They aren't? Then why are the names... You know what, I'll do some reading one of these days. As soon as I find sources that weren't seemingly written during the Satanic Panic. Those tend to make genuine research difficult.
I think I see where our wires are crossing here. I'm focusing on the means of the characters, whereas you're looking at their ends. Really, both are important to get a complete picture of the character, so it's probably a good thing we're having this chat. Balance our perspectives out a little.
Right and wrong, from where I'm standing, tend to depend as much on the environment you're in as they do on the individual taking the action in question. Like, you would say cannibalism is always wrong, yeah? Well, a common funeral ritual in some South American cultures is to take the ashes of a cremated loved one and mix them in a drink in order to... Well, I forget the exact reason, but something to the effect of always having them with you, and the ancestors they drank, and so on. This is normal there. Right and wrong are completely subjective, but humans act on these vague terms like they're iron-clad descriptors. That's why the line is intentionally blurred for these alignments in the plots of the games, so you can question the base these worlds' societies are built on, and maybe catch enough perspective to apply the same principle to the real world.
And opposing something just for the sake of opposing it is the dumbest, most irritating, least rational concept I have ever had the displeasure of being made aware of. I would bring up an example, but there are too gosh darn many. Flat Earthers and Anti-Vaxxers denying their thing because they don't like "the man?" Holy shit, you people brought measles back from the dead just to try, and fail, to prove a spiteful point. I don't like how medicine is handled in the States either, but these dumbasses make reasonable discussion impossible without being lumped into the same crazy pit as them! I mean, basing your whole worldview on a debunked study!? How the f...!?
Ahem, sorry. The complete lack of logic in these people is one of my few buttons. Pardon the rant, or add one against your conspiracy-theory cult of choice. We all have at least one.
I mean, they're similar in some ways, but no, they're not quite the same. From what I understand, Satanael is the leader of the fallen angels who refused to bow to the human Enoch in Christianity, while in Gnostic traditions, he was an angel who served the Demiurge but rebelled against him when he realized he was not the true god and gave humanity the knowledge to liberate themselves. Satan originates from Abrahamic traditions, and is basically the ruler of the material world who tempts mankind from the word of God. Yeah, I suppose that might be a way to look at it. You could also say I see what they believe in, and use that as reason for their actions. You see their actions, and interpret their beliefs based off of them. I didn't know that. It certainly seems like when you explain it like that, their tradition seems pretty understandable. And Anti-Vaxxers aren't so much contrarianism as discrimination against autistic people like myself. They base their belief that vaccines cause autism off of some unethical idiotic doctor who's findings were disproved before, but because they know the alternative is to admit that autism is caused through genetics and would therefore be their fault, they decide to risk everyone else's lives just to prove a point, which if they actually bothered talking to a real medical expert, would know is blatantly untrue and that not only do their children still have autism, but they're now sick and very likely to die at a much younger age. Flat-Earthers on the other hand don't even have that pathetic excuse. They're being "rebels just for kicks" as the song goes, which means they're just a bunch of idiots who think they're being cool for saying something different.
Interesting stuff. This seems like the same base concept, a figure who opposed a ruling lord, taken in different directions as traditions passed along. It says a lot more about the way ideas evolve in the hands of humans than anything, and I find that exceptionally interesting.
That about sums up my worldview. Actions speak louder than words, especially when words so often ring hollow.
Anti-vaxxers, the most perfect example of people trying to deny the truth that's right in front of their eyes. Instead of acknowledging that there's something here to be done, they find a convenient excuse to avoid the effort. Except establishing that scapegoat always ends up taking more effort than the thing they should have been doing in the first place, and it hurts people to boot. Now when something harmful does actually slip into a vaccine, the people reporting it will be lumped into the same intellectual camp as these morons and ignored until the consequences hit everyone like a sack of bricks, and that's on top of the previously mentioned revived diseases. How long before the Black Plague comes back and these people try preaching that it's a force of holy judgment? If they want to drag us back to the Dark Ages, we might as well go all the way back.
