when you’re toxic in darkmoor this is who you’re being mean to btw

seen from Ireland
seen from Sweden
seen from Canada
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Sweden
seen from Canada
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Uruguay

seen from Sweden
seen from Türkiye
seen from Morocco
seen from Türkiye

seen from Sweden

seen from United Kingdom
when you’re toxic in darkmoor this is who you’re being mean to btw
The polycula:
The diabolicule:
The thing I love the most about Just a to the moon series beach episode is the fact that... They never hid the truth about Neil.
If you read the comics, if you played the games, watched the trailer or simply looked at the menu screen... It was there. It was clearly there. During the game itself there were multiple elements that made it clear. The books at the bookshop. And then seeing Quincey and Lynri at the airport. You knew. Of course you knew.
If you played the To the moon mini episodes you had long known (I did play them when they first came out). And yet while playing the game you feel just like Eva. And you desperately try to think there are other possibilities, other realities, you try your best not to think that Neil is dead. You convince yourself there must be something else, something more. It's just a trick, they are playing you, Neil is alive and well.
But then you confront Neil and the truth comes crashing down on you. You've always known that, but when Eva says that Neil is dead is the moment you start coming to terms with it. You stop being denial, just like Eva is forced to.
And just like her, you hope you can live another moment with Neil despite knowing that it's not real.
And every now and then, you open the game again and just look at Neil and Eva on the Beach and wish they got their happy ending. And we all know Eva is doing that as well.
Our Last Resolve
Here we stand, our last trial before us, fate's final gambit set to unfold. We may live. We may not... But promise me one thing, my dear, my love, my beating heart... Remember that I love you, that I have loved you, and that I will love you. Carry this close, beloved, for whatever comfort it may bring, whatever safety or protection... One way or another, we'll find each other again.
Based on a screencap of my OC, Quincey, and Gale before the final section of BG3.
Do yall like my Tav's background characters (so far)
Good luck!!! Today's the big day for the both of us :) -QPM
You too Quince. I'll be armed with a trembling hand and my emotional support lancet.
See you on the front lines.
Some character sheets I use for reference and that voiceclaim video edhhdejhedhjdnjdjne
Ugh. There's a meme going around about how you could have a cowboy, Samurai, and pirates in Dracula and it would still be historically accurate.
The meme isn't the problem. The problem is directly under the meme was a bunch of joking comments about what would happen if Dracula faced off against an Old West Gunslinger.
Only problem is... He DID!
Quincey P. Morris, one of Lucy's suitors, was a Texas gunslinger. He even shot at a bat outside a window at one point in Dracula (possibly / likely Dracula in disguise). He said he did it because he doesn't like bats, that he lost a horse to a swarm of vampire bats from South America (not quite accurate to how actual vampire bats work but just go with it). And he died heroically when the heroes confronted Dracula. He used his Bowie knife against him along with Kukri blades. Mina and Jonathan Harker named their son after him.
Quincey was a fun character. He (in the novel) admitted to exaggerating his accent because Lucy liked it and when she chosen Lord Goldaming (Arthur Holmwood) among the three suits Quicney was like "Oh, well. No hard feelings. You guys want to go for drinks?" He was that laid back about it.
There IS a cowboy in Dracula! The 1992 Gary Oldman movie Bram Stoker's Dracula directed by Francis Ford Coppola is one of the few films to do the character justice. He also appears in Frank Wildhorn's Dracula the musical. Quincey even got a solo novel where he becomes a vampire written by P. N. Elrod.