#EPS-95
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EPS 95 Pension: क्या हमें मिलेगी ज्यादा पेंशन? आई पॉजिटिव खबर, 78 लाख पेंशनर्स का मामला
ईपीएस-95 एनएसी ने न्यूनतम पेंशन को बढ़ाकर 7,500 रुपये प्रति माह करने की मांग की है, जिसमें महंगाई भत्ता और पेंशनभोगी के जीवनसाथी के लिए मुफ्त स्वास्थ्य सुविधाएं शामिल हों। पेंशनभोगियों के संगठन ईपीएस-95 राष्ट्रीय आंदोलन समिति (एनएसी) ने शुक्रवार को कहा कि सरकार ने अधिक पेंशन की मांग पर विचार करने का आश्वासन दिया है। ईपीएस-95 योजना के करीब 78 लाख पेंशनभोगी न्यूनतम मासिक पेंशन बढ़ाकर 7,500 रुपये…
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jayy
#jay ferin#drew her from my memory of how i think she looked like who needs refs#last time i was listening to riptide i binged it so hard i got nightmares and had to stop. the time before that too#but third times the charm! im on ep 95 so i should catch up this time yayay#jrwi riptide#jrwi#my art#just roll with it
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Liam O'Brien - Bells Hells Episode 95
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defending laudna online isn't enough i need a gun
#watching ep 95 and i can't deal w the yt comments#critical role#cr#crit role#laudna#marisha ray#critical role campaign 3#c3#bells hells#bell's hells#cr campaign 3
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the thing is, Laudna could have made a lot of good arguments on why she wanted to sword gone. I think people underestimate the trauma the sword caused her because the view Oryms suffering as greater.
That's the point of the scene, she is an addict according to Marisha and is definitely in the wrong. It was intentional on Marisha's part. Even if you don't think Orym was right in the altercation over the sword either, he didn't attack her first.
The fact is, Laudna is not in her right mind, she is intentionally cracking up. It's bad for her and her sanity for many reasons and she did the worst thing she could think of because it was the first thing she thought of. It was selfish and she was lying to herself because she can't use logic at the moment because she wasn't being logical. Regular Laudna wouldn't be acting this way, she would accept Orym's ownership of the sword even if it made her uncomfortable. That's the point, she is not regular Laudna. She needs help, she needs to talk to someone, she needs Delilah out of her head or she's going to completely fall
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to sum up my only negative feelings on orym: compared to the rest of them he feels super disjointed as a character because he gets amazing moments with the party when they're interacting as a whole. life-changing one-on ones! but every time he gets the idea of one thing just for him he walks away every time so nobody else will see it or only react to it after the fact. we're never gonna get a "shardgate into feywild retreat into fearne titan-ing" moment from him and i really think that sucks!
which okay, sure could be intentional since he preferred to be on the sidelines his entire life and is solidly Just There but that doesn't make it any less bizarre a character choice/bit to keep white-knuckle gripping onto over 100 episodes in. like he isn't a shitty character in the slightest nor do i think liam's roleplay is boring but COMPARATIVELY. comparatively i don't get why he's dedicating himself to being so low-key in solo moments when everyone else in the party is doing the roleplay equivalent of poppers with their characters when they get the same chance
#🍃#critical role#critrole#orym of the air ashari#and like his arc is supposed to be about realizing he's more than a faceless soldier and deserves a life outside fighting#because matt keeps pressuring to get him to go against his leaders time and time again#and he DOES! he's done it so often it's practically a running gag so the seeds are there#but asides those moments everyone's like Well He's Objectively Correct Because Ludinus Sucks#and he is but they don't push him on it because of that objective correctness#and it's like turned into a Prime God Argument thing when it really should be:#'hey man throwing your life away for people who would step on you without a second thought is Fucked actually'#ep 95-96 and 102 was his best eps. there i said it.