As for the relation to Autism, on top of being inaccurate, it ignores the fundamental cause behind the condition. It's a developmental condition, as in, it was there when the brain started growing in the first place. A shot from after that period would have zero long term impact on the condition one way or the other. They don't know what Autism is, and they don't care for whatever reason. They might as well be blaming the Four Humours. This is both intellectually insulting and morally offensive. I may not have Autism specifically, but as a proponent for understanding mental health as a whole, and someone with a touch of depression, I can only look at what they're doing to science the same way I look at the old practice of icepick lobotomies and cough syrup made of cocaine.
And Flat Earthers are just a joke at this point, so let's laugh at them to let off some of this anger. Here's the best way I've heard them put:
Person in the age of infinite information: "The Earth is flat!"
German artillery gunner in WWI who probably didn't wipe his own ass: "I have to adjust my trajectory for the curvature of the Earth."
Ancient Greek dude with towers, shadows, and math: "I just figured out the diameter of our planet without the ability to see it from space. Neat."
Ooh, ooh, who wants to laugh at people that think the moon landing was fake next? The ones who try to be controversial in important fields are frustrating, but the rest are the best clowns I've ever seen.
I love comparing the mythology from different religions. For instance, you know Noah's Arc? Well the Greeks had a very similar story, indicating that there was likely a huge flood in the Mediterranean Sea around that time period. Agreed, Anti-Vaxxers are the worst. And I'd laugh at Flat-Earthers if they weren't so fucking sad. They probably watch Alex Jones or some other bullshit conspiracy theory crap. Like, how ignorant do you have to be to believe anything that man has to say.
And that's why, despite being atheistic, I don't discount religions out of the gate. There's usually a grain of truth in there to be found somewhere under the subjective spirituality. Otherwise, there are darn good story ideas. See any Greek story that didn't begin with, "Zeus really wanted to bang X." Or most of the crazy shit that the Norse came up with. Why isn't there more Norse mythology in video games? They had the most badass monsters, like you'd expect of a warrior culture. I'd totally throw down with the world eating snake.
The Alex Jones guys aren't ignorant. They're under the influence of BRAIN FORCE PLUS!!! Or whatever bullshit supplement he shilled for before YouTube shoved his shit back in. Did you know he lead the charge on claiming Sandy Hook never happened, leading to the harassment of victims' families? Fuck him and his ideological spawn. It's like the incest family of political extremism and clickbait culture.
See, that's why I love the SMT series. They use basically everything they could find out about various cultures and religions, take monsters, demons, and deities from all of them, and throw every single one into a melting pot of mythology. Not only that, but they use designs for them that relate back to their cultures. Except Cerberus. And Jack Frost. And come to think of it, Beelzebub's tiger pattern thing is kind of weird too. But the point is, they clearly put a lot of their time into researching everything there is to no about these figures, and that's something I really appreciate. Yeah, humans are stupid, but dammit, I love this species. They're capable of such amazing things, and even if just as much do stupid things, I find I can appreciate those people too. Because if there weren't dumb people, what would that make the smart ones.
I love that about SMT, too. Heck, for my journalism class, I wrote an opinion piece about P5 detailing how it could help jumpstart an interest in world religions, psychology, and other cultures through gameplay and smart artistic choices. It's published online, but I'm a bit iffy about linking it since. You know. It's listed with my real name, and through the college I attend, and I like anonymity.
For the mythological figures not included in the main stories, though, I feel it misses some of the impact of a more focused experience. Some of these things are terrifying, but they pull techniques from the same pool as every other monster, lessening their unique impact. I'm all for the likes of God of War breaking into new, untapped soil, even if I haven't had the cash to grab it yet.
People are ridiculous, plain and simple. Sometimes in a bad way. Sometimes in a way that threatens all life as we know it. Sometimes in a way that makes them the butt of jokes evermore. Sometimes in ways like painting the entire ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. Life is rarely boring for long, for better or worse.
