Fern
Fern
A crow says "I just want to"
"Focus" Crow is now very detailed and crouching down
how could i forget my people
always a huge line up at the car wash as soon as itβs above freezing
while Iβm still forming my own opinion on it, fantano had a poignant comment on people tending to fall out of love with music after 30-ish and just listening to stuff they liked as a teenager.
Iβve definitely felt this, though for me I chalked it up to depression, etc
J Cole album is good on my 2nd listen, not sure if more than that.
My first one i was blind so I didnβt really tap into the whole 29 vs 39 disc theme.
It definitely feels like something made for Cole Fans and people over 30
life is just lamenting that your youth has slipped you by
over and over and over
at least you don't yowl to play like you're going to die
βcats are chronically dehydrated β
bitch me too they ainβt special
my world feels too small yet too big at the same time
may have to fire up the retro console nintendo switch 1
wait does unicorn overlord let you get married maybe i revisit it
Frieren
The series caps with Zero's final choice. He chooses martyrdom, even if a cardinal sin, killing a human, was in his way.
He was never a legendary hero, but he was a tragic one. Guided by the hope that this sacrifice, he makes without a second thought, would be the last one the world would need.
Holy Land stands out, as the theme for the camp of humans escaping execution, drawing a direct parallel with the first Zero game and the fate of the reploids.
In Zero's finale, the soundtrack is probably the series' best and my favourite. Every track has so much detail, every hopeful melody has a layer under it of chords that lament the world. www.youtube.com/watch?v=dseO...
You get called a legendary hero. Even when it's proclaimed in earnest, the metanarrative coats the word with sarcasm. Zero never accepts the compliment. The light of the "Hero" is reserved for X, he is merely the shadow cast from it, a martyr.
As you play through the Zero series, the narrative shifts, do humans deserve to exist? Does anyone at all? With the little population left of both man and machine, the life that they cling to is with an iron-fist. Neo Arcadia is a dictatorship, there is an energy crisis, and constant war.
As you play through the X series, you start to question whether reploids should even be allowed to exist. Made in image of X, every single one is vulnerable to Zero's virus. Zero makes the decision to end the existence that contradicts the world he's in.
The sacrifice Zero made solved one problem, only to introduce another. The taste of the despair is different, but it's the same ingredients. We see the world this time, through the perspective of the more pragmatic, and starkly unwavering Zero.
It didn't hold back on showing us just how cruel a fate the two had, that try as they might they couldn't escape their origin. Until megaman zero. We're plunged into an even deeper dystopia, only this time, Zero finds himself on the other end of the scales. He awakens to a world still without peace.
my current hyperfixation is the tragedy of megaman zero and the timeline from X1 to X5 to Zero 1 to Zero 4.
X5 was such a shift in tone for the series, from X4's whimsical anime stylings draping the game, to pulling the curtains back on the despair and hopelessness of X and Zero's world.
i feel like iβm in an endless war with my mind
just barrage after barrage of negative thought patterns and wanting to be as mean as possible
29 years of adhd making me hyper fixated on something until I understood it Enough then throw it away like a toy
tired of my mediocre at everything curse i want to lock in
love the way you render skin it feels almost porcelain
hmm i thought about the year 2050 and my immediate reaction was that I donβt wish to see it
this requires deeper reflection
Winter Fern