This pretty much just sums up Sherlocks experiments
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from China

seen from Singapore

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
This pretty much just sums up Sherlocks experiments
Mystery Wrestling's Falls Count Somehow match is my MOTY
I'd pay $400 and one of my kidneys to watch these two play uno no mercy.
How To Write Villains Who ALWAYS Get Away With
This is a 3-part Series on Writing Different Types of Villains. In some series or stories, villains don't always die or defeated. There are villains who always get away with. They tend to be formidable, vicious, cunning, and most importantly invincible.
Here's how to write invincible Villains
Put them inside the system, not outside it A villain who breaks laws can be caught. A villain who writes policy, controls budgets, owns courts, or funds campaigns gets to call harm procedure.
Give them plausible deniability every time They never touch the knife. They outsource, delegate, and weaponize distance. If anything leaks, someone lower takes the fall while they keep their hands clean.
Make consequences land on the wrong people The hero reports them and a friend gets fired. The whistleblower loses housing. The witness disappears. The villain stays untouched, and everyone learns what speaking costs.
Let them win by being boring and patient No grand confrontation needed. Paperwork, delays, appeals, and waiting games grind people down. They outlast outrage, and time becomes their shield.
Stack the deck before the game starts They choose the judge, the venue, the committee, the rules of evidence. By the time the hero enters the room, the outcome is already leaning one way.
Turn every accusation into a trap The hero tells the truth and gets sued for defamation. They fight back and get labeled unstable. They stay silent and get called complicit. Any move feeds the villain.
Give them a public mask that keeps working They donate to charities. They speak in comforting phrases. They show up at funerals. The town keeps defending them because believing otherwise would cost everyone something.
Make them useful to powerful people The mayor needs their money. The guild needs their contracts. The palace needs their armies. When the villain is convenient, morality becomes negotiable.
Let them engineer failures for the hero Plans fall apart at the last step. Evidence goes missing. Doors close. It feels like bad luck until the pattern becomes clear and the hero realizes they are being managed.
Delay justice until it stops feeling real Even if the villain will fall later, do not rush it. Let the harm pile up. Let the hero doubt. Let the reader ache for payoff, and attach that ache to the villain.
˚✧₊⁎ happy matt in situations monday ⁎⁺˳✧༚