#1st world
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soapdispensersalesman · 11 months ago
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dumbledorathexplora · 1 year ago
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🥺🥺🥺🥺
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rrr-mmmm · 4 months ago
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wombpala · 4 months ago
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yeah to me it feels like the popular idea that John was homophobic/beat his kid(s)/taught them that having emotion makes you weak is just ppl choosing to interpret 'abusive father' in the shallowest most black-and-white movie villain way possible. when the ways he fucks them up in canon are so much more interesting and complicated.
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kittykatninja321 · 1 month ago
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RH: The Hill was not a Jason story but it was so nothing that it had no effect on his character and can be completely forgotten and disregarded. Robin Lives is not a Jason story but is has the audacity to bring back the classic classist “he’s always going to be doomed” take while making him the final villain. Can someone say real and true about him for once
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wasyago · 7 months ago
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not drawing for others. not drawing for myself either. playing video games. okay? yay
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deramonfaqs · 4 months ago
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On My Love
Happy Odaiba Memorial Day 🦋
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geo-bby · 10 months ago
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need more of this genre of picture
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notllorstel · 1 year ago
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binged the Trolls trilogy this week
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bey-life · 1 year ago
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comraderoscoes · 13 days ago
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GP2 superstar
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radaverse · 8 months ago
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When the angsty ahh aus meet
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+ smol comfort bestie swap
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heshemejoshi · 1 year ago
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back again
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cheekylittlepupp · 11 months ago
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every single time I start the game I tell myself that I'll just play, no screenshots, just play. And then this mfcker called Astarion is just.. there... looking beautiful every single time from every single angle and it DRIVES ME MAD
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ratzhatz14 · 3 months ago
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So, I had an ask from Funnbit (I think was their name?) which I planned to answer MULTIPLE DAMN TIMES
but I kept forgetting about it, or just ending up unhappy with the sketches... Until I finally decided to make AND finish Vee :D
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[yappa yappa yappa below ↓↓↓]
Now, the ask was to draw the main 5 as a twisted.... Which I cannot exactly do- BUT I can separately draw each one! +Had some redesign ideas bcuz of how little the mains felt like actual threats...
So sorrgy for not doing your ask exactly how you wanted.. but there's things some artists can and can't do
Anyways- if you like reading or something or idfk what you're doing, then I'll just spill my own ideas for this TVee
I thought about changing her debuff from "Slow" to "Targeted". Basically, when Vee chases a toon -- that toon will have their stealth DRASTICALLY decreased (so bad to the point where twisteds will detect them through walls), making it harder to escape her.... And more troublesome if there's other mains/rares on the floor.
The way Vee decreases stealth, is via her microphone. Due to missing her legs (Finn twinsss yaasssssss), Vee's tail/mic drags across the floor. And we all know what kinds of noises that can make.
(can't decide) Vee would fuck up your SkillCheck bar (making the red-line glitch around/shaking bar/etc), OR make it so you can't see your Inv, HP, stamina, or tapes.
Oh and- she can make every twisted hear EVERY SINGLE SkillCheck miss, no matter how far they are
I feel like this would make her somewhat of a bigger challenge to extractors or solo-runners
Thank you for reading this random rant about Veenus
For that, you get 1 more dumb idea I had with my friend;
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"I think Vee needs one of these"
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city-of-ladies · 4 months ago
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"According to Roman sources, emperors such as Nero and Domitian were fond of throwing lavish celebrations featuring female gladiators as novelty acts. The Roman historian Cassius Dio wrote of a days-long festival Nero held in honor of his mother in 59 where upper-class men and women “drove horses, killed wild beasts, and fought gladiators, some willingly and some sore against their will.” Roman historian and politician Tacitus referred to Nero’s female gladiators as feminarum, a term reserved for upper-class women, writing that “many ladies of distinction, however, and senators, disgraced themselves by appearing in the amphitheater.”
In 66, Nero sponsored more gladiatorial games featuring Ethiopian women, wrote Dio. And in 88, Emperor Domitian held games that again featured female gladiators, wrote biographer and historian Seutonius.
Sources also wrote of venatrices, female beast hunters, appearing in the Colosseum’s 100 days of opening games in 80. Venatrices took down stags, boars, and even lions with spears and bows, says Potter. Whereas female gladiators likely fought other women to first blood in single combat, explains Potter. Contrary to popular belief, fighting to the death was rare in gladiatorial games: Sponsors considered gladiators expensive, long-term investments.
Even though many Romans disapproved of female gladiators, people went wild for them in the arena. “We do know that some of the [female gladiator] fights took place in mid-afternoon, and that’s not the time for the novelty acts or the comedies or the executions,” says Philip Matyzask, an author, historian, and professor at the University of Cambridge. “That’s the time for the premier gladiator fights. So they were treated as serious professional bouts.”
The very existence of female gladiators complicates the understanding of Roman gender roles. Many believe Roman women were docile, modest, meek, and subservient to the men in their lives. But “Roman women wielded much more influence in society than many people out in the public think,” says Coleman. Roman women could be independent benefactors (funding the construction of buildings, temples, and social programs), own property, and divorce their husbands.
“I think we develop a better understanding of our own culture by close study of another,” says Potter, and studying female gladiators illuminates the “latent sexism in the way we view women,” both today and in antiquity.
Rome’s female gladiators are just one offshoot of women’s long, often-forgotten history as warriors. “Women have fought in nearly all conflicts and wars throughout history, from the war of Troy until today,” says Manas. Rome’s female gladiators were the women warriors of their time—redefining societal expectations of what women were and are capable of."
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