#Murder Drones Analysis
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Okay so... I was doing a md rewatch before ep 7, and I noticed something in ep 4 that I NEVER noticed before.
In the scene where V covers up Uzi, when she sits down, I always thought she was frowning. Cuz like in ep 3 she's starting to realize that worker drones don't actually care about death anymore or smth like that.
BUT NO
SHE'S ACTUALLY SMILING IN THE SECOND IMAGE IM GONNA BE SICK
And after noticing that I started thinking back on her behavior with Uzi and realized how much she actually cares about her.
Look at her smile. She's starting to care about the workers smmmm Im crying
Okay now for Vuzi. In ep 4 V initially saw her as just a "purple thing", later on as Cyn. But probably N saying "what did I say about antagonizing her?" got her thinking. What if she was really antagonizing her? That's why she covered her with the teacher, and that's why she smiled.
Now, episode 5 doesn't have much about them. We know that V remembers stuff from her time as a worker, so we know that she got once possessed by Cyn. She would be the only drone ever to understand what Uzi is going through. (another reason why she protected her in ep 4).
This reflects in ep 6. When Alice cuts Uzi's finger she can be seen flinching.
Idk about you, but it's kinda strange for V, the most insane out of the trio, to flinch when someone's finger got cut off.
This further proves just how much V started to care about Uzi. Same when Alice and Beau died and she was trying to escape the Sentinels. She immediately rushed to save Uzi, even if she just witnessed her getting fully possessed for 5 good seconds by Cyn
She didn't have to save her. She could've ran away, leaving Uzi to be killed by the next sentinel that passed by. But she didn't. She brought her back to N and Tessa, holding her tightly
And of course.
When they saw the Doll trap.
V immediately went to protect Uzi, getting extremely worried too when she was about to use her solver
This shows just how V started to like Uzi. She initially saw her as a thread, another Cyn, a thing and a monster. But after the sky therapy she probably saw herself in Uzi. Someone who's always been alone, someone who the solver can control however it wants. A poor possessed worked, confused and scared.
Moving to her sacrifice. The very first time V called Uzi by name instead of dumb nicknames. Immediately before she was smiling after N said that they still needed her. But she didn't believe him fully. They could do well without her, she probably thought. She had done nothing but cause troubles with Uzi. She wanted to make it right
Giving her full trust to Uzi, giving her life to Uzi. She was literally half possessed by Cyn but V still decided to trust her. And then she smiled at her.
That smile, immediately after the "I trust you" meant a lot coming from V. That smile was to assure Uzi that she doesn't see her as an enemy anymore.
Okay rant is over because I'm tearing up.
I love Vuzi so much I love tragic yuri 😭
#murder drones#murder drones uzi#uzi doorman#murder drones v#serial designation v#vuzi#v x uzi#violetviolence#murder drones analysis#murder drones angst#tragic yuri
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Something that makes me even sadder about what happened to V is how she went from being hostile and threatening towards Uzi to becoming actually pretty protective over her in the last episode
It initially seems like a quick shift, but it actually makes a bit more sense when you know most of V’s hostility to Uzi was because of the Absolute Solver. V was scared and distrustful of Uzi because of it and the traumatic events that happened with Cyn at the mansion, so she wanted to get rid of her (and Doll too) since she knows the AS is dangerous
But I think what started to change V’s view was the Worker saving her alongside N from getting their minds digitally wiped, since technically Uzi could have just saved N, but she helped V too
Ironically, since it involves the AS, another factor I think was seeing Uzi later overexerting herself with her powers from fear of N getting hurt, and then seemingly stopping the Sentinels from getting to V despite being practically unconscious (at least that is what I think happened when watching the episode)
I think all of that played some role in V beginning to realize that yeah, despite the very real threat the Absolute Solver is, Uzi herself is genuine and is someone she can put trust in
Which makes the scene where she calls Uzi by her name for the first time and tells her she trusts her more sad and impactful 🥲
#murder drones#murder drones analysis#murder drones theory#serial designation v#md v#murder drones v#uzi doorman#md uzi#md uzi doorman#murder drones uzi#absolute solver#zi rambles#i’ve wanted those two to start getting along and I sort of got it but at what cost
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i've seen enough people crying over this uzi sacrifice scene in ep7 but i don't think enough people actually analyzes esp uzi and N's character (atleast from what i've seen??) and my god i need to rant because this scene the more i watch it the more it ABSOLUTELY destroys me (save me nuzi save me...)
