, but this was another layer where it feels like Annabeth genuinely dislikes Percy and oscillates between hate and love for him. Later on she also develops a fear of Percy after Tartarus, which begs the question why they are even together at this point. Annabeth also admitted she hated Percy does fit with her behaviour as she genuinely seems annoyed with Percy in the books but it becomes really questionable as she gets older and even how she acts towards him.
At one point, can we excuse Annabeth actions as a quirk of "trauma" as she is too young to know differently and using that as shield to excuse shitty behaviour as someone who is meant to be a role model.
Riordan doesn't understand the implications that is here. How it's not a healthy dynamic with Percy, who is also an abuse survivor with a fatal flaw of loyalty. His story means a lot to people and to not look into any of his relationships and how that impacted him would be doing that a disservice with the focus that was presented onto it.
Personal loyalty to stick with people no matter how they might treat you, good or bad. It provides a tragic lens onto Percy who might have Gabe as a reference but Gabe's abuse was more direct; he insulted Percy's intelligence with "brain boy", threatened to punch Percy lights out (and probably did that on occasion) and also financially took advantage of him. Annabeth's is a little different. I don't think Annabeth herself is aware of it completely, but it still doesn't erase the emotional belittling and pressure she puts on Percy throughout the series.
It doesn't change the fact that Percy asked her to stop with the nickname in the Bronze Dragon (and probably before as hinted in TTC) refusing to respect that boundary of Percy, who is never really fully at ease around Annabeth and has major emotional insecurities that have emerged so much more poignantly as a result of the relationship.
So why is the Staff of Hermes so special when this is littered throughout their dynamic across the books? Why was this the nail in the coffin for me?
Well, it's rather simple, actually. It's control.
The pair of them are on a date. Percy had clearly arranged matters. The Great Lawn is a lovely place in Central Park and the internary shows Percy took considerable care into the thought process behind it. We know from the first book Percy in not that fussed on olives and he had chocolates and lemondades with them.
Percy is not made of money, we know this firsthand from the first books but even the fact he able to do something like this for date is quite sweet and thoughtful.
Like that is the Great Lawn for reference. Not a bad place for a first date. On a lovely sunny day at that is.
Now it's infered from Frederick's background even before we further learn in Magnus Chase they come from generational wealth in Boston (and Annabeth technically inheriting the Mansion in the end) he is on the richer end. No one can afford housing in San Francisco that easily or be able to work on Sopwith Camels in TTC without a bit of money. That or Annabeth's stepmother is an underrated breadwinner.
Why is this relevant?
It's essentially Annabeth's expectations of what the date is meant to be in her mind versus what Percy could actually do.
Annabeth's character is one of privilege in the books (she is explicitly white coded not only from her appearance, along with her siblings, but also wealth), both from her home life and Camp by Chiron. Chiron informs Annabeth on nearly everything and presumably allowed her to be a Camp Counsellor at a young age. Despite not ready for some of those responsibilities as we see in her introduction, she is very rude to Percy who she should be able to empathise with his situation of losing a loved one (missed chance there to connect them by Rick), acts out against him and is deeply impatient in answering basic questions about Camp, which is her job. This is part of their poorly constructed Meet-Ugly in the books, and by the time Piper arrives, Annabeth is much better at her introductions but it doesn't change the fact that she wasn't fit for the task initially and presumably treated other Campers like that in search of the One. (I doubt she made many friends because of that)
We learn in The Lost Hero, Chiron rarely kept anything from Annabeth (with the exception of the initial theft of the Bolt and the Romans), and from what we see in the series, this is fairly true. Chiron allows her to know about the Great Prophecy from ten, but she also has information about the Labyrinth in BOTL, despite that being a secret. TLO also explores this, and one of the reasons she has the infamous "You're a coward" Percy scene is because Chiron informed her about where Percy was, and crucially neither of them informed Percy of the wartime developments like with Typhon.
I was never fussed on the You're A Coward scene and especially the dissipated resolution in it meant that the tension between the pair was never truly resolved. It never struck me as particularly romantic so to learn that was some people's favourite scene in TLO had me confused because of how frustrating it is. Especially since Percy was asking for confirmation about Rachel's vision and the possible direction. But because it's Rachel, Annabeth refuses to even entertain the possibility, despite the fact SHE said it.
