“Hey, I don’t know if you’ve noticed, when you pick up Gilgamesh, but he’s actually… so fucking muscular it’s weird.”
“Yeah, I have to actively not pay attention to it, because he is so ripped it’s scary.”
Normal conversations to have about your chihuahua. But for real he’s weirdly ripped. How did he get this powerful. I don’t understand.
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I'm so transgender everything has become a trans allegory to me.
Beauty and The Beast, Zuko's redemption arc, The Amazing Digital Circus, Spider-Man, Darth Vader's character arc, The Little Mermaid, Megamind, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Invincible, She Ra And The Princesses of Power, The Owl House, Joker etc
I consume a story and my brain transes it.
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I had a random thought related to the Purified Au
So Oliver is part dragon, which is something I think Rontu and Egalt would know about, either by being able to just sense his dragon side or maybe he mentioned it or something, idk. Point is, they know he's part dragon.
And I can just picture Egalt, this guy who's very adamant that humans can't learn something like rising dragon and trying to teach them is a waste of his time, would just question Oliver on why he looks like that. More specifically, why he would choose to look like that, because if he's able to choose a more dragon-like form, surely that would be more powerful and useful than a puny little human guy.
And Oliver just goes, "I don't know man, I just like this form." Which would probably just make Egalt even more annoyed with these guys bothering him to train them. Like, this guy is literally part dragon and he's not doing anything with that.
(Meanwhile Lloyd, who is also part dragon, is just sorta standing off to the side awkwardly while Egalt argues with Oliver over this)
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here's hoping canon doesn't end up shipping any of the fallen heroes with each other because i've already built up an entire found family sibling dynamic for their past selves inside of my head. eternal sugar's the youngest, mystic flour the oldest (shadow milk may seem like the leader atm but his middle child energy is THERE). silent salt takes on the responsibility of keeping the group out of trouble (it's tricky, but they've grown accustomed to their friends' antics). burning spice declares themselves the others' biggest protector (they will throw hands with anyone who so much as glances at their siblings friends the wrong way). eternal sugar & shadow milk are so good at making everyone smile and laugh but also they're absolute gremlins who can and will start a ridiculously extreme prank war on a whim (shadow is not subtle in the slightest and cackles at the top of his lungs, sugar plays innocent while sporting the most devious smirks known to cookiekind). mystic flour is like a mentor to the younger four, the glue that holds them together and the light that guides them towards staying on the right track. spice & shadow regularly fight each other on and off their training grounds as a weird way to show affection, flour & salt pretend to be exasperated but find it endearing, they all value each other so much and share a house together while still protecting earthbread. they're entirely platonic and entirely family and until their soul jam corrupts, they care about each other more than anything <33
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I wanted to make this for a while
From left to right
With the bite of a shark Jungle Beast Shark Ranger @ask-the-out-buck-pony
Lightningdragon Storm Ninja Ranger @ask-golden-dragon-ranger-pony
Purple Lightning Storm Ninja Ranger @ask-purple-power-ranger-pony
Powered by the Alicorn Amulet The Luna Knight (me)
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As Oda is a writer, and we're learning this story through a media that was written by someone, I feel these lines to be so multilayered, like a metaphor within the metaphor of an author writing a story (“setting up a charade”) in order to have their character go through a determinate development (“so you could make me say that line”)
Besides, the line in question Akutagawa is referring to here is such an ironic one! It's the one that has Akutagawa say “Those who cast their anger aside and think rationally for the sake of the mission are the ones who end up surviving” which is strikingly opposite to Akutagawa's usual and characteristic behavior of breaking cutting everyone to shreds driven by his fury– which Akutagawa is going to do, again, in a matter of hours after this exchange takes place. I feel like it's fascinating the way this dialogue underlines how those lines, more than spontaneously coming from Akutagawa himself, are implied to be the result of Akutagawa being manipulated into saying them - in the story, by the writer Oda - or of Akutagawa being coaxed to say something so out of character - in real life, by the writer Asagiri - as an ironic hint to what's soon to happen. It's nice. It's also nice how Akutagawa, to an extent, is aware of the fact that he's just a character delivering lines, a role who's story is already written.
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