messy rant incoming...
alright, quick recap of the characters so i can later explain my points better
pilot uzi had no one to rely on, treated as a freak by her community, neglected by her father and overall completely isolated with the world. She had no one but herself, that's why she never allows herself to show any vulnerabilities so people won't take advantage of her and literally dismisses her own feelings and coping mechanisms as "angsty hormonal teen feelings" and developed a inferiority complex of wanting to prove herself and be recognized. Meeting N was more than just a change of trajectory in her life, he helped her in so, SO many ways from making her realize that her feelings are validated and it's okay to lean on others when you need it the most, to be vulnerable- something that she desperately needed but was never provided- to helping her just.. overall improve herself and promise that he'll always be there when she needs him the most. N is so integral in uzi's life, all she needed was someone to understand her, and there he was.
meanwhile N is always treated as a worthless nobody by people around him which is very evident in the pilot with his interactions between J and V. He clearly has issues when it comes to his own self worth and completely robbed of autonomy. All he ever wanted was to be useful and seen by others, which leads to him going along with other's insane crazy ideas without questioning morals and rights or wrongs. Uzi was the one that helped him find a ground he can stand on and finally being able to defend himself and what he thinks is worth protecting, as well as being a genuine friend he can finally talk and bond with after being ignored for so long.
and back to the scene. The reason why this scene hurts so much for me is that uzi finally found someone so important to her that she's willing to sacrifice herself and thanked N for "everything" he's ever done. He gave her everything that she could possibly ask for, she was content. Uzi even used her solver powers to push N away to make sure he wasn't in danger or an attempt to save her. The fact that she even thanked N, making it sounds like her final words to him implies that she was okay with dying and giving up her own life just really says how much N meant to her. She couldn't have done all of this without meeting him, to be selfless and sacrifice yourself for someone you truly love.
for N he's probably absolutely devastated, especially after V's sacrifice the ep before. Both of his closest friends sacrificed also for the sake of saving him, he literally could not do anything but watch them disappear in front of him. He'd probably blame himself so much for failing to save them and the fact that he has self harm tendencies every time he makes a mistake... N is definitely VERY TRAUMATIZED from this and also needs time to heal as well.
overall im very normal about nuzi these 2 will be the death of me i love them so much. both of them meeting each other was the best thing that ever happened to them and watching them grow and develop is so 😭😭😭
have a good day thank you so much for reading this very messy rant and bare with my very limited vocabulary if you did... ;3
#this is an extremely messy rant...#stbc rambles#murder drones#murder drones analysis#nuzi#biscuitbites#n x uzi#serial designation n#uzi doorman#murder drones uzi#murder drones n#nuzi analysis#or more of a rant but whatever#this is supposed to be nuzi but its a bit more uzi centric ARGHH WHO CARES#ily uzi....
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The russian worker drones family; murder drone's greatest small scale tragedy.
As long as I can recall there has never been in my mind a story quite as painful and heartbreaking and yet quite as engaging as the tragedy of Doll, Yeva, and her husband, who's lack of a clear name doesn't detract from the impact of this story or the death of the other two.
The last time such an emotional impact was left in my brain was with Noximilliem Coxen the Watchmaker from Wakfu, who I will assuredly make a comparison post with Doll, as they both hit extremely similar themes and ideas while still having such different execution and story beats that it almost makes you question why would you even compare them in the first place.
Tragedy is deceptively hard to write right and make meaningful, as just crippling your characters won't do, because at that point it just becomes drama porn and as boring as a low effort pre-schoolers program. Seemingly unfeasible in a show such as Murder Drones; an horror/comedy/romance where an abused child repaired and made friends with a robot only for said robot to cause the destruction of her planet and... something else.
Buckle up cause these robots emotions might not even be considered real inside the fictional setting but our pain allows what would otherwise be a pretty standard horror scenario to transcend into the bane of my existence as we take a look at the small, inconsequential tale of the russian worker drones family.