Annabeth has never really liked Rachel but a part of that, I think comes down to mortality itself. Annabeth constantly dismisses Rachel is because she is "just a mortal." But even the way Annabeth talks about mortality is squint-worthy, given that she is meant to be his mortal tie through the Curse of Achilles.
Like the hidden meaning behind these scenes is Rachel and Annabeth are fighting over Percy but honestly, I think that is poorly done given how spiteful it comes across and how Annabeth says mortal like a slur. It's not even the first time we see her dismissive towards mortals either, she doesn't have a high opinion on her stepfamily in the first books and authorities like cops (which honestly fair) but it does spell a different layer to Annabeth's dislike of Rachel is connected with that dislike of mortals.
It's understandable that another reason why Annabeth might act the way she does is linked to her family and also her inherent pride in being a demigod, a divine child of Athena (Athena is the best after all), and a gift onto her father. Either way, it makes her a poor fit as a mortal tie for the Curse of Achilles.
I do think Riordan was using the Curse of Achilles as a crutch to pair Percy and Annabeth together and to rush the romance between them, given that is the primary reason they got together. But it still doesn't change the fact narratively as a mortal tie, Rachel or even Sally would've made more sense.
I don't even ship the pair but throughout TLO Percy and Rachel have a crucial impact on each other and the choices they make. As we see to Percy, Rachel is a reminder that there is something there for him in the mortal world and, you can see Rachel seeing Percy as an escape from her own life, given how she joined him on the Labyrinth quest on the spot. Rachel is present in reminding Percy he is not the Hero of the prophecy and was there when Percy gave the pithos to Hestia. Later on Percy does the same for her when her moment came with the Oracle.
This is the precursor to Percy turning down immortality and Rachel plays a critical component in that, but is ultimately the reminder for Percy of the broader picture, much like Annabeth is when Percy looks back and thinks of Camp and all those who died when he declines immortality. the only time I believe Percy's mortal tie to Annabeth made sense beyond a romantic level.
Percy is clearly more comfortable around Rachel.
And Percy made to feel guilty for his interactions around Rachel throughout TLO and much later with Annabeth, this is revealed she does this deliberately to Percy even after they have gotten together in order to assert control.
So at this point, it goes beyond Annabeth's jealousy and possessiveness and into control. Annabeth is a complicated character, but it still doesn't change how one can read into her actions and that in the text and present for all to see. Back to the Coward scene in TLO.
Annabeth is emotional and she does have decent reasons to be. She is scared for Percy. We see this when Percy reacts to the prophecy.
More than anything Annabeth is projecting her own emotional insecurity onto Percy in this scene. About his oncoming death and also his feelings towards her.
She is annoyed with Percy presumably not confessing to her when she clearly has emotions for him and for him spending time with Rachel instead. But she presents it as Percy being the coward and for running away, scared. Rather than actually confess her feelings herself. It should be Percy to be the one to do so. Percy is clearly not a coward running from his death and even in terms of their "romantic relationship" at this point, apart from a kiss which came out of nowhere there is not really a lot of reasons for them to be together (yet) Percy reads between those lines over why she is really annoyed.
This, among many scenes, continues a tension between Percy and Annabeth which is never truly resolved and its' not helped with Annabeth and Rachel making up off-screen, which doesn't make sense given how Annabeth seemed to have genuine emity towards Rachel's perceived crush on Percy.
This connects with who is well established as Annabeth as a prideful character but as controlling as well. Annabeth's pride possibly can't accept what she deems as a mediocre dinner for their first month anniversary.
It is genuinely gutting to see Percy, who was doing something nice and presumably this IS the special dinner Annabeth was thinking Percy "promised" her and what she expected him to do instead.
I presume this was the dinner Percy had in mind if he did promise, but for Annabeth she wanted something grander and more important; this wasn't it.
Annabeth wanted to pressure Percy despite him doing something nice; she wanted to keep Percy on his toes, as it were. That's not healthy.
