Romantic thiefshipping ideas: Bakura helping Malik die before his flesh container begins to age and decay, shattering his illusions of godhood forever
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from South Korea
seen from China
seen from Spain

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Sweden

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Russia
seen from China
Romantic thiefshipping ideas: Bakura helping Malik die before his flesh container begins to age and decay, shattering his illusions of godhood forever
The first thing I said to Aria when she posted the episode guide this morning was “You gave 96-97 a B rating? Who ARE you?”
I love those two more than anyone on earth (possible exception @ariasune) , but I wouldn't wish the thief tag on anyone
I love how everything in the thiefshipping tag is 1. "Oh everybody thiefships but /I/ don't" OR 2. "I don't thiefship unless it's abridged haha" Yeah. Love it. ........
what is life like without bakura for malik? good place to start yes/no? considering like, it was hard to Malik to really relate hardcore to anyone as much as Bakura. even if he probably hated it sometimes.
You have to answer what it was like before and what it was like after. But I think the “after” Bakura is a really shockingly honest, terrible time for Malik. Because he has to confront his own behavior and realize how much he missed, knowing what he knows now about what Bakura was in relation to himself.
Malik beats Yami Malik because he’s honest about being just a human being who fucked up really bad, instead of fancying himself a god-thing who is above moral and physical laws.
And when he thinks about Bakura later, I think he realizes that the secret to living forever is to do one thing well and forget the rest —- and part of him envies Bakura for this, and part of him doesn’t.
Yami Malik is a manifestation of proto-Malik, really. The Malik that had the willpower to stay alive and survive the ritual, the Malik that is the real wielder of the Rod. He’s the Malik that has a willpower that matches Bakura’s, who has the capacity to rise above mortality and attain the godhood that he believes will keep him safe and satisfy him.
Ultimately, Malik’s dominant personality overrides Yamima and accepts mortality, and responsibility for his actions in this life, instead.
Bakura was above human affairs and was completely comfortable in himself, but when it got down to it, Bakura is a god because he lives single mindedly and on will alone. There’s no deciding that he doesn’t want this anymore for Bakura. There’s no starting over somewhere else for Bakura. One part of Malik wanted this for himself, and the other part, which is the human part, didn’t. After Battle City, and definitely after Bakura’s death, Malik has to deal with that and live a mortal’s life.
To say that he regrets it wouldn’t be true. But to say that he still sometimes wants what Bakura had? Yes. To say that he knows Bakura is the only person in the world who would look down on him for his choices? Also true.
sonofasphinx said: Have you ever considered Malik being in the closet ? Like, half of his persona hr shaped himself after hypermasculine figures like James Dean. Bakura is comfortable with his himself, but Malik isn’t.
I have considered this and I think it’s a very valid interpretation of Malik’s aesthetic/moral attitude that comes with it. Malik’s entire persona is very topical and that lends itself to hypermasculine posturing really well.
Of course, I think he picks and chooses what to identify with as his taste changes, which is by the minute. Sometimes he’s a modern James Dean figure, and sometimes he is the embodiment of an immortal ancient Egyptian pharaoh ---- I think the central portion of his feeling about himself is that he’d like to be timeless, immovable, and ultimately, above all human affairs.
The problem is that he isn’t. Malik is still a teenage boy with a physical body and physical needs, and real world issues. I think his problems with homosexuality don’t stem so much from hypermasculinity itself, but from this odd sort of mental wishmaking to be above sex, to be above human emotions altogether. He’s a poser, essentially. A god-hipster.