Yeva
Starting off with Yeva as the oldest member of our family in terms of chronological relevance, we get our first peek into the way this story plays out due to Yeva being seemingly mute by choice or programming, which retroactively sets up the storytelling method used; Yeva doesn't speak a single word in this scene or the one that precedes it, but we still get a clear rendition of her character by her standoffish behaviour juxtaposed with her caring and nurturing nature, it's debatable whether or not her and Nori are sisters, but you wouldn't be blamed for thinking that judging by the way Yeva tends to Nori after the banishment of the solver, being chained up and experimented upon didn't stop her from staying positive in the midst of adversity and could theoretically be the reason why she was the only correctly patched drone in the facility.
During the V attack she sacrificed her own life in order to protect Doll. An act that, in the long run, ended up being whortless, but that cemented Yeva has an unyielding positive influence in a world stormed by negativity and death.
The father
We know jack s##t about this man but that won't stop us from analysing him. The most interesting things about him are his relationship with Yeva and the fact that the picture of V seen in episode 2 was made by him. He's, admittedly, a white canvas for head cannons, but thematically he keeps a recurring motif that this post will touch upon in his final entry:
Doll
And now, for the crown jewel of this family. The protagonist's dark reflection. Not many people can claim to have been messed up as hard as Doll was. Sure, death is still death, but with it comes a certain sense of finality and rest. Instead, by contrast Doll's death is so brutal and devastating because although it's something that she has been calling upon herself since she started to consume other drones for her goals, it's just so heartbreaking because she managed to achieve absolutely nothing despite being one step forward everyone else in the story; she never got better, never reademned herself, made their parents sacrifice worthless, died almost entirely off camera completely alone and scared, and as her last compensation act she managed to give Uzi a barely useful warning before having her probably still alive consciousness eaten by an eldritch atrocity. At the end of the day, she was deemed worthless by the main antagonist and quickly brushed aside.
And we go back to a certain reoccurring theme regarding this family: Yeva never speaks. Her husband is never given a name. Doll is literally a toy name. Their story plays out in the shadow of the main plot. Every single aspect regarding them paints their existence as worthless and inconsequential (classic eldritch horror), yet are given enough spotlight to leave an impact on us, to have their presence felt, and to give us the impression that, despite their bad luck, if they only took certain decisions in certain key moments, maybe they would have survived and received a much better ending than the one they got.
Want more?
#murder drones doll#murder drones yeva#murder drones doll's dad#murder drones ep 7#murder drones episode 7#murder drones spoilers#wakfu nox#wakfu#murder drones uzi#murder drones#murder drones analysis
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fun little thought i had that i don't know if anyone has brought up yet
we already know that there are HEAVY Christian themes in Murder Drones, and they've given up on subtlety in the trailer, but one scene that i haven't seen people talk about in regards to this is episode 4's falling scene
N and Uzi have angel and demon themes. their designs make this pretty clear. Uzi's tail can also kinda be seen as snake-like.
going off of this, N making the promise to stick together can be taken both as N falling for Uzi in the romantic sense (as the song name implies) but also as N falling for her in the sense that he's falling from Heaven/whatever the Solver's plans are (more than he already has) after being tempted by a demon/snake
in this case, the Solver can also be taken as a sort of God figure
idk i just really love how much symbolism the goofy toaster show has
#murder drones#murder drones analysis#md uzi#md n#md nuzi#i haven't been able to stop thinking about the symbolism since the trailer
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Murder Drones - Trauma and Healing
I was once of the opinion that Murder Drones never really had a theme or message. It was kind of just, watch the funny robots be funny.
But the more I've thought about it the more I've realized, Murder Drones does have a theme. And that theme?
Trauma, how it affects people, and how to heal from it.
In this essay I will go over five of the characters of the show, Uzi, N, V, Doll, and Tessa, and describe their traumas. How it affects their actions, and what they do to heal from them.
Uzi - Lonliness and Acceptance
Uzi grew up with no friends, classmates who either hated or ignored her, an emotionally negligent father, and a dead (*cough* in church *cough*) mother. Truth be told, she had no one. No one to talk to, no one who would listen to her, no one who cared about her.