Percy gives a lot in this relationship. He feels obligated to and as we see her, Annabeth expects a lot out of this relationship. A month anniversary is materialistic as hell. Annabeth is also not expected to do anything similar. I would understand Percy's anxiety even further if Annabeth had done something similarly nice, but that isn't the case here.
More often than not, Percy is expected to GIVE and Annabeth often TAKES in the relationship.
As someone who works on celebrating special occasions, this feels petty and ridiculous to expect from a partner. But it's also telling how the picnic dinner was not enough for Annabeth as well since Percy did still do something on their anniversary, even if unintentionally on the anniversary itself. It might not ever be enough for something so "simple".
We know from the series a lot of Percabeth moments are focused on grand and impressive feats. They had their first kiss in a volcano. Annabeth is his mortal tie. They both turned down immortality for each other(they hadn't) and they fell through in Tartarus and walked out together. Etc, Etc.
In many ways they have done a lot together, but it doesn't have the emotional weight it deserves. Percy and Annabeth frankly don't have the chemistry or a real emotional connection as people. Part of that, I think, is due to Riordan clearly trying to push them as a couple before them being friends, and Annabeth's character in particular suffered from this. Stranged from the Red String as it were.
This is meant to be a sweet and domestic moment, and it isn't even a bad idea for a date but it isn't enough. Annabeth had widely different expectations, which can also be a microcosm of how they have completely different views for the future and ideas on how that will turn out. Percy didn't believe a month anniversary was really that important or significant and honestly. He's right. It's not. But Annabeth is not satisfied with a mere picnic for a special dinner and talks about it being more like the year anniversary than a single month.
This is arguably one of their better stories together, too where we see good teamwork and some nice moments between them compared to others. One day I will get into the Bronze Dragon. But for me the focus on the dinner overshadows everything and that is a frequent problem with Percabeth, where there are so much negativity in the relationship I feel gobsmacked whenever I'm expected to clap like a seal whenever they do something positive.
It speaks to me how Percabeth don't really have a lot in common apart from being with each other, fighting threats, or just knowing each other for years.
Percy doesn't appear all that interested in architecture, and Annabeth isn't much into sea life or skateboarding. While Percy had few common threads with Rachel in BOTL which he acknowledged, they both have mutual interests in the environment and peace with each other, which we don't really get with Percabeth. Percabeth feels so performative and stale in comparison that I still struggle to even read them as friends, let alone lovers. Particularly as Annabeth doesn't really respect Percy all that much.
Percabeth desperately needed more time to develop, getting together on the same time a lot of their peers died and the pressure from Camp I don't believe helped later down the line.
Like this comes across as sweet and it is, after all, it's them getting together and then getting chucked in the water. It's a great and grand way to get together for the Finale, YAY!!!!. But it has way too many unresolved issues that we only see blossom even further in HOO with how rushed it was. I find it esoteric. The Curse and by extension, Percy's choice to turn down immortality, feeding into it. Grand reasons to get together but fragile on examination as you wonder what really connects them together and I refuse to see them as this cute and perfect couple, which is the gold standard when they are ironically quite basic.
It makes sense why Percy compares their relationship to a "glass sculpture" and how he really doesn't know Annabeth nor does she in return about Percy. A glass sculpture is something that is so fragile and can break with a good push. It is destined to crash and break. In contrast to Annabeth's grand ideas of making something that will last for thousands of years. (Annabeth also has a connection to glass in her architecture, which I will not get into today but trust me it is there and it is haunting me)
Percy has so much love for Annabeth and treats her with utmost respect in his narration, but that is not really shared to the same degree. It feels so jarring reading their perspectives and how idealised Percy pictures Annabeth in his head, like him remembering her in SON, versus how she acts towards him in MOA
Percabeth is built on grand and lofty moments from the first book which is highlighted with the forced one-sided rivalry all the way to the present to justify them being together. Rather than having something more genuine and real connecting them together.
Annabeth's expecting something more from Percy for their month anniversary is, I feel, emblematic of everything I despise about it.
The fact that Annabeth forgot proves it wasn't about the dinner but control. It was making Percy uncomfortable over "forgetting" despite him doing something nice for her anyway, and that was presumably what he originally had planned for her anyway. It was keeping him on his toes. It's small but very present.
