-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Wow, that was... unexpected.
And that gives me something new to add to my list of Illven-induced distrubing images.
Spoiler
Show
Illven with a Luvdisc's mouth between his legs
Illven with a Gardevior between his legs
Illven on top of an Altaria
Melinda and a Gardevior
Melinda and a Machamp
Melinda and just about every girl in Kanto
And now Melinda and Gary.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Wow, that was... unexpected.
And that gives me something new to add to my list of Illven-induced distrubing images.
Spoiler
Show
Illven with a Luvdisc's mouth between his legs
Illven with a Gardevior between his legs
Illven on top of an Altaria
Melinda and a Gardevior
Melinda and a Machamp
Melinda and just about every girl in Kanto
And now Melinda and Gary.
I told you Melinda with emotions was hard. At first I was going to have be more upset, but that didn't work, then I was going to have pretend to be unaffected which was unrealistic. So i had her trying and failing to repress those emotions.
And you're welcome for the images :smalltongue:
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
How many ranks did you take in Craft (disturbing mental image)?
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
How many ranks did you take in Craft (disturbing mental image)?
Max. The awesome part is the synergy bonus it gives to Will saves from disturbing images :smalltongue:
Course I notice Illven and May aren't in there. And they "played" at least four times.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
That was more easily glossed over. Nor did your renewed attempt work.
WOOT! NAT 20!
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
That was more easily glossed over. Nor did your renewed attempt work.
WOOT! NAT 20!
Meh. So do you think Jango was justified in spilling Melinda's secrets?
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Jango is actually a really interesting case for a moral examination. On one hand she was taken under false pretences, although Melinda eventually made good on them. I think that they're at a point where they could become good friends, but they have hated each other for so long that neither wants to suggest stopping for fear of appearing weak to the other. Its really just spite and ego right now, as opposed to a recurring issue. They've pretty much taken turns angering the other and being angered in return. Let me see if I can come up with a pair that did something like that... maybe not. But it strikes me as they would rather stay with their familiar rage at each other than to humble herself before the other and suggest that they stop. After all, its usually the one who's loosing who sues for peace, and both of them seem to either be convinced that she is winning, or feels that she is loosing, and cannot afford to loose face before her "opponent". In the end, I don't think that Jango is "justified" per se, as I personally don't think that vengance is really the best option, but I can see where she's comming from. (Long post is long)
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Jango is actually a really interesting case for a moral examination. On one hand she was taken under false pretences, although Melinda eventually made good on them. I think that they're at a point where they could become good friends, but they have hated each other for so long that neither wants to suggest stopping for fear of appearing weak to the other. Its really just spite and ego right now, as opposed to a recurring issue. They've pretty much taken turns angering the other and being angered in return. Let me see if I can come up with a pair that did something like that... maybe not. But it strikes me as they would rather stay with their familiar rage at each other than to humble herself before the other and suggest that they stop. After all, its usually the one who's loosing who sues for peace, and both of them seem to either be convinced that she is winning, or feels that she is loosing, and cannot afford to loose face before her "opponent". In the end, I don't think that Jango is "justified" per se, as I personally don't think that vengance is really the best option, but I can see where she's comming from. (Long post is long)
Well there's also the question of. Did Melinda intend to find a way to feed Jango or did it just kinda happen?
If Melinda really wanted to find a way to feed Jango then it would be if the ends justified the means. (In this case does kidnapping justify allowing the kidnappe to not starve to death.)
But if it just kinda happened, then how justified is Melinda in claiming credit for teaching Jango to eat?
There's also no guarantee that Jango would have starved without her. Jango could have been caught by anyone else.
However so far Melinda is the only one that has apologized.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
I didn't say Melinda was justified, and really, neither of them is justified in their actions. It looks to me like they are just holding onto their bitterness because they each think that the other has wronged her, and there is no way that she is going to let that bitch come out the winner. Melinda has apologised for physically harming Jango, showing that even she has remorse, but she has yet to apologise for her actions as a whole. She essentally said "Yes, I went too far there, but I still hate your guts."
