Homos
Kurukshetra (2025) | Netflix
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Homos
Kurukshetra (2025) | Netflix
As someone heavy into Warhammer 40k and often posting about myth and legend, I have to inform both the 40k fandom and the mythology fandom that they are sleeping on Mukesh Singh's Mahabharata illustrations depicting the Kurukshetra War, from Grant Morrison's "18 Days" graphic novel.
Truly, romance in the Mahabharat peaked here. Get you a man who will wash your hair with the blood of your molester. Every other couple can go home, Bheem and Draupadi win here
I think we can all agree that Gandhar Raj, Shakuni, was the smartest, the wisest, the most cunning and perhaps the only one in the Mahabharata who consistently used his brain. While everyone else was drowning in ego, vows, pride, or blind loyalty, he was thinking ten steps ahead.
The only person he never managed to outwit was Vasudev Krishna, and that makes sense. You can’t outplay the Almighty. If anything, I’ve always felt Krishna saw him as the only real intellectual threat in the room and admired him for it. The only opponent worth strategising against.
Because let’s be honest, Shakuni shaped everything. He nudged Duryodhana’s insecurities, exploited Dhritarashtra’s blindness (in every sense), manipulated situations, and practically orchestrated the fall of an entire dynasty. He understood people. He understood weakness. He understood timing.
Bhishma had principles but no flexibility. Drona had skill but no moral courage. Vidura had wisdom but no power. They all had moments where you just want to shake them and say, “use your damn brain dude!”
But Shakuni? He was always thinking. His only flaw wasn’t intelligence; it was intent. He was bitter. Vengeful. Self-serving. He didn’t just want to win; he wanted destruction. And that’s what ultimately makes him tragic than admirable.
Krishna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra
"I watched Kurukshetra (Netflix) for the plot"
The "plot":
@irantaboutkanha @i-like-to-eat-cotton @krishna-vallabhaa @bigsimp69 @merevasudevmeremadhav @neelabharkavi
It's Patroclus's death all over again when you reach the 17th day of Kurukshetra war
"There's no story without you."