Ukagaka ghosts available to download and use as chat characters in Microsoft Comic Chat
Alice
Brynhild
Kikka
Mayura
Seriko

seen from Japan
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seen from Malaysia
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seen from Canada
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seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Japan
Ukagaka ghosts available to download and use as chat characters in Microsoft Comic Chat
Alice
Brynhild
Kikka
Mayura
Seriko
Why is this so funny
giving love to Kratos☝️
my fgo fanart from 2020!!
Who's Hotter? FGO’s White-Haired Hotties: Knight Class Edition
Who's Hotter?
Altera
Bedivere
Brynhild
EMIYA/Archer
Karna
Lakshmibai
Melusine
Nagao Kagetora
Siegfried
Tomoe Gozen
@xioproceed I don't think I need to explain that SigBryn is a very unusual couple. Both sides of the pair love each other much more than they love themselves, and it's textually explicit that their decision to remain alive for as long as they did was for the other's sake. They're incredibly passionate about each other, but their intensity expresses itself in excessively bloody ways. They're A-grade freaks. It's a really funny dynamic out of context but as always, context matters a lot.
SigBryn is primarily a part of Gotterdamerung, and Gotterdamerung is very laser-focused on its purpose of being a story about Ophelia's inability to tell the difference between love and emotional abuse. Sakurai makes the choice of presenting this cartoonishly violent relationship there… as the story's prime example of healthy love. Neither Brynhild nor Sigurd can individually be called a healthy person, and their love language is murder attempts, but their unusual love is reciprocal, well-communicated, and fully consented. The violence makes their unfailingly positive portrayal very unintuitive, but this unintuitiveness is exactly what makes it works, especially when Ophelia's confusion is the focus of the story. Anything more straightforward would be a less effective answer. It's not that simple, and making it any simpler only makes Ophelia look worse.
I think Sakurai just crafted the perfect example for the point she was trying to make. I genuinely don't believe a different could have been more effective than them.
your post about historical variants of the sleeping beauty myth got me thinking and doing some research, specifically about the brynhild version. and i got to thinking, is that the reason why the disney version has the prince fighting a dragon and the forest of thorns awash in dragonfire? because they were drawing inspiration from how, in the nibelungenlied, sigurd slew a dragon shortly before he found brynhild's castle, and how the castle itself is surrounded by a ring of fire?
i always wondered why the most popular written versions of the sleeping beauty story, namely perceforest, sun, moon, and talia, and the sleeping beauty in the wood had no dragons whatsoever, and it wasn't until your post about brynhild that something clicked for me. i guess i wonder if that was the same for the disney writers back in the 50s
I had never thought of that before, but I think you're right!
And Perceforest has the princess and her lover already acquainted and in love before she falls alseep.
The Disney version has more in common with the earlier versions of the tale than we would expect it to!