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The Score of 4 Minutes - Episode 8
Well. It happened folks. The show ended. I'm still in shock I got to watch this show, that I was lucky enough to get it. I'm so happy with it and now, it's time to close this chapter by sharing the music of Episode 8. (Posts about Episode 1, Episode 2, Episode 3, Episode 4, Episode 5, Episode 6 and Episode 7) - Learn Through Play by Dream House: When Tyme examines the woman at the beginning - Reaching the Sky by Epsilon Wave: When Tyme examines Great - A Monsters Feeling by Hampus Naeselius: Tyme's clock changes to 11:03 - Team Six by Hampus Naeselius: Tyme's last minute sequence - Hostages in Love by Hampus Naeselius: When Fasai and Korn end their agreement - Engage by Hampus Naeselius: When Korn finds the hidden stuff at the warehouse - Just Get It Done by Hampus Naeselius: When Korn finds out Tonkla killed Title on the news - Out of the Dark by Jon Björk: When Korn and Tonkla meet - Steep Dive by Hampus Naeselius: When Win gets ready to chase after Korn and Tonkla - Cluster One by Hampus Naeselius: When Korn and Tonkla run away after seeing the cops - The Slow Tick of Time by Alfie-Jay Winters: KornTonkla's end - Frail by Joyspring: Tyme and Great make merit together - Moving Clouds by Heath Cantu: When Great "gave" Korn the lighter - A Place to Call Home by Hampus Naeselius: When Great visits the exhibition - Sweet Baby (K-POP Version) by Collin Lim: When Great serves food - Whatever Rocks Your Boat by Hampus Naeselius: When Great meets with the politician - Time to Target by Hampus Naeselius: When the politician gets exposed and arrested / When Warit is found in critical condition - Byrðr by Hampus Naeselius: When Tyme sees Warit and almost kills him
#thank you to everyone who liked and reblogged all my posts about the score of 4 Minutes#it means a lot that you liked them#the music and the sound of this show captivated me and I wanted to share my passion with you all#I would have added “Why don't you stay?” here but we all recognized it the moment we heard it so#brilliant choice BOC#thank you BOC#4 minutes#ost#(btw loved how in this ep it was 95% Hampus Naeselius lmao)#(Banana Sound Studio @BOC: Hey how much of this guy's music should we use?)#(BOC: Yes)
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#ep 95#everything he does is for yoohyun#the current and the preregression ones#my s class hunters#han yoojin#han yoohyun#sctir#tsctir
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every time riot calls olivier ollie i gain +1 year on my life
#i am SO NORMAL ABOUT THEM#SO NORMAL#listened to ep 95 yesterday and i am SO FREAKING HAPPY#like so happy#i’m gonna draw it don’t even worry about it#olivier song#riot maidstone#maidstorm#banger ship name btw#hello from the hallowoods#hfth#doll’s jibber jabber
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Ok I’m rewatching last weeks episode bc I’m off work today and I’d just like to say. People have been TELLING LAUDNA TO GIVE DELILAH MORE POWER TO FIGHT. You can’t have lemonade without the sourness of lemons. You can’t just get Uber powerful Laudna without getting more Delilah and the consequences of that. I’m just saying.
#critical role#laudna#imogen temult#delilah briarwood#cr 3 ep 95#cr spoilers#man#I love Laudna so much#she’s so crunchy#I love her
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well now that i'm officially right in the midle of s7. i can honestly say my biggest issue with it is. (what happened to all the pussy in supernatural voice) what happened to ALL THE BANGERS ON 911.