The only reason she isn't mad is that she did get the dinner in the end, and presumably Annabeth knew full well Percy "forgot" but she kept pressuring him anyway. But the fact that she tells Percy to start planning for their second month anniversary...
I don't find that sweet, funny or the one bit pleasant. It feels so materialistic and inconsiderate to Percy, who had a lovely date planned for her with some of her favourite treats and foods. And it didn't look like she cared for that one bit.
That more than anything kills me. The lack of appreciation. And that killed any hopes of their relationship going forward for me.
In fact, she urges Percy to do more. Annabeth doesn't say she will try anything special herself for Percy. No, it's on Percy to pick up the bill here. As I said, Percy is the giver, and Annabeth is the taker in this relationship and that fact is constant.
This story made me read the series completely differently and this is more than a dinner. All Percy can think about is "surviving" a month as Annabeth's boyfriend and hopefully her seeing a future with him, which is quite bleak.
More than anything to me, it just feels tragic reading Percy's attempts to do something nice for his girlfriend being brushed off or discarded like this. Annabeth has a commanding personality, and she promised she would never make things easy for Percy. In that she's right.
This story proves to me, Annabeth will never be satisfied with Percy's attempts and Percy will never feel good enough in this relationship to feel content and genuinely happy in a way that doesn't feel like he's forcing himself to be.
But it did open my eyes and made me consider so much more about why Rick might write a certain way, what he might have been considering when writing Percabeth himself and the likely future they will have in a peacetime without the same worries of a war on the horizon. Cause I can't see it work.
you know it is interesting, for all that the sea doesn't like to be restrained, and percy is impertinent, he has a talent for connecting with the gods and spirits. he is usually quite polite, for all that he's represented as wildly rude by the fandom.
he uses respectful terms with the gods who care about that kind of thing: lord/uncle hades, lord zeus, even though he greeted his father first. he's more careless with hermes, but in a friendly, empathetic way. he's rude to ares but ares finds it funny. he made friends with apollo, and then impressed artemis, which probably made an even better impression on apollo. he followed through on his commitments to hades, both in the first book and after he was offered immortality, which made up for the whole beating the brakes off him after getting the achilles' curse. he trusted hestia with hope, which impressed and touched her. not sure about hephaestus, but he did fulfill a quest for him and he seemed to have a good impression of him. he's generally polite to hera i believe and carried her across the river in SoN, but i think he may have gotten mad at her after? not sure but i don't think he was crazy rude or anything. athena never liked him but he stayed polite, and i dont think he really interacted with demeter. he did a quest for persephone and got mad at her but she accepted her wrongdoing graceully i believe. dionysus and he have a semi-fond, semi-bitter relationship where they pretend they don't like each other i think by the end of the second series.
his father of course loves him and percy is polite to him, and poseidon has high enough regard for him to hear him out on a plan to defeat typhon, which he was right about, and that plan was enacted. and he's very kind to minor spirits, who are used to bad treatment from the gods because they have the power. like when the river nymph was scared he would use her water to clean the stables and he saw that and felt for her and chose to find another way even though he literally had no clue if that would even be possible.
and he got the minor gods cabins at the camp in lieu of immortality. which btw he did consider, but he didn't turn it down for annabeth. he turned it down to get leverage to help ALL his fellow demigods who suffered at camp halfblood, and the minor gods and hades who were disrespected.
I wish more Percabeth fans would acknowledge the fact that Annabeth attempted to murder Percy.
Just because Percy is laughing, it doesn't make it ok.
And also if Annabeth hitting Percy is ok because they are combat partners and it's a sign of affection, why aren't there Percabeth fics where Percy is the one hitting Annabeth and judo flipping her? We all know the answer to that.
I keep thinking that the only reason Percy survived the Judo Flip is because he didn't have the Curse of Achilles anymore.
He was flipped onto Gravel, on his back. A pointy stone in the exact wrong place would have it his Mortal Point and killed him. And Annabeth would have been to blame.
