Don't know my pronouns, don't know what I'm doing most of the time
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I've only been on bluesky for an hour...
This Fandom bro...
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Did you guys ever notice the weird reception Ghostfuckers got?
I've noticed a lot of people hail Ghostfuckers as one of the BEST episodes to ever come out of Helluva Boss. At the very least, a lot of people left that episode thinking it was a great episode.
At the same time,
I've seen people hate this episode so much that they've either quit the show entirely, or consider it noncanon because it didn't fit their beliefs. I've actually seen people say that this episode made Unhappy Campers look like a fucking masterpiece in comparison.
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And it got me thinking...
I think the reason why Ghostfuckers seems to get this outlandish reception has to do with the fact that some people find it hard to believe that there was more to Blitzø as a character than just "asshole".
Some parts of the Fandom left Apology Tour thinking that Blitzø was this monster that hurt people left and right, and didn't give a shit about anyone but himself. He was remorseless, he was a monster, he was a villain.
But then Ghostfuckers did the opposite, it challenged that notion, it gave a new perspective. A positive one at that, that the man that was just painted as an "irredeemable monster" and "ultimate asshole" in Apology Tour was actually capable of doing something good. Not just good, something amazing.
That this asshole actually had the power to inspire others to be the very best version of themselves. That this "irredeemable villain" could change someone's life for the better, that everything they have and hold dear, is all thanks to him. That this motherfucker actually had feelings beyond just his facade. That perhaps, maybe, they were actually mischaracterizing him this whole time.
I think it has to do with the fact that some people refuse to see Blitzø’s character and Helluva Boss as a whole in shades of gray. Everything has to be black and white, everything has to be good or evil.
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