#HALF OF THE SEASON IN AND THEY'VE HAD LIKE. ONE (1) ETTA JAMES. AND THAT'S IT#OH IT'S DIREEEEEE. DOES IT GET BETTER.#911#911 lb#jk there are other issues obviously. athena is at her peak Coppy mode probably. i'm hating the camerawork#everything feels rushed.#tommy has been retconned.#BUT buckeddie has been 95% GOOD so like. at least there's that. as least there's that.#WHY DID THE CRUISE STORYLINE LAST 3 EPS I WAS FALLING ASLEEP.......#i'm 3/4 a bottle of wine in. btw.wasn't gonna do this sober
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i feel like ten and martha's friendship is kind of doomed from the start because like. ten kind of needs a friend to be around him lest he go insane (even if he's in semi denial about it). and martha likes and admires him in return. and they both inherently trust and rely each other, because how could they not. but also ten is very much not in a great place at all. he just lost rose and refuses to talk about her with anyone. the guilt is eating him alive and he's trying so hard to ignore it and it's resulting in him becoming more and more reckless and self-sacrificing. and he (unintentionally) puts it all on martha. he trusts her to save him and he also trusts her to sacrifice him in the name of saving people. and at the same time every time he finds himself getting closer to or more vulnerable with her he stops and pushes her away (see: his guilt over rose). and that is so unfair. that is so much to put on one person, especially someone that is in a spot of mutual care and trust. like i wish martha had met ten when he was more stable/healthy/not haunted by his extremely fresh grief but she didn't, and i think they will save each other over and over until one of them comes apart at the seams. basically
#dr who#ten and martha#if my post ends up getting proved wrong or something with the later episodes ill rb this saying 'well i was a clown'#but like atp it's like they are toxic doomed friendship to me. and it's insane#ten does contain 95% of the insanities but also i think martha being a doctor-in-training and driven by helping and saving people#and here's a guy that simultaneously needs saving all the time but also refuses to be saved in the ways that matter.#is definitely contributing to the insanity.#idk. i'm crazy.#there are some very strong issues w how martha is written or treated by the narrative esp in th shakespeare ep#but i think at their core their dynamic is so crunchy . if doomed and set to explode#10 era
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Bells Hells - Episode 95
#critical role#liam o'brien#critical role spoilers#bells hells#critical role episode 95#marisha ray#taliesin jaffe#ashley johnson#robbie daymond#travis willingham#laura bailey#matthew mercer#cr ep 95
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One last thing and then I'll stop because I'm really tired.
I'm reading takes on the episode like "Laudna WANTED to feed the sword to Delilah"
I just think "want" is a very very VERY strong word.
Unless is meant as "Delilah manipulated her and made her believe it had to be done"
Laudna has many faults and did many wrong things up til now, but acting on her own will and being simply evil is not one of them.
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people need to stop acting like complex issues have simple solutions. The whole thing between Orym and Laudna is incredibly complex that no one is right about. Yes, despite her being my favorite character I think Laudna is more in the wrong than Orym. That doesn't make Orym in the right.
It's an issue that would have a better chance of being worked out if they talked to each other like they were friends who cared about each other instead of two caged animals looking to hurt something or someone. They're not thinking with their heads, their talking with their hearts, their deeply wounded and broken hearts that have been put through the ringer.
complicated issues need to be worked through, they need to fix Laudna's head and try to get Delilah out. This is a bad moment, but hopefully they can actually work to make something new. Because there is a limit to what trust exercises and craft nights can do when you're like them. Sometimes you need to break, to completely shatter so something new can be forged from the bits instead of trying to fix the breaks
#critical role#bells hells#critical role spoilers#cr 3 ep 95#laudna#orym of the air ashari#orym#critical role meta
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Hello! I hope I’m not bothering you. I just feel confused about what I keep missing in episode 63, and I’m wondering what characterization or moments of detail I’m missing out on about Orym purposely enabling Delilah’s revival, or letting it happen? I had totally misremembered and thought that Hunger of the Shadow killed Bor’dor and so Orym nodding was a “We need to do this” that had multiple interpretations and Consequences. I had always thought it was a really ill-timed “He needs to die” that happened before Laudna used Hunger to kill Bor’dor
but after rewatching the whole fight, I realized Hunger of the Shadow only knocked Bor’Dor unconscious. The failed death saves came from Prism’s punch and Wither and Bloom. And it turned out Orym’s nodding thing came after Hunger of the Shadow and Delilah’s heart started beating again and not before like I had thought, so now idk what it is that Orym did that lead to Delilah’s return? I keep rewatching the fight trying to figure it out but I’m not seeing it 😭 Liam on 4sd and Beacon discord said that after Orym clocked that Delilah was probably back he thought that Delilah would be helpful against the Vanguard (this aged well :’D), but Orym’s suspicion that Delilah returned happened as Laudna was killing Bor’Dor and got “30% scarier,” not before Laudna decision to kill Bor’Dor or Hunger of the Shadow. I’m trying just to figure out how he could have “let” the revival happen before the fact? Because it’s a common topic of discussion among critters but now idk what it’s referencing?