Yeah, SMT isn't the series you wanna look at if you need an in-depth explanation of a particular culture. It simply uses general myths and legends, and because it is a video game, it has to have rankings for all of them, and this means certain deities that are known for their power, aren't even stronger than Black Frost. And man, I loved God of War. Watching Jack play it introduced me to so many aspects of Norse legends that I was unaware of before. It also hinted at a sequel featuring Atreus as the playable character. Can you imagine how cool it would be to see a God of War game where you could shapeshift? That'd be awesome. Speaking of Atreus, I read somewhere that Atreus translating all of those runes for Kratos is actually based on what one of the creator's son does for him because he's from a different country and can't read English that well. I always felt like that was a nice touch.
But, like I said, the variety platter is good for sparking some initial interest. I just wish there was more modern content that capitalized on it. Why have an easy mode if there's no normal mode, you get me? (Black Frost is an absolute hellion in all instances of his appearance, for the record. Those elemental resistances.)
I know nothing about the new GoW other than the setting and the meme. You know the one. "Boy." I actually put off watching Jack's playthrough with the intent of picking it up for myself at some nebulous future date. Then Jack went and spoiled what Norse figure "Boy" actually is when he played Akinator, so there went that surprise. Nowhere is safe from the spoilers. (If anyone tells me anything about The Last of Us 2, I'm gonna throw my fat model PS2 at them. I want to go fresh into the new journey of everyone's favorite depressed lesbian.)
I know what you mean. Creating your own original content is great, but it's okay to take inspiration from older mythos. Like the Percy Jackson series. A reimagining of the Greek Gods in a modern setting, it's such a brilliant concept, and if it wasn't for the fact that he got the short end of the movie stick, Rick Riordan would be just as popular as J. K. Rowling. Oh, I kind of assumed you'd watched Jack's playthrough of it. And I don't know anything about The Last of Us series, so no worries hearing anything from me.
If there's one thing I've learned from writing fanfiction, it's that using a source material can be fine if you do something interesting with it. Not that hard to do something new with material no one has touched in centuries. (And I call a good book series with a bad movie the Eragon treatment. I would call it the Twilight treatment, but that adaptation fits the source perfectly, if you catch my drift. Oh, and silver lining, the Percy Jackson guy is still writing great books. Trials of Apollo, it's great, even to people like me who haven't read his other stuff.)
I watch everything that guy makes unless it's something I plan on playing myself. So stuff like God of War and Spiderman PS4. I like keeping my first exposure to a game personal, which is why I kept my head down for several months after P5 launched. I somehow avoided almost every spoiler for that game except that "Igor" wasn't Igor. Not a bad rate of avoidance for a big release like that. It occasionally pays to be in an area with no other JRPG fans.
Oh my god, do not even get me started on Eragon. It wasn't even that bad a movie. Sure they changed some things, but all around I'd say it was decent. And they set up perfectly for a sequel, but then that sequel never came because apparently a decent enough movie adaptation of a really great book series isn't enough for people. Meanwhile a trashy vampire romance novel series written by a racist white woman gets all of it's books adapted into a movie series. I know it's ridiculous to complain about the Twilight series, because it's just beating on a dead horse at this point (not that the horse was ever alive to begin with), but I just get a little salty whenever I think about the multitude of legitimately good series that never got past they're first movie, all because they didn't exploit the very specific demographic of shallow teenage girls. My point is, I don't think Eragon was that bad a movie, at least not compared to the two movies Percy Jackson got. Like, not only did they mess up the plot in both of them, but in the first one, they didn't capture the sarcastic and slightly morbid humor that made Percy Jackson a good series to begin with. Then they surprised me with the second movie, which I didn't think they could achieve with the trainwreck that was the first one, but they actually pulled out a mostly good movie this time. The characters, the plot, the humor, it was all so true to the original. But then Kronos comes out in the final half hour and I'm like "Okay, so they're definitely not planning to bring out a third one." Which is fine to be honest. It's just such a shame Rick Riordan couldn't get Percy on the silver screen for just a little bit longer. I feel like it could have been so much better if they had gotten the director of the second one for the first one. And I know he's still writing books. I started reading Trial of Apollo, and although I feel the talks about homosexuality were a bit clumsily handled...he's a white guy in his 50s who was born in Texas, I understand he's trying his best with a concept he doesn't have that much experience with, which is a lot more than I can say for most writers out there right now. You should definitely read the rest of his stuff though sometime, he clearly takes the concept of the series to a great level. I never really bother trying to avoid spoilers. If anything, I tend to divulge in anything I can find about something. There are exceptions though, like games I actually own myself. Like Pokemon Super Mystery Dungeon. Playing through it the first time, I was spoiled about nothing, which I'm glad about, because one of the twists in the story really truly got me.
