WWWAAAAA
what if
"The most talented duo in the public safety devil hunter division!"
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THEYRE SO UNDERATED WHY DONT MORE PPL TALK ABT THEM
Today I offer you goth gf x golden retriever bf
some of my fave shots from the new lil pootis episode! (i love how babygirl heavy and medic is in this ep!! AND ALSO DEMOMAN!!)
bonus: pootis being squishy and lovable :3
Happy Valentineâs Dayđđ¤
thank you to a twitter post in my feed saying how lost is like sdr2 by a user with a reigen pfp for making me watch lost
could you do an analyze for chuuya and his feelings ect ?
âŚ..Sure!! Thank you for the ask, Iâm very honored!! Though I admit I feel a bit insecure when talking about Chuuya since Iâm not exactly the most knowledgeable about him.
I think Chuuya feels at home in the Mafia, and thatâs very heartwarming. For all the shit weâve been shown with regards to the Mafiaâs shady activities, this dark organization is still one of the pillars of support for Yokohama. We donât have to agree with their methods, of course, but their army is one of the main forces that keep the city safe from foreign enemies like the Guild, and Chuuya is one of those in the forefront.
In terms of emotional content for Chuuya, I could find more to unpack in the light novel Fifteen than in canon itself. I was particularly intrigued by how Asagiri-sensei tied his emotional development and maturity with his artificially attached special ability. We havenât got to the dirty details of the experiments carried out at the government facility where Chuuya had been, but I think Asagiri-sensei will give us that because it is an important aspect of the governmentâs attitude towards special abilities and their users. In Fifteen, Chuuya was pretty much the same as we know him in canon, kinda reckless, kinda short-tempered, definitely strong and independent. Young Chuuya, however, did not have as clear an understanding of choice and duty as he does now. He started off without an identity and a past, and Sheep was his first family. I think he stayed with them because they didnât care much about his identity, or lack thereof. Sheep didnât just want a family member, though. They wanted Chuuyaâs strength as their shield. Chuuya stayed with Sheep for so long because they gave them a place to belong, but also because of that sense of duty and loyalty. Though in the end, because they both wanted his strength and became fearful of it, Sheep was bound to betray Chuuya.
Emotionally, I think Chuuya was already mature in Fifteen. He didnât care much for revenge and he understood Sheep betrayed him to protect themselves. And though Dazai made it sound like a deal had been made to arrange for Chuuyaâs joining the Mafia in exchange for Sheepâs safety, in the end it was Chuuyaâs choice. I feel like this was the first time he made that choice to stay with a family he found instead of doing what was expected of him. Mori and the Mafia didnât demand Chuuyaâs strength in exchange for a place to stay; on the other hand, Mori expressed genuine gratitude for Chuuyaâs dedication and determination to be a great leader in the Mafia. Moriâs thought of raising Dazai and Chuuya to become sharpened diamonds shows his genuine hope for them to become valuable leaders to the organization.
Chuuyaâs attitude towards his ability is another important aspect of his character. I found it intriguing how Chuuya questioned his attachment to his own body, and even doubted that he was actually human. His immense physical strength also meant he would never have to defend himself at the verge of death, something that usually would make people realize how fortunate they were to be alive. Chuuya doesnât experience that, of course. He had an abundance of power, which means heâs always in control. However, he feels that power is not entirely his. This is where Chuuya shares something in common with Atsushi: their powers seem to have a life of their own. But while Atsushi doubts himself and becomes fearful of his own power, Chuuya wields it when he needs to, but wishes to feel a bit more human when he doesnât have to use it. Chuuya and Dazai also share the sentiment of their humanity slipping away, Chuuya due to his inhuman power and the fact that it was forcefully built into his identity, Dazai due to his intelligence and isolation.
Chuuyaâs connection with Arthur Rimbaud is perhaps the most memorable thing about him for me personally. For all the shit heâs been through, Chuuya doesnât blame Rimbaud for making him the way he is. If anything, Rimbaud made Chuuya understand that he was fine just the way he was. He didnât have to keep questioning how much of his identity was entirely his, because in the end, everyone is just a frame for something (I think what he meant was our body is only a frame for our soul, but Iâm not sure). Rimbaud also told Chuuya to live, not as a shield or a tool, but as his own person, with his own will and freedom of choice. Not as a weapon of war, but as a valuable member of the most powerful underground organization in Yokohama, a place he chose for himself. Chuuyaâs sympathy for Rimbaudâs dedication and loyalty, his maturity and strength, both physical and emotional, and his willingness to forgive and move on (non-applicable to Dazai) is one of the things I like the most about him.
Everything between Jayce and Viktor can really be traced back to their childhood inciting incidents and itâs killing me.
Jayce: a miracle saves him and his mom, forever imprinting him with the certainty that miracles do exist, they can be controlled, he can save his loved ones no matter how awful things get, if he can just be smart and bold and quick enough.
Viktor: he saw the horror of what Singed had doneâof forcing a creature to live against its will, of the degradation and terror of being fundamentally changed. For a while he thought he understood Singed, when he decided that he was willing to throw away all his principles to survive his own body. But he didnât, really. He didnât understand. There was still a line he would not cross. He wanted to die human.
Itâs fitting, then, and unspeakably tragic, that Jayce is the one who played Singedâs role in the end. Because you canât ask Jayce to let a loved one go, when he knows thereâs a miracle that can save him, the solution is right there, it will work if you will just let him tryâand so he forces a change onto Viktor against his will. He traps him into the Arcane, takes apart and reassembles his body, strips him of his selfhood and humanity. All so that Viktor will live. Singed wasnât talking about the desperation not to dieâhe was talking about the desperation not to lose someone you love.
And so Viktor isâŚchanged. He lives, whether he wants to or not.
And so Jayce loses him anyway.
DIES DIES DIES DIES SHUO has CURLY Hair.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
any | đđđđ | panromanticmultifandom (arcane, tf2, crk) , occasionally does artthe sanguine melancholic of all time
170 posts