I guess an argument could be made that nobody stopped Laudna before she did hunger of the shadow, but again I don’t think anybody was thinking of Delilah? My personal interpretation was that on Laudna’s turn in initiative, the party simply saw Laudna attacking Bor’dor and didn’t discourage it because guy had just betrayed them and dealt 10d4 acid damage to everyone— and not because they saw any strategic benefit in Laudna attacking. When the purple eyes in the Form of Dread appeared, I had just thought that was a manifestation of Laudna’s hurt at being betrayed again and tying it to Delilah (but that’s just my interpretation). Taliesin definitely clocked that eye color, look at his face 😂 But I can’t see how the characters knew beforehand that Laudna was specifically intending to make a move that would revive Delilah? And that this was a move that was strategic to enable? And Orym didn’t even suspect Delilah until Bor’Dor’s death with wither and bloom.
Are the purple eyes why critters keep bringing up Orym? But then that has nothing to do with the Nod that is moreso getting brought up. And wouldn’t Ashton get equal mention before Ep95 aired because they both didn’t stop Laudna on her turn?
The timeline beats I’m getting are that it’s Laudna’s turn in initiative after she counterspells Bor’dor’s attempted polymorph. On her turn, she does Form of Dread wit the purple eyes then casts Hunger of the Shadow, dealing damage and knocking Bor’Dor unconscious. Then she feels Delilah reawaken within her through the heart beat.
It’s now Prism’s turn and she punches Bor’Dor, autocritting and taking off 2 death saves.
Laudna’s form has been darkening and at this point, the mourning veil appears over Laudna. Liam notes that Orym has been watching, silent. Ashton also sees all of this and drops their rage. When it’s Laudna’s choice whether to end Bor’dor, Orym nods. Laudna is barely present and is cycling through her own trauma and memories at the moment, then she makes her decision and uses Wither and Bloom to kill Bor’Dor. Familiar purple flame and green light that Ashton and Orym recognize manifests as flowers bloom and Bor’Dor form cracks and withers.
So Delilah had already been revived before Prism punched Bor’dor and Laudna dealt the last death save, so I guess I just feel confused about what is Orym’s connection to Laudna bringing back Delilah?
The nod was endorsement to kill Bor’Dor. At that point that’s what the conversation was about, whether or not Laudna was gonna kill him. Delilah had already been revived
Like yeah Orym saw some potential advantage with Delilah once he realized what had happened, but he didn’t seem to cause any of it? But it’s a point constantly brought up, so I’m feeling confused about how it happened.
Sorry this got long. I tend to ramble
hi anon, thank you for being respectful and curious in this message, instead of coming at my throat. i appreciate it more than you know! i will do my best to explain this perspective
in the time between laudna's resurrection and bor'dor's death, the presence of delilah was questionable at best. they had "sundered" her in laudna's mind palace whitestone, pike seemed to think delilah was no longer present, and delilah was completely quiet for that stretch of time. i think a lot of people were waiting for the other shoe to drop, but there was also the idea that maybe she really was gone, or at least significantly weakened.
chronologically, here's what happened during that fight. bor'dor reveals his true alliances and turns on the party. per liam's statements in 4SDx14, orym decides that bor'dor cannot be allowed to live, because of the danger that any ruby vanguard member poses to the general public and other innocent lives. laudna says this:
she casts hunger of the shadow. prism does a bit more damage. then, as bor'dor falls:
the "faint shimmer of a mourning veil" explicitly mirrors the pre-resurrection form of dread and definitively reflects delilah, suggesting that delilah's influence is visibly returning. then, liam says this:
("you just see this" is where he nods.) per liam's statements in 4SDx14, orym realizes that laudna has opened the door again for delilah to reemerge, but he also thinks, "yeah, we're gonna need that." (liam's words, not mine.)
laudna casts wither and bloom for the hdywtdt, with the following description:
please draw your attention to the statement that the world has broken her and that she was trying to keep this dormant until she couldn't anymore. she is barely there, she has lost herself. more on this later.