In my mind, the movie for Eragon didn't keep the spirit of the book alive. If we're being honest here, Eragon took a lot from pre-established fantasy in the beginning. It had unique ideas in the dragon riders and those scary as Hell bug servant things whose name I forget, but it was still a lot of standard fantasy affair. The power of the book was in how grand it made these old ideas feel alongside the new stuff. Its prose was amazing, especially considering it was written by Christopher Paolini at the ripe old age of FIFTEEN. And from what I've read so far of book two, it only gets better as the series goes on.
The movie, meanwhile, was mostly kind of dull. It's been years, so my memory is hazy, but I recall not being as invested. It was passible, and a sequel from that base could have been good, great even, but it was a weak showing next to the source material.
I don't consider Twilight criticism a dead horse. It's sort of an immortal showcase of what happens when tropes are used in place of actual storytelling, and bad iterations of those tropes at that. But hey, the leads were kind of hot. You know, if you define hot as disinterested, bland, and in admittedly good shape. The power of pretty boys holds much sway. Remember how people used to defend Akechi on the grounds of, "This poor hot boy is just troubled, that's all." Bruh, that's a sociopathic twink, I don't know why you want him when there's a hot blonde boy right next to you without the baggage of having killed your little sister's mom. (And let's just ignore how the werewolf in Twilight imprinted on a newborn child, that's just creepy by every metric.)
The racism bit is news to me, though. I haven't looked into the writer, as I try keeping my critique in the realms of the work itself. Before I dive into that cesspool to see how deep the rabbit hole goes, do you have a rough rep sheet of her... let's say "statements," to keep this vaguely civil.
Homosexuality is a bit of a difficult topic to write around when you're talking about Greece, one of the most openly gay cultures in the western canon. (The Island of Lesbos, anyone?) Good on him for not ignoring that little detail. I respect that, especially with other writers trying to use LGBT for a bit of good PR without actually having it in the body of their work. Looking at you, Dumbledore. And you, ending of Legend of Korra. Grow some guts and wear your gayness with pride. Even a fifty-something straight guy can do it.
Oh man, Pokémon Mystery Dungeon is my jam! I rented Super a while back, and it tickled my fancy a lot more than Gates to Infinity. If you're talking about a certain twist regarding your partner, it was a neat twist, but they didn't do much with it when the postgame looked like it was going to make full use of it only to timeskip over the interesting stuff. Or maybe I'm just spoiled by the majesty that is Explorers of Sky. That one did twists excellently. (And the ending made me cry. Bonus points to any game that manages to do that.)
Yeah, I guess you're right. I don't think they could have made a good sequel with how bland the movie was. And no, I honestly think complaining about the Twilight series is ridiculous at this point. It was ridiculous back then and it's ridiculous now. We could spend all day talking about it's flaws but I think we really should just let it die. Also, Rowling saying Dumbledore was gay was just so she could prevent the director from having a romance between Dumbledore and McGonagall. And while I respect struggling to get your movie as close to the source material, I really wish she would admit the real reason she said that at this point. I...actually haven't finished the game. I was never able to get past the final boss. I'm trying to go through it again, but I haven't arrived at that point yet. What I was talking about was the thing with Nuzleaf.
