sweet

#batman#dc comics#bruce wayne#dc#dick grayson#batfamily#batfam#tim drake#dc fanart




seen from China

seen from Serbia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Israel
seen from Georgia

seen from Türkiye
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Japan

seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Jordan
seen from Netherlands
sweet
Got an IRL friend who's a bit of a vocaloid fangirl to play the Caligula Effect. She's loving it, and managed to guess who wrote the music for Sweet-P first try after only hearing her name.
Did you know the vocaloid producer OSTER project used to go by "futanari-P" (literally just in the sense of meaning gender ambiguous) in order to let listeners experience her works free of any conceptions of gender, before later admitting she was a woman, a lesbian at that?
Her current online handle is Fuwafuwa Cinnamon.
So Sweet-P, the fluffy fluffy dreamy cute Ostinato Musician was like, explicitly written with "we're gonna get OSTER project to write this one" in mind...
alt:
canon trans character icons!
if youre a weirdo i will fucking block you
hibari oozora, kaoru anesagi, mako ariga, nitori shuichi, ryou watari, sweet-p, toyosatomimi no miko, yamato, yuzu
Today’s J-fashion wearer is Sweet-P from The Caligula Effect! She wears yume kawaii!
Grand Guignol Boss Rush
I think about Sweet-P a lot specifically for the angle they go with for her
Like I get why people prefer Gin and I think his story is equally important
But I think it's interesting to have a trans character and her problem isn't that she's coming to terms with her identity but the step afterwards and the idea of a "transition goal".
There's a specific type of girl that is Sweet-P's transition goal, and it's someone who is far away from where she's starting. It's an instagramable model of a girl for her preferred aesthetic.
And her story isn't that that's unobtainable to her. It's not that she couldn't achieve that look if she put in all the work.
But the recognition that doing that would make her miserable. That there would be a long period of time where she'd be miserable and potentially harm herself and realising that it's not worth that.
That she doesn't have to suffer and match some model to be happy.
It's opening her eyes to girls like her who still follow that aesthetic, but are happy in how they look already. Their problem isn't with their actual appearance, it's that the market doesn't cater to them.
That's something that can be tackled. That's something she can do something about without hurting herself.
Sweet-P's story is about rejecting the marketable idea of how a girl should look and finding what makes her happy. Doing the things that make her happy. Not forcing herself to be miserable just because she thinks that's the only way to live.
And I think that's really important and a really interesting twist when talking about body image.
happy birthday sweet-p my beloved
Sweet-P from Caligula Effect.