She was alone and very vulnerable. However, she didn't like that. She didn't want people to see her as vulnerable, she didn't want people to see her as weak. So she developed her edgy, "not like other girls" persona to convince people that she wasn't dying inside. That she took all her pain in stride and was owning it.
However, her coping mechanism of creating her goth girl persona didn't help in the long term as it didn't combat her true problem. She was lonely, lonely and... just wanted someone who cared about her.
And one day, while going out to find the last piece of her railgun she needs to save the world and earn her dad's respect and stuff, she meets N. N, the bloodthirsty drone killer, who was willing to sit down and talk to her.
Sure he was blind and thought she was a fellow Murder Drone, but he didn't immediately push her away as emo. Sure he admittedly was used to much worse treatment from much worse people, and Uzi was probably a saint compared to them (which we'll touch on in his part).
But even afterwards, when he realized she was a Worker, and that he would get in massive trouble with J if he let her go, he willingly spared her life. Saw her father leave her to die, and took pity on her.
Where the two came to develop a connection and eventually, friendship.
Uzi had made her first friend.
N - Self Worth and Free Will
His whole life, N has been used and abused.
While we don't know much about his first life, his life before the Elliots, we can only assume he was still treated as a slave, as much as the rest of the Worker race is.
His life with Tessa and her family, while seemingly happy, he still lived with them as a servant. Tessa may have been a good owner, but she was still an owner. He, J, and V might have been good servants, but they were still servants.
His life as a Disassembly Drone was probably the worst. Not only did he have his entire body forcibly changed against his will, but he now was forced to take innocent lives as he relied on their bodies for sustenance. Not to mention he also had his brain swiss cheesed to hell and back, and didn't even know because well... can't remember things well when those memories are full of holes.
Not to mention, the people he was forced to serve under were awful to him. The most obvious one is J, who was him as a waste of materials and space. She literally wanted N dead, leaving a piece of paper that read "kill yourself" in a dog book that she knew N would read, as a Disassembly Drone telling N that if the company allowed it she would kill him herself, and literally stabbing him with a deadly virus after she saw he had dissented.
However the Solver, the Solver was worse. It killed him several times over, wiped his memories of his past deaths, turned him into a monster, and forced him to kill an unspeakable amount of humans and drones. It could clone him an infinite amount of times. If one clone learned too much or got too rebellious, there were always the next hundred. He was disposable, in episode 7, the solver literally said he had served his purpose. The worst part? There's no way of truly knowing what the Solver did to him or forced him to do. How many clones of N it tortured, killed, and replaced.
But what's even worse than this? He enjoyed it. Well, enjoyed is a strong word. But he saw it as okay. He believed that being treated like trash was normal. He literally thanked J for stepping on his neck. He thanked J for "looking out for him" after getting stabbed with the virus.
When Uzi questioned him about what the "company" would do to him after they were finished with their mission on Copper 9, he didn't know. He was blindly following orders, doing what he was told. With no thought to the consequences. He never considered that JcJenson would view them as a bunch of useless, worthless, disposable robots...
Then he meets Uzi. Sure she's a bit rough around the edges, but she doesn't hurt him or belittle him. She values his opinions and him as a person.
She doesn't see him as a means to an end. She sees him as N.
V - Protection and Attachment
V hid information from and hurt N, yet she did it to protect him. V remembered more than N from the manor. More of the killing, the bloodshed, the forced experimentation, more of the Solver.
She didn't want N to remember. To have the same painful memories she did. So she did her best to keep them hidden from him. Keep him in the dark about the Solver.
How did she do that? Avoid telling him anything she knew, anything that he could use to get closer to the truth. She wanted him to stay in blissful ignorance, something she would love to have.
However, her desire to keep N safe didn't just extend to keeping him safe from the Solver, but keeping him safe from her.
She was afraid of loosing N, and the pain that would bring. So if she developed a deep emotion attatchment to N, like say... reciprocating his crush... it would only hurt if she ever lost him again. And she wasn't ready to deal with that pain.
So she pushed him away. pretended to be mean, pretended to be crass, pretended to not notice, not care, literally pretended to forget his name. No attachment, no pain.