I hold my grudges long. It's a low flame, but eternal. I'll keep the collective rage pool against the worst properties kind of lukewarm so that if one of the so-despised-they're-now-memes properties return, the pool can boil anew with minimal extra effort. (No I don't know what I'm on about, I just woke up from my mid-morning nap. This is why I do my best writing after the sun sets instead of when it rises.)
If she wanted to pull the no romance card, she could have gone with him being asexual, or aromantic. Those two would make more sense to never come up. I only bring them up when I'm joking. (As in, "I literally don't give a fuck.") But hey, hindsight makes a fool of us all.
I am very happy I spoke in vague terms, then. I think I remember having some troubles with the last boss, too, but I can't recall how I beat it. Pretty sure it had something to do with pelting it with status effect seeds and stuffing my face with berries until I won the war of attrition. At least if it was anything like how I handle every boss in the PMD series. The Nuzleaf part was a pretty good twist, too, but my memory is bad so it slipped my mind. Whoops.
Um...suit yourself I guess?
You're assuming this white woman who was in her late 40s at the time knew what asexuality or aromantic even meant. Or that the director would even care if she said anything other than that he was gay.
That's pretty much how I beat most bosses too, but I was so high on the power that being fully evolved gave me that I didn't even think about using items once I was back to my base form. And man, the Nuzleaf twist tore me up. Like, this guy saved us from the Beheeyem, let us live in his house, set us up so we would go to school, and seemed to be doing everything in his power to help us remember who we were. For all intents and purposes, Nuzleaf was our adopted father, and then it turned out he was working with the Beheeyem all along for his own purposes. That actually fucked me up a bit.
1) Fair point about the director. Ace is less showy, but it's also less liable to inspire outrage for being ignored on a character sheet. 2) Her job is to know the shit she's writing about. Not knowing about this alternative ahead of time is a failure of research on her part. I've put up my hands and apologized for a lot of Japanese culture stuff I didn't know while writing Many Quirks, and I'm not even making a thin dime off it, let alone however much her net worth is. Ignorance may be the reason, but it's not an excuse. (Side note, got curious, Google says her net worth is one billion dollars. Also, the picture of her they used on the net worth tracker makes her look like the girl from the "This is your brain on drugs" commercial.)
No kill like overkill. If I've got plenty stowed away in storage, I always use orbs and seeds liberally, especially since Super made orbs completely overpowered for standard dungeon traversal. I'd rather lose a hundred sleep seeds than a half dozen revival seeds.
I guess I'm so used to video game betrayal that it didn't hit me as hard. Now, if our partner had done that, I'd be devastated, though that's mostly because I always pick the same partner in these games from Sky onwards (Riolu, named them Rio) and I'd have some emotional transference there. (They don't betray you, by the way. You can trust them one hundred percent.)
Yeah I don't think Rowling ever really bothered trying to research. Or was that big a fan of math. I'm pretty sure the only math she did in Harry Potter was the currency for the wizarding world, and smarter people than me have pointed out the flaws in that system. I tend to bring one of each berry, orb, and wand that I find useful, as well as 3 to 4 Reviver Seeds and 2 Blast Seeds. You think I should adjust it somewhat? I had a Charmander and Treecko for me and my partner in the first playthrough and named them the Wyverns, and a Riolu and Braixen currently, with a team name of Jackal-Foxes.
I don't recall the exact mechanics of Super specifically, as it's been a year or so since I rented it, but I can tell you the few big rules of thumb that have helped me against bosses ever since Red Rescue Team. Fill your entire inventory. Worry about collecting junk from the dungeon after you clear its story. For now, use every slot you have for stuff that will help you get through the dungeon and beat the boss at the end.
Next, I would say focus your items a little more. A wide variety is good for dealing with situations you aren't expecting, but once you know the specific threats that are in store, build your inventory around countering those. Bring multiple of each item you think would be useful, with a heavy focus on healing items. Like I said, war of attrition. I'll leave the exact counts to your preferred playstyle.