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
I notice Illven's talking in this chapter.
I'll stay out of the Jango conversation...
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
'Cause I like Jango, and not Melinda so much.
That, and I don't like arguments with Illven. :smalltongue:
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
I'm not arguing. I'm conversing, and perhaps debating somewhat, but never did it enter my mind that we were arguing.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
I call it argument because I'd rather "argue" than "discuss" or "debate."
It's just my classification of it.
(Mainly 'cause of the argument sketch... blame the Pythons)
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
I didn't say Melinda was justified, and really, neither of them is justified in their actions. It looks to me like they are just holding onto their bitterness because they each think that the other has wronged her, and there is no way that she is going to let that bitch come out the winner. Melinda has apologised for physically harming Jango, showing that even she has remorse, but she has yet to apologise for her actions as a whole. She essentally said "Yes, I went too far there, but I still hate your guts."
Wait. Since when can you use B word on the forum. I could have sworn that it was blocked. (I remember an argument that Rich had used it in the comic and people were arguing that they couldn't. Maybe I'm misremembering. :smallconfused:)
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Penguinator
I notice Illven's talking in this chapter.
I'll stay out of the Jango conversation...
I fixed it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Penguinator
I call it argument because I'd rather "argue" than "discuss" or "debate."
It's just my classification of it.
(Mainly 'cause of the argument sketch... blame the Pythons)
I don't get the reference.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Yeah, it surprised me, too. Maybe it could tell that I was only using it to drice the point home.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Yeah, it surprised me, too. Maybe it could tell that I was only using it to drice the point home.
It'd be better if it was an Arcanine.
So how do you feel about Melinda as a character. And compared to Illven.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Illven must have spent a lot of time asking himself where he went wrong. I mean that this one is so much... humorously darker I guess, than Can We All Survive. You do the same good job when writing deeper emotion, but the story as a whole somewhat resembles a creepypasta in its morbid casual injection of rampant death into a kid's game. Personally, I like my dark stories with a side of life lesson, not just a continual gorefest (a large part of why I never got into the zombie craze). Don't get me wrong, I'm enjoying it, it's just that you seem to be overly focused on "play" and death, as opposed to the deeper story. Can We All Survive went downhill during the grinding for the elite 4 in this manner as well, because you took "play" (even just calling it that is irksome to me), and just turned it into a cheap recurring gag. If there had just been some form of underlying tension, like there was between Illven and May, it would have made a compelling plot point. However, you have permeated it to the point where I want to roll my eyes every time a ditto shows up.
I can live with one or maybe even two testosterone/androgen-fuled characters, but when Melinda is accused of being a lesbian every chapter, it looses any sense of humor it had the first time or two and, to me, just becomes something I want to shake my head at, because it almost seems like you don't know what to write to keep the story moving, so you try to distract the reader with hormones.
Yeah, I'm probably sounding harsh, but what I mean is that if you take a look at my nuzlocke, there is at least tension on Michael's part, but I'm not playing it up for humor. Instead, I'm holding onto it, investing in what I can do with it later. If I wait until I start making jokes with that, I think that it will be funnier, as I personally find that somebody trying hard to hold back feelings before he ends up shoving his foot down his throat to be more amusing than the guy who does so right off the bat.
Melinda's crush also struck me as kind of shallow, with no real setup in earlier encounters with Gary. Yes, it was an honest attempt at character development, but there was nothing the reader could go back to and see where this came from, leading me to think that this was concieved rather recently, as opposed to being in your mind from the start. Yes, I know one can't expect everything that ends up being written in a nuzlocke, but I had almost all the major plot details of mine (and a good amount of the sequel--assuming I ever get there) decided within a few days of starting. Let me use Azorath as an example then. In victory road, she suggested that Illven teach her flash, with obvious innuendo. What made this funny was that there had always been this subtle implication that each of them had cross-group breeding in the back of their minds, and in that moment, it was all unleased like a coiled spring. With the situations in Blazing Hate, however, there is no buildup, the characters just jump in, and the humor is that much weaker for it.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that any story, once again, in my opinion, should teach a lesson. There should be some recurring element in the story that, even (or especally) if it is not obvious, the characters deal with or that the moral of the story is. From Star Wars' themes of hope, trust, and eventual triumph of good to Can We All Survive's tones of friendship and dealing with loss, they have an underlying point to the story, a message the writer was trying to convey. But Blazing Hate seems lost, a series of jokes of increasingly lesser comic effect.