But then, Uzi comes along, and her eye starts glitching to show a Solver symbol. V remembers their orders, kill all the Solver infected drones on the planet. But N, N likes this little drone. he sees her as a friend. He won't let V kill her, becuase he doesn't know what she can do.
It would be so easy for V to go behind N's back and kill her, afterall, N's made friends with rocks before. He'd get over a pathetic Worker, right?
But as time goes on, V starts to understand more about Uzi, about why N likes her. She's smart she's kind, she gives a damn about his opinions. She tells him things... that's more than V ever could've done.
And when V realizes N doesn't need her protection anymore, she's willing to let him go.
Doll - Obsession and Isolation
Doll just wanted to be normal. She just wanted to be free from the Solver's influence and live a normal teenage robot life. But she also wanted revenge, revenge on the drone that took her parents from her, revenge on the drone that set her down this path on the first place, V.
After becoming an orphan, Doll became obsessed with getting her revenge on V, to the point she no longer cared about anyone else. Including who lived and who died. Of course, being Solver infected, she had to drink the oil of the Workers around her, so it's hard to fault her for that.
However, it's hard to tell how many drones she kills out of necessity, and how many she kills for other, less justifiable, reasons. The amount of oil she has in her house? You can't tell me she drinks all of it, at least, not before killing more Workers. The prom girls? That was to lure V into the bunker. Even at prom, She kills two (I think) other Worker Drones, for the crime of getting in her way. Why?
V, everything Doll does, is about V. All of the prom-related deaths she caused, were about V. Doll was obsessed with V, all she cared about was killing V to avenge her parents, not caring about who else she had to hurt to do so. All that mattered, was that V ended up dead.
But after Prom, when she had failed to kill V, and ended up getting killed herself. She learned that Uzi had the Solver as well, finally, someone who could understand her pain, someone she could help. But even after learning she and Uzi are in the same boat, she still chooses to go alone.
At every turn she either leaves Uzi to her own, which usually ends in Uzi getting hurt, or she actively antagonizes her, setting back her own progress in terms of investigating the Solver to further her own goals. Even going as far as to sentence Uzi to death by dinesaw after getting to the elevator.
However, in the end, her relcutance to accept help would be her downfall.
Both Uzi and Doll ended up getting confronted by Tessa, whose goal was to have both dead. However, what separated them in those moments was that they had backup. Or at the very least, one did.
When Tessa had been pinned down by Uzi and was about to be stabbed N was there, knife as hand, ready to do whatever it took to save Uzi. He had had enough of Tessa's shadyness, and now only cared about her.
However Doll, Doll was all alone. When she was attacked by Tessa, she had to try to protect herself. She didn't have anyone she could turn to or rely on for help in that moment. So she ended up getting killed by the very monster she was fighting against.
In her last moments, all she could do was find Uzi. And hope that she'd be able to fight back.
Tessa - Love and Compassion (And Getting Skinned Alive By God)
Tessa's parents hated her. Her mom, Louisa, seemed to view her as an embarrassment and while we don't know much about her relationship with her father, James, it can be assumed he was either generally apathetic to his daughter or found her creepy.
Either way, he didn't care much about her, as he was complicit in Lousia's abuse of her, which included chaining her up to her bedpost like she was a misbehaving dog.
Yet, despite her loveless upbringing, when she was given the opportunity to essentially be a mother to the Worker (Zombie) Drones she rescued from the dump, she chose to be the opposite of what her parents were.
While her parents were cruel and demanding, Tessa loved her drones, flaws and all. She was them almost like her children, little ones she had to protect, keep happy and safe. Heck, she probably cared for them more than she should've, considering that they were robots.
However, there was one drone she had found. One who was different than the others, in a way she could never guess. Cyn, little Cyn. She was different than the other Drones Tessa rescued, she was small, had an odd way of walking, and an odd way of talking. But that was okay to Tessa, she was a Worker Drone deserving of a home.
Tessa could've never guessed that by bringing that Worker into her home. She's not only cause the deaths of her parents and countless other fancy rich people, but also her own and lead to the destruction of the entire human race.