Since Revival Seeds are so expensive, try to use berries to keep yourself from dying whenever possible. The Seeds are best used as a failsafe if you miss a healing opportunity, not your primary source of healing. If they also heal PP when reviving you in Super like they did in earlier games, the Revival Seeds tend to be better bets than most standalone PP restoration items because you don't waste a turn by using them. Use normal attacks until you die, then come back swinging with your heavy hitting moves.
And, one last tip, try to keep the beginning of the fight at long range as much as possible. Most bosses can only brutalize you when you're right in front of them. Pelt them with as many Blast Seeds as you can from a distance. The confusion status effect is also good, since it keeps them from approaching as you throw everything and the kitchen sink at them. For long range damage, though, the Blast Seeds are your best bet since they tend to outperform any other damaging item or attack you might have.
That's about all I can recall. Hope it helps.
Riolu has always had my back in these games. Its raw damage output makes it the perfect frontrunner/tank while I duck behind it and support with ranged moves and healing. That's my standard playstyle; partner with the direct damage, me with the status effects, corner-cutting moves, and ranged damage. The AI doesn't do tricky strategy well, so I plan around it. (And for the other teammates you can recruit, they're mostly a meat wall to cover the rear.) I tend to stick with the team name Lunice, which is from a really early story concept I have since scrapped because of all the hallmarks of First Story Syndrome. To not go into the story that will never be too much, the guys who used it there were a tight-knit bunch that were as close as brothers and tough as a brick wall when together. It seemed fitting for an exploration team.
Hmm, I do tend to limit my items. I suppose that's not really the best strategy against a boss, is it? And I mainly chose Riolu and Fenniken (I think I typed Braixen, I always get the two confused), because I wanted to use the reverse of that strategy, with me being a melee attacker and Fenniken, or Blair as I named them, backing me up with long-range attacks. Of course, I was unaware at the time that the AI prioritizes range over typing, and will use Ember on a freaking Fire type instead of Psybeam. Why couldn't the developers have made it so the AI understood not to use a move if it wasn't very effective?
Items are your best friend, plain and simple. Who needs risky fisticuffs when you can be a trap-slinging rogue extraordinaire? (Or you could grind until you can turn in the boss's general direction and squish it with your bulging Riolu biceps, but level grinding isn't fun.)
You think a blindness to type advantages is bad? In Red Rescue Team, my first partner was a Squirtle. When we got to a water area, it started using long range water moves on Pokémon with the Water Skin ability. You know, THE ONE THAT HEALS THE USER WHEN THEY'RE HIT WITH WATER ATTACKS!!! Like, holy shit, these games are tough enough without this handicap. Sure, I turned off its water moves after seeing this, but that cut our offensive options in half. Thank goodness I was Bulbasaur, or I would have dined on turtle soup that night.
This is why I stick with my boy Rio. No Pokémon is healed by fighting type moves. Also, Aura Sphere is high damage with a chance of paralysis at long range. OPAF. You're playing Riolu, so use that. It's effectively your nuke button.
Oh trust me, I know what you mean about Water Skin. Like, it's not as much of a problem because I never end up using a Water type for me or my partner (screwed me over later on in Blue because I didn't have any Pokemon who could learn Surf), but it was still annoying whenever I had another Pokemon with us who knew Water moves. I gave my Riolu Anthony (don't ask me why I named him that, I'm weird) Earthquake, which I'm thinking could be a good, last-minute option for when my partner's dead.
...I don't think you realize the reference you turned Anthony into.
First, Lucario is essentially a Super Saiyan in Smash 4, getting stronger as he gets hurt. That makes Riolu a normal Saiyan.
Second, when DBZ people power up, the earth quakes.
Third, you specifically said you'll use it if a friend dies.
Dude, you're gearing up to reenact Goku vs. Nappa. I want to say you've been watching too much DBZ, but that would be projecting on my part. Never a bad time to binge DBZA.
Maybe. But I'm sleep deprived and thinking up all sorts of crazy shit before I clock out. Like, 9/10 of these ideas are going to be purged, but that last tenth is some of my finest insanity. Like panning for gold in a muddy river. Okay, am dead now, will be back when time and space aren't buzzing in my inner ear.
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