Lhong for @qinnyanimation DTIYS BECAUSE ARTBLOCK CANT HOLD ME BACK FOREVER.
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Lhong for @qinnyanimation DTIYS BECAUSE ARTBLOCK CANT HOLD ME BACK FOREVER.
Un filtered ver :3
TharnType: Why Lhong Isn’t Dubcon, and Why He Isn’t Redeemable
The Difference Between Dubcon and What Lhong Did
While writing these reviews for TharnType, I kept stewing over Lhong. I need to express my feelings on him and him alone, and why he is different from someone like Kinn in KinnPorsche.
Some people look at Lhong and say, “But he loved Tharn. Doesn’t that mean something?” No. We need to be very clear here: this isn’t morally gray dubcon like we see in KinnPorsche or Love in the Air, where fans can argue about interpretation, fantasy, or consent blurred by power dynamics. Those stories leave space for debate because they play with the idea of control in a fictional, stylized way.
1. What dubcon actually is. In BLs like KinnPorsche or Love in the Air, we sometimes get dubcon (dubious consent) scenes. These are messy, morally gray moments where power, desire, and consent blur. They’re written to be provocative, and because it’s fiction, fans can interpret them in different ways. Some people love it, some hate it, and some read it as consensual after the fact. The point is, dubcon lives in the fantasy realm, where debate is part of the appeal.
2. Why people sometimes excuse dubcon. Because dubcon is staged inside a stylized, fictional play, it can be interpreted as roleplay or as a character arc where dangerous desire eventually turns into trust or love. That doesn’t mean everyone has to like it, but it does mean it exists in a gray zone where multiple readings are possible.
3. Why that doesn’t apply to Lhong. Lhong didn’t blur the line. He erased it. He deliberately arranged for Tar to be sexually assaulted, not just once, but as a system of ongoing abuse. Then he kept Tar trapped for over a year through blackmail. That’s not “dubious consent”; it’s no consent. It’s not fantasy; it’s premeditated violence.
4. Why “love” doesn’t redeem him. Love that destroys another person’s body, safety, and autonomy isn’t love at all. It’s violence dressed up as devotion. And violence doesn’t get to be redeemed.
5. This isn’t about censorship. I don’t think TharnType should be censored, and I don’t think people should be told what they can or can’t enjoy. I’ve said it before: I don’t need you to censor me. We the people can do that just fine on our own. If you love morally gray villains or want to explore stories about sexual violence, that’s your choice. Fiction gives us room for that.
But choice requires clarity. And the clear truth here is that Lhong is not a misunderstood romantic. He’s a perpetrator. You can like a villain and still call them what they are: a villain. For me, as a survivor, I can’t extend sympathy to someone who orchestrated and sustained sexual assault. And even if others can enjoy him as a character, that enjoyment can’t rewrite what he did.
Lhong by @qinnyanimation 👍👍👍👍👍
Most Unhinged - Loser's Bracket Round 4: Lhong (Tharntype: The Series) vs Ruan Lan Zhu (The Spirealm)
[Submitted Reasons Under Cut]
Who is the most unhinged?
Lhong (Tharntype: The Series)
Ruan Lan Zhu (The Spirealm)
[See Results]
30 Day BL Challenge- Day 8: Best Baddie
I really should mention I thought I have seen a lot of BL's turns out I haven't. In my defense I don't always have the time. Anyways you may or may not agree with me on this baddie being the best but hear me out.
My favorite baddie is currently Lhong from Tharntype. Hear me out, please 🥺. First off Kaownah killed this role, I hated the character he played. (Not as much as the woman who killed Selena bit he's definitely up there.) Anyways, I mean if you saw this plot twist coming, good on you. I did not see this coming, I was literally watching this during quarantine and once it was revealed he was the villain I lost it! This was the last episode I saw before going to bed and I went to bed with a knot in my neck from the stress this episode caused me. Anyways, this man worked so hard to try and get Tharn but in the end he failed, bad and only caused himself harm and Tharn. He's my favorite because he was so blind with love he wanted to do anything to get with Tharn, and I mean anything! Tar baby I am sorry for what this man did to you. I also understand why he did what he did but I won't feel any sympathy for him. Anyways I still hate him with a passion, but in my opinion he worked the hardest and wasn't very obvious about it. I think Type just has some keen senses. Like Lhong got things done, unlike other baddie's that I have seen in other BL's. Still not justifying what he did was okay just saying he put in the work.
𝙆𝙖𝙤𝙬𝙣𝙖𝙝 𝙆𝙞𝙩𝙩𝙞𝙥𝙖𝙩 — 𝘭𝘢𝘺𝘰𝘶𝘵
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* headers aren't mine *
icons kaownah! 🔭
› ♥︎ or ↻ if u save
It wasn't short, it was perfect. This episode was perfect. It showed us everything that we needed to know but at the same time it was done in a way that doesn't make you feel sorry for Lhong because whatever happened in his life doesn't justify what he did. They wanted us to understand Lhong's personality better from how alone he was since he was a kid to finally find someone who's the light in his dark and lonely world, Tharn.
He’s completely alone. No one’s there for him, no one cares. No one cared about him even when he was just a child. He lived his life completely alone.
Then Tharn shows up, tells him that he’s not alone anymore and that he’ll always be there for him. This is the turning point in his life, he found someone that made the promise of never leaving him.
The episode is also full of flashbacks of Lhong’s happy memories:
memories that show us an happy person, but it’s just toxic happiness. It’s not the happiness that you feel because you’re good with yourself, it’s the happiness that it’s given to you by someone else. So, if this someone leaves you, everything in your world crumbles.
Lhong’s obsession can be explained in just one sentence: fear of being left alone. This fear is going to make him do anything he can, even the worst things, just to be sure that no one can steal the only person he’s ever had.
This episode explained his behaviour really well, now we can understand him but we can’t forgive him and this exactly what the director wanted. Also, a big round of applause to Kaownah’s acting skills ‘cause he nailed it. Everything was on point and portrayed perfectly. Never disappoints.