That would have started a war between the Greek and Roman demigods. Likely the Romans would have arrested and then executed Annabeth, Piper and Leo, possibly Jason. They would have definitely killed Hedge then taken the ARGO II and used it to attack CHB for killing their Preator.
The Giants likely would have succeeded in toppling Olympus with the demigods focused on killing each other, and then its just a matter of grabbing a male and female demigod to sacrifice and wake Gaia up.
Like, obviously, this is all the worst case "everything goes wrong" scenario. But the Romans go after CHB for Leo's possession-attack on CJ. They'd do the same if not worse for the murder of their preator.
Bingo.
Percy lost the curse, and that's why he's still here. If he had it, he's six feet under, and Annabeth would have a body on her hands. I even believe that's why she aimed there. Killing him? No, but what will cause the most pain? That's what's on her mind.
It's not only wrong and abusive, but it's also just a stupid decision. It's just a ripple effect of consequences.
Judo flip is a terrible thing that shouldn't have happened. The show will probably take it out. I hope so at least.
So funny to me (and by funny I mean it makes me mad with rage) that it wasn't enough for Rick to make Rachel the oracle and make so she's unable to have a relationships with Percy; he also had to make sure that she would be going to an all girls school and wouldn't be school mates with him any longer.
And then, he also made sure they wouldn't be close friends in the future. Bc you know. She was once upon a time one of his love interests. And god forbid there's any doubt regarding Percy's choice to be with Annabeth. God forbid this girl who was once important in his life continues to be a close friend after he gets with Annabeth. God forbid he even speaks of her in front of his girlfriend (who is also her friend!) without hesitance.
Btw he did the same thing with Nico, in the sense that he used to have a deeply important relationship with Percy in the first saga, but the moment Rick decided Nico used to have a crush on Percy (and I can assure you, he didn't have this in mind in the first saga) suddenly they couldn't be close anymore. God forbid Nico's process of falling out of love with Percy doesn't involve him diminishing Percy in any way in his head. God forbid Percy is someone Nico confides in, trusts deeply and who is a huge part of his support system.
Rick's unchecked fear of fans merely considering the idea of a ship other than the one he chose has ruined the writing of some amazing platonic friendships and I'll never forgive him for this
PJO Au where everything is the same except Percy grew up watching atla and lok, so when he gets to camp and finds out he has water powers he basically goes—
"Fuck it, let's see if it works irl"
And it works, it works terrifyingly well. So well in fact that everyone is side eyeing Poseidon thinking he was an active father because "There's no fucking way he didn't train this boy look at him!"
Percy:
Monster: Ha! There ain't water here Jackson!
Percy: ...Wait...Annabeth, isn't the land also a part of my dad's domain?
Annabeth: Yeah?
Percy: ...OH MY GOD! I'M THE FUCKING AVATAR!
Monster: What—?
Annabeth: ...ohshit—
Percy:
•••••
Nico: Watcha doing?
Percy: Tryna bend metal, I think I've almost got it...You'd probably have an easier time with it.
Nico: Why?
Percy: Metals are in Hades domain right?
Nico: Yeah...Huh...
•••Some Time Later•••
Enemy: Might as well give it up death boy! Not even Percy Jackson can do his cartoon bullshit on metal!
Nico: ...
Nico:
I find it soooo interesting how percy was put in a position and expected to take the responsibilities that came with it yet given none of the respect that should. and simultaneously if he ever tried to step up and take those responsibilities he was treated as an attention seeker.
I have a lot of criticisms for the writing in Heroes of Olympus, but I will forever be grateful that that book series gave me the scenes where Percy interacts with the roman senate in son of Neptune.
I adore these scenes on so many different levels.
There are two senate scenes in son of Neptune, and I am obsessed with both of them, partly because they really highlight some of my favourite aspects of Percy’s characters: His intelligence, his social awareness, his leadership abilities and his ability to easily understand the emotions of others.
A thing for @breakfastatmiles' dtyis challenge on instagram :)
Been a while since I drew the world's most favourite boy (like. almost a year ago???? uh woops) I wanted to draw something for Percy's birthday but alas I had no idea what to draw :'') consider this late Percy Jackson b'day art
Variants under the cut