with this information, it's inaccurate to say that orym caused delilah to come back. she already came back, as we can see with the chronology above. i will admit that i didn't realize the nod came after the veil, and i think that's an important thing to clarify. i will also say that most of us never fucking said that he caused delilah to come back in the first place, but i digress
this is a total sidebar but i think there's also an important distinction to make between orym deciding bor'dor needs to die because he poses a danger to the civilians around him (again, per liam's statements in 4SDx14), vs. laudna deciding bor'dor needs to die because he betrayed her. one is calculated and intentional with an understanding of the big picture and its consequences. the other is deeply personal and impulsive and blind to the consequences. this could be a separate post but suffice to say i think that when you're approving of your friend killing someone, it matters why they are killing them, and it matters if their "why" is different from your "why" because it will affect them differently than it would've affected you after committing the act. because of this, it could be argued that letting laudna kill bor'dor negatively affected her psyche more than if the roles were switched and laudna let orym do it, because orym could see the bigger picture and laudna was simply coming from a place of pain. it was a huge character moment from orym, i think it's fascinating, and i don't think it was wrong from a storytelling perspective even if it could be argued either way from a morality perspective. so i'll just leave that there.
anyway, the reason this is all relevant, is because it is a reflection of what orym says in ep 95, which is "you're right. why do i need the help of some dark force?" intended to suggest that she shouldn't cast judgment upon him for using a dark weapon when she uses the dark magic given to her by delilah.
what many people have tried to bring up about this statement is the issue of choice and agency. orym picked up otohan's blade and decided it would be meaningful to him, and also empowering from a mechanical standpoint, to wield it. which is fine, for his character story! laudna might not like it, and fearne might not like it, but it's something he did, and it's interesting! but the sticking point is that such a level of intention and purpose is simply not present in laudna's story. it could be argued endlessly how much of every laudna decision is actually laudna vs. how much of it is delilah, but regardless of what you think, it is plainly true that, in the high stakes and game-changing choices, at least some part of it is always delilah.
and per marisha's description above, laudna was trying to keep that dormant within her for a long time. it wasn't until bor'dor that it was unleashed in full. and in that moment, delilah's process of overtaking laudna completely was kickstarted. that isn't to say that delilah would've never come back if bor'dor didn't die the way he did, but it is to say that it happened earlier than it otherwise would have, and it's been a slippery slope of dwindling agency and psychological power-hungry manipulation ever since then.
the point of the argument is that it doesn't feel fair when laudna says "how dare you use that dark blade," for orym to throw it back at her and say "the same way you dare to use delilah." because orym wanted to use the blade for its power no matter the cost, and orym thinks delilah is useful for those same reasons, so for him perhaps they can be equated. but when delilah came back in ep 63, laudna didn't want her to. it broke her and it happened in a moment of terrible pain and anguish after weeks of trying to keep her at bay, and she hasn't been able to stop it ever since. and she's been getting mixed messages from orym and everyone else the entire time about whether she would be more useful if she just gave in entirely. but nobody seems to like what she turns into when she gives in even a little bit. nobody seems to understand that they are gravely underestimating how corrupt and dangerous laudna will get if they let this go unchecked for the sake of gathering more power to take down ludinus.
at the end of the day we're just people who think laudna is an interesting character with a vastly complicated psyche that dictates why she made a choice like this, and we were pointing out something that orym said that felt unfair to those nuances. in response, people have been painting us out to be demonic and illiterate misogynists who are stealing away laudna's agency and blaming her entire warlock pact on orym who's just doing what's right. forget being unfair to laudna, that's unfair to the equally interesting arc that liam is creating with orym, of an ambiguously levelheaded, hypervigilant, war- and grief-driven soldier. we should all know by now that liam is not interested in making infallible characters, but you wouldn't know it based on the amount of backlash being thrown at us for pointing out that hey, maybe that one thing orym said was flawed.
anon, if you've made it this far, please continue to be kind and ask questions of others to understand their perspectives. i appreciate you.
#and the reason ashton hasn't been brought up is simply because ashton didn't play a huge role in the ep 95 talk dkfjsdf#sorry this is soooOOOOOO long#but i figured this was a good opportunity to just lay it all out there#be nice to people for crying out loud. we're all coming at this incredibly complex story from different angles#it's not meant to be taken apart in the same way by every person. that would make it boring and that would make it antithetical to cr.#anonymous#ask#answered#long post#critical role#cr3#cr spoilers#cr meta#*meta#cr fandom#cr negativity#laudna cr#orym cr#r: laudna x orym
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