huh, that sure looks familiar @eirikrjs
When you take your kids to McWaddles, you have to take ALL of your kids. Happy Waddle Wednesday!
every time you talk to minion waddle dee in forgotten land's post-game, dedede greets you first. he doesn't have to do that. kirby technically doesn't talk to him directly nor he first initiates a greeting. but he does so anyway.
it's like shinya kumazaki just put up a megaphone in front of this game and screamed through it:
legend has it, he still screams
Omg i can't believe you did this. IT'S LOOKS GOOD you're the best :D
i don't know if anyone has done it before but what if magolor doing a RE 4 merchant impression
i can still hear his voice…
There are so many different Amazons (I am very sorry Wikipedia).
(I am not entirely sure what "vinaceous" means, was not in the dictionary. But I think it means "wine-colored".)
you know, thats why metatron has a cross despite him being a jewish character.
This made me curious, so I checked out all the books I have that note Metatron's origin and almost all of them at least say "Israel." Metatron is in a Jewish angel section of Devil Summoner World Guidance with Sandalphon and Lailah. But then Pandemonium:
It says he's Christian, lol. The Pandemoniums are the only books I have that list origin via religious affiliation rather than geographical location, and this seems only for the angels. Sandalphon is listed as being from Judaism; it's inconsistent though, as Lailah's stated origin is Israel again. I would chalk this one up to a goof.
The crosses on his eyes and sash might just have to do more with the Messian/Center aesthetic than Christianity, though.
Finally,, some Bandee action,,,,
Bandanna Waddle Dee design in KatFL with Kirby and Elfilin. Now the whole gang is her-
right i suppose Meta Knight and Dedede are there as well fjekmslsa (eventually)
A claim repeatedly brought up online, in some media, in antiquated “scholarly” works, as well as seemingly in the online lectures of a certain Canadian self-help guru who shall not be named here is that the „storm god slays chaos serpent” motif – so called “chaoskampf” - found especially commonly in the mythologies of ancient Middle East and Anatolia represents some allegorical tale about the fall of primordial matriarchy and associated religious figures, or a broader triumph of some abstract masculine principle over feminine. This assumption is entirely ahistorical, and its spread is only possible due to the fact that despite being among the oldest recorded stories of the world, the myths of Mesopotamia and culturally related areas remain largely unknown to the modern audience, making it easy for various dubious authorities to claim they contain what’s not exactly present in them. See, the problem is… the „chaos dragons” in most versions of this narrative aren’t even female. Additionally, most if not all of them aren’t vilified echoes of older figures, but merely antagonists devised for already popular gods and heroes and figures which belonged in both these categories at once to defeat. They’re not demonized “primordial earth and sea mothers” or whatever, they’re cheesy, hammy over the top saturday morning cartoon villains of their era. Like the titans in Greek mythology, Apep in Egyptian, and so on, the likes of Tiamat, Yam or Illuyanka never served a purpose different than that of an antagonist for an established figure. And, most importantly, only one of them, Babylonian Tiamat, famous for her role in the Enuma Elish (the epic describing the deeds of Marduk, the lead god of Babylon) and not much more, is female – and even Tiamat was likely developed based on older figures of such mythical antagonists, like Ugaritic Yam.