The worst part? She couldn't find peace even in death. With her skin being worn by Cyn and used to masquerade as her, tricking her once beloved drones into assisting the very entity they were trying to defeat.
In Tessa's heartfelt attempt to try and break the cycle of abuse, she ended up causing something worse than she could even imagine.
Trauma is a complicated thing to talk about, and an even more complicated thing to get right. However, I do applaud this show for not only tackling the subject but showing such a wide branch of ways the characters cope with it. From finding others to confide in, to harming others in the pursuit of their own interests. And it pains me the fandom can't recognize this.
So many times have I seen people in this fandom either use a character's trauma as an excuse to absolve them of all blame, or ignore it and try to spin them as the second coming of Satan. When these characters are much more complex and fascinating than people give them credit for.
Anyway, thank you for reading and I hope you have a good day.
#kitty's kooky insane ramblings#murder drones#murder drones analysis#essay writing#analysis#character analysis#media analysis#kitty's deep thoughts#<< tag for stuff like this#it's funny this post literally went to hell
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Something that stands out to be about how Murder Drones does horror, is its relationship to organic matter, especially in contrast to how machinery is portrayed.
The main characters are as the title would imply, drones- they live in a cold wasteland, trapped behind doors upon doors of mechanical creations. In a way Murder Drones establishes machinery and robots as its baseline, it's what's comfortable and familiar. Which I find interesting because we as humans are more familiar with the organic, what scares me is a future dystopia dominated by machines, where life struggles to survive.
However in Murder Drones- the moments I find the most freaky are always those where something looks.... Human... Or, alive.
This moment from episode 2 where J goes eldritch horror and Solver appears, the hand that crawls in to grab Thad looks human.
[image description: human looking hand crawling on the ground, but it's revealed to not be attached to an actual human, but instead a long mechanical wire]
This honestly was really freaky to me, because it's so... Wrong. Even when we see actual humans, it's as shadow thingies, or in the case of Tessa, completely covered up by clothing. We see skeletons too, but they're dead, which I feel doesn't really qualify for the horror of something looking... Alive.
I feel like it's mostly with Solver's portrayal that things look... Organic. For example whenever Uzi loses control of her quirky powers, a black hole thingy appears and leaves gooey flesh looking stuff- honestly very gross
[Image description: There's a hole in the wall, with the edges covered in organic looking goo, spreading across the wall. There's a black orb in the center of the hole]
It's also very apparent when comparing Solver Uzi's wing design to the disassembly drones' wing designs. Uzi's are bat-like, with tears and they look more reminiscent of something organically created.
[image description: Uzi looking silly with her bat wings]
Meanwhile Disassembly drone wings are 100% metallic and look like blades, there's a pretty big contrast. Especially when you think of how Uzi actually does start to develop average disassembly drone characteristics, like the mouth, burning in sunlight, and the X for eyes.
Might be besides the point but Uzi's wings look like hands, meanwhile the others' wings don't have that shape really built in anywhere.
Freaky little guy
Something something design language of Solver being completely different to other things in the show.
Anyways I've completely run out of brain juice, hopefully this makes sense
#murder drones analysis#text post#murder drones uzi#murder drones solver#murder drones spoilers#murder drones cyn#murder drones v#murder drones n#serial designation n#serial designation v#murder drones tessa#murder drones j#murder drones#design language#horror#horror anslysis
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I would like to point out that I, as a believer in the theory that the Solver is a separate entity from Cyn, find it interesting that it is physically controlling her body like a puppet. Same can be said for how her natural movements are very puppet like as well, almost like the show is hinting that she herself is a puppet
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hi aza opinions on solver uzi
solver uzi is so important to the conection between uzi and the absolute solver
when we see uzi in episode 1, she is confident in herself, mostly, she trusts her railgun and she can defend herself from her classmates bullying, even if shes just being edgy, she doesnt let anyone know if it gets to her
when she lies to khan at the door in episode 1, her lies are not the best, but she doesnt give up and she ends up getting what she wanted, going outside
of course its scary, but shes not like the others in the bunker, and she is not giving up on it.
