Angel!Chuuya and Demon!Dazai in disguise
Kunzite: Would you like...to form an alliance with me? Zoisite: Absolutely I do.
For the character ask game, how about 2, 3, and 12 for Zoisite?
2. Favorite canon thing about this character?
Ahh so many things…I’ll have to go with his love for Kunzite, it makes the whole first season so interesting, adds doubt into just how evil the Dark Kingdom really is when that kind of love can exist, and it’s fun to see how he just melts around Kunzite after being so evil the rest of the time like he’s a totally different character. ❤️ Also honourable mention to his fire attack, the scenes when he uses fire are my favourite action sequences in the series. 🔥
3. Least favorite canon thing about this character?
I don’t love that he kills Nephrite. I wouldn’t want to change it because it would diminish the story and how Zoisite’s character works, you’re supposed to feel ambivalent and conflicted about him, but wow, the scene is just brutal to watch. 😢
12. What's a headcanon you have for this character?
I think he drinks as much as Nephrite. When he comes to harass Nephrite at his mansion he’s also there to pinch some of his liquor. He has higher tolerance than Kunzite so Kunzite often tries to cut him off and Zoi pouts because he’s fine. He frequently has drinks with Thetis to talk shit about Jadeite. 🍹
Thank you for the ask 🙏
"Sebastian just pretends to care for the aesthetic"
Ok, but
There is no one else at the gravesite
Ciel isn't even looking at him
so, who exactly would he be putting on an act for?
Hmmmm?
Who is that look for sir?
They call it the hoyo grandpa effect <3
i don’t know there’s just something about ever-composed, prim and proper old men that makes me want to see them.. disheveled…..
I NEED the wuwa read x character fanfics to stop uhgg i hate them
Ahh but it's so Jennette coded
Athy in this outfit would make heads turn, and countless people offering to carry her umbrella for her...feeling like this Athy would answer to the cute nickname, "Lady Angel." by a... certain someone.
Anime/Manga Writers: Why don’t the fans like the canon straight couple instead of the non-canon gay ships?
MC looking at their canon love interest: So pretty and fights good.
MC looking at their rival/best friend/partner: They’re like the sun, brilliantly blinding and all-consumingly powerful. There’s a deadly beauty and grace to every action they take. They’re the other half of me that I never thought could exist, the one person who pushes me to be my best self, and life without them would not be worth living. There’s nothing in this world that they could not accomplish and I am but a fool chasing after them in hopes of reaching their level. Even then, having them in front of me/by my side has pushed me to heights I never thought imaginable.
the face you make when the girl you latched onto in order to cope with your severe trauma shows up after going missing, so you forget that there's a gun pointed at you and run to her like a dog (someone's about to get shot)
One thing I've constantly seen in Jade hate posts is the idea that she's trapping good and innocent people like Aventurine and Topaz and chaining them down to the IPC.
But I actually think it's this act--choosing Aventurine and Topaz to be her proteges--that tells us a lot about whether Jade is a fundamentally bad person or not.
First, it's key to understand that Jade is in a significant position of power within the Stonehearts. When Diamond chooses not to appear, it's often Jade who goes in his place and acts as his voice. When it comes to making administrative decisions on who will get to join the Stonehearts, Jade had a direct hand in supporting Topaz's ascension (by accepting recommendations) and an even more direct role in Aventurine's ascension, choosing and testing him for the job herself.
So Jade is a character with enough power to have a strong say in who gets to become a leader in the IPC. She possesses enough authority and trust from Diamond to catapult a wanted murderer like Kakavasha straight up 45 ranks in the Star Rail universe's single most powerful corporate entity. She helps to decide who rules.
And who has she picked with that power?
Aventurine and Topaz are both good people. Although they'll do whatever is needed to advance the IPC's aims, they're both essentially kind-hearted and unwilling to put others at unnecessary risk. They both deeply value friendship and exhibit many of the other positive traits one associates with heroes--loyalty, generosity, gentleness, and honesty. Topaz takes a hit to her own reputation and rank to protect Belobog. Aventurine, infamous for high-stakes gambles, specifically spells out that he absolutely refuses to cheat his way to victory.
In an organization that is otherwise known for the literal colonization and extermination of civilizations--in an organization that puts wealth and material value above anything but their own god--in an organization with people like Obsidian who literally want to turn things into a bloodbath--Jade's top picks are both quintessentially good characters.
She is extracting value from them. She is profiting from their work for the IPC.
But Jade had the power to promote complete monsters into the Stonehearts. She could have picked heartless, profit-driven villains who would have forwarded the IPC's goals at the expense of the human element entirely. She could have promoted more evil into an already evil organization. But she did not. Jade chose to support two disadvantaged young people who had clawed their way up from the bottom while still maintaining their principles. At least two of the Ten Stonehearts are people the Trailblazer can associate with without extreme moral guilt, thanks in part to Jade.
The people that Jade chooses to throw her support behind mean something. Topaz and Aventurine's presence in the Stonehearts indicates that Jade is capable of not only recognizing goodness--but has actively chosen to elevate (at least relatively) moral people into positions of authority. This act, choosing to promote and support inherently decent human beings, speaks greatly to Jade's sense of who deserves power--and, from there, to her own sense of justice.
Just something worth thinking about, I feel.