Can We All Survive was a hillarious story, constantly bubbling with over and underreactions and overly blunt statements (courtesy of a certain Swampert), there was still this vibe of the bond between the characters, the friendship between Illven and Memetic that kept Illven from simply ordering him to shut the hell up, and put up with his trolling. In Blazing Hate, there is no bond, no tie, nothing to ground the humor in, and it becomes just a mess of dark humor that is slowly breaking down into what I fear could be just a long, dark tunnel of horror and smekxy humor that long ago lost its ability to garner a laugh.
I know I described Melinda's crush as shallow, but nontheless, it is moments like these that keep me comming here. What I hope is that a platform can be built upon which the rest of the story (including the jokes) can exist, as opposed to being just a series of lesbian jokes followed by a series of two people verbally tearing each other apart, and back to the lesbian jokes.
In short, what I would like to see out of this story is:
De-emphasis on "play" humor (just comes across as cheap by now.)
More character development (as right now the characters can probably be best described as static stereotypes of: evil manipulator (Melinda), innocent exploitee (Bolliante), ingrate/foil (Jango), exploitable drug addict (Thumbs), pitiful victm (Sunspot), morally blind servant (Jack), and horny guy (Haddock). It just keeps making the same jokes over and over, the only change being their increased sadism, which does not equal humor or good storytelling.)
Building up humor, as opposed to just taking all potential jokes and using them right away (as then the joke has a greater effect.)
Some sort of point to the story, rather than sounding something like the ramblings of a serial killer/rapist in a mental ward (yes, it sometimes feels like the mind that came up with this should be institutionalised.)
By all means, keep it as dark and disturbing as you like, but add some sort of frame for the story, something that makes the humor make sense in the world, rather than just a cobbled-together collection of innuendo and rage.
Wow, that turned into one heck of a rant. Sorry about the length there. Don't worry, I'm still reading, I just feel that this story falls far short of what it could be. This nuzlocke could be a story for the ages, worthy of being recorded and passed down till the end of time like, in my opinion again, Can We All Survive is. But unless you turn this into more than just a series of brutal killings and lesbian jokes, I fear that it will degenerate into some abomination of pointless idiocy that it will be lost in the eternal trash heap that is the forgotten graveyard of stories that failed to live up to what they could have been.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Illven must have spent a lot of time asking himself where he went wrong. I mean that this one is so much... humorously darker I guess, than Can We All Survive. You do the same good job when writing deeper emotion, but the story as a whole somewhat resembles a creepypasta in its morbid casual injection of rampant death into a kid's game. Personally, I like my dark stories with a side of life lesson, not just a continual gorefest (a large part of why I never got into the zombie craze). Don't get me wrong, I'm enjoying it, it's just that you seem to be overly focused on "play" and death, as opposed to the deeper story. Can We All Survive went downhill during the grinding for the elite 4 in this manner as well, because you took "play" (even just calling it that is irksome to me), and just turned it into a cheap recurring gag. If there had just been some form of underlying tension, like there was between Illven and May, it would have made a compelling plot point. However, you have permeated it to the point where I want to roll my eyes every time a ditto shows up.
Okay I can understand that. To be fair to Illven, Melinda's been getting worse over the course of the story, presumably she was just kinda unempathic before the game, and Illven has no idea what's going on before.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
I can live with one or maybe even two testosterone/androgen-fuled characters, but when Melinda is accused of being a lesbian every chapter, it looses any sense of humor it had the first time or two and, to me, just becomes something I want to shake my head at, because it