during her fight with N, she never gives up, and the only reason she doesn't win is because she didn't think he could regenerate
when she and N start talking, she is nervous, mostly because it is unexpected, and she almost lost the fight. but she is quick to try and get N on her side and tell him about the company's true intentions (or what she thinks are)
in episode 4, she is scared of what she will find in the camp, but unlike episode 1, she isnt confident in her abilities, now she has the solver, but it doesnt give her the same feeling of protection her railgun did,
she made the railgun, she understands it, she cant understand the solver, she doesnt know how it works 100%, she doesnt even know why she has it
in this scene ⬆️ she again has to lie, but to get out of a situation this time, and she is being influenced both by the solver (overheating, in need of oil) and by the presence of her mean classmates and V, which makes her lie worse than in episode 1
again, unlike her railgun, she cannot control her absolute solver
in this scene, she ends up killing her classmates, who she wanted to save in the first episode from the murder drones (not them especially, but everyone in the bunker, and that includes them)
here she laughs, but someone (i forgot who) pointed out that it also sounds like her crying
in the end she accepts N's help, and we all understand the severity of the absolute solver, its a real threat that uzi cant fight alone
AND ALSO SOLVER UZI'S DESIGN AND THE MUSIC FOR THE EPISODE IS VERY VERY EPIC CAN WE AGREE ON THAT?
#awesome mutualz#UHH DO I TAG THIS?#solver uzi#uzi doorman#murder drones analysis#murder drones#SORRY IM MAKING YOU READ THIS but YOU ASKED!#z.txt
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Considering that both Doll and Cyn seems to live on inside Uzi, how would that affect the toxic yuri levels?
being real, between the similarity between the three of them and the fact that uzi has so much love and support in her life, i think the toxins will be seriously denatured.
uzi's getting what either of them needed emotionally, where the two of them were too caught up in their violent antisocial coping to try. this probably sounds funny coming from someone whose written so much angst and despair but i genuinely dont see things going sour from here.
if doll and cyn are entangled enough with uzi to share her experiences — or better yet, uzi comes out to her friends who will absolutely accept her — then it's smooth sailing. i guess the only angle for angst is if you go really hard on uzi hiding what's she become (but that borders on an idiot plot tbh), doll & cyn either desperately wanting to interact with others or hide away (or better yet, they each want different things).
also my honest hot take is i've never really been sold on uzi & doll having a deep relationship or any chemistry, and i think canon cyn reads pretty aro
no yuri imo but i think the potential for even more fucked up and fun qpr girls goes hard
#🐍#my answers#my thoughts#murder drones#murder drones ep 8#murder drones spoilers#murder drones analysis#murder drones uzi#murder drones cyn#queerplatonic
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Hot take (probably idk): J may have sided with Cyn out of fear, but she still chose to side with her in the final confrontation.
She chose her path, and it ended with her alone.
The major theme of MD, at least from what I can tell, is togetherness. V, Doll, and J denied this at some point (yes due to trauma, I’m aware. Major thing for V to apologize for it.), and look what happened. V almost died in the woods, Doll’s corpse was never even recovered and her funeral was basically “Damn, she’s dead. Should’ve been you, Rachel, u suck majorly”, and J ended up possibly banned from the bunker and forced to live outside.
#murder drones#murder drones spoilers#murder drones analysis#i guess#they did at least remember Doll enough to make a funeral for her#nobody looked happy to be there tho lmao#prolly not the best take but oh well#anyway common J L#I was wrong about Doll they brought her corpse to class
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While I'm drawing a small nuzi confession comic (on paper sorry) have this thing I noticed
When N patted Uzi's head for the first time ever, she slapped his hand away
BUT THE LAST TIME????
SHE ALLOWED HIM, SHE JUST WANTED TO HUG HIM, SHE DIDN'T CARE ABOUT A HEADPAT, SHE WANTED HIM WITH HER
I hate them so much WHY ARE THEY SO CUTE??????
#murder drones#murder drones uzi#murder drones n#uzi doorman#serial designation n#md uzi#md n#nuzi murder drones#nuzi#nuzi md#murder drones analysis#I'll go back to crying#i love them so much
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Huh…
Yeah… I don’t think I actually want to know what kind of freaky shit the Solver/Cyn did to make that work
Also interesting that “Tessa” seemed fairly coordinated in episodes 6 & 7, like with the flips and swordsmanship stuff, but once it’s revealed to actually be the Solver/Cyn the gait is kinda staggering. So either the Solver did creepy flesh stuff under the spacesuit that it could control with better coordination… or it’s just being dramatic™️ and zombie shuffled on purpose. Honestly I wouldn’t put it past that last one lol.
Also, it apparently was wearing Tessa’s high heels underneath those boots too 💀
#murder drones#murder drones spoilers#murder drones details#murder drones analysis#zi rambles#absolute solver#absolute solver md#md absolute solver#cyn#cyn md#md cyn#murder drones cyn#tessa james elliott#tessa elliott#md tessa#tessa md#murder drones tessa#am i overanalyzing things? perhaps
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SPOILERS FOR EP 7
I was just talking to my mom (who knows nothing about murder drones) about this scene and my mom was like “that doesn’t sound right”… SHES RIGHT…
SO THE CORRECT THING WOULD BE THAT THEY ARE DATING?!
NUZI COMMITTEE WE SO WIN
#murder drones#fandom#murder drones uzi#n murder drones#biscuitbites#nuzi#murder drones episode7#murder drones analysis
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"Doll had no character arc"
"Her death was meaningless"
"We know nothing about her"
That is false.
This is a response to a post of user @rad10active-ketchup regarding (spoiler) Doll's death in the new episode of Murder drones, in particular to these replies:
These points are most likely rooted in the belief that Doll's death was handled poorly from a writing standpoint, and while I consider it a fair interpretation to have given that writing something to be intentionally disappointing will always feel unpleasant to a consumer, I believe that the reasons found to justify said feeling in the replies are disingenuous and flat out wrong, and I am going to debunk each and every single one of them independently.
Starting off with:
The character development
Doll has for the most part a flat character arc in all the scenes that she appears in, but that doesn't mean that she had no development at any point; first of all, there's most obviously her villain arc, caused by the death of her parents, the solver, the loneliness and lack of mentor figures and general mental illness, during the prom scene, she has reached peak villainy in the series, only saving Lizzie's life because she has mentally assessed the people to care about and the others and even when shot in the head she doubles down on her tendencies and keeps being a menace, but that's where she discovers that Uzi also has the solver and for the first time in ever she has someone who shares her pain but is on the "enemy" side. This starts a continuous chain of doubt in her mind that she overcomes only at the end of episode 6 when she completes her negative character arc by sacrificing Uzi for the cure in the raptor trap, spelling out her doom in the next episode where in her last moments she does her first and only step of a positive character arc by inciting her to fight back the solver with all her forces. Doll is given many chances to switch to the other side and stop being a villain, but she refuses every single one and her reality check only comes on her death bed when it's already too late.
The impact of her death
First of all Rebecca "died" in front of 4 other people while Doll dies only in front of Uzi, who outside of her genuine shock later swears to fake Tessa that it wasn't her doing but someone else, all while pretty terrified herself. Nori and N also come there, but they are too busy with everything else going on to notice, also, neither of them ever cared about Doll. And Cyn... come on.
What do we know about her
First of all, she is quite literally "Uzi if things got even worse" most of her traits are darker reflections of Uzi or an improved version of Uzi's skills, including her aura of mystery, there to be the cool factor that Uzi tries so hard to achieve but fails. She also has the same goal as Uzi, but without the hero complex part whose substitute by her belief of being the chosen one by the solver and fated to bring about the end of the world. She's sadistic, delusional, traumatized, stubborn, russian and a pathetic wet cat of a person whose inability to change denied her the answers that she so desperately craved.
Want more?
#murder drones doll#murder drones ep 7#murder drones spoilers#murder drones n#murder drones rebecca#murder drones uzi#murder drones cyn#murder drones tessa#murder drones nori#murder drones lizzy#murder drones#murder drones analysis
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D’you ever think abt how the ‘choose the universe’ line could be recontextualized now that we know that was the Solver speaking
Like. if that was its way of mocking N. like its worded-to-sound-sympathetic way of saying ‘this drone is either going to die or become unrecognizable, just like all your other loved ones. your choice’ or something
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