Everyone talks about how Irredeemable is about evil superman and nobody talks about how the protagonist of the comic who stands opposite him is a thinly veiled pastiche of the 10th Doctor
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Everyone talks about how Irredeemable is about evil superman and nobody talks about how the protagonist of the comic who stands opposite him is a thinly veiled pastiche of the 10th Doctor
swallowed up by the guilt of it all
y e s ~🎃
What's your favourite kind of tea, and your preferred tea snack to go along with it?
Black peach boba tea with passionfruit popping boba, ideally with extra-mushroom pizza or deep-fried crab and avocado! Oooooh or spicy crab sushi with the orange eggs on top. OR PIEROGI. Or grilled cheese. Ooh or seafood chowder. Or my mom's coconut-chicken soup. OR MUSHROOM LO MEIN AND SPRING ROLLS. Or calamari. Or or or or
i hope they die
Nobody should ever forget that the Sterek fandom Teen Wolf fandom was batshit insane and evil
Got commissioned to draw the supposed aftermath of my previous Hellaverse comic. Lucifer really left his mark on Blitzo but at least he didn’t kill him ⭕️
I was looking up stuff about Homelander and, one thing leading to another, I almost choked on my water and had a fit. Anyway. I survived, moved on with my life, and that's when I came across Plutonian. And what an absurdly good character. There's something about him that I find far more interesting than the simple idea of the “corrupt superman.” He doesn't just rely on cruelty or excessive power: what's unsettling about Plutonian is the way he embodies the collapse of a perfect image. He's not scary only because of what he can do, but because of what he represents when someone built to be a symbol, hope, and an almost sacred figure breaks from within. He has a very particular presence: elegant, devastating, almost tragic. He's not just a dark character; he's a character who seems written from disillusionment, from fragility turned into a threat. And I think that's precisely why he's so fascinating. Because he doesn't feel empty, or flat, or simply cruel for shock value. He feels like a long, bitter, brilliantly uncomfortable fall to witness. The more I read about him, the more I asked myself the same question: why doesn't he have the popularity he deserves? I really don't get it. He has design, concept, symbolism, narrative weight, and a presence that lingers in your head long after. He's one of those characters who work not only because of what they do, but because of everything they suggest. Anyway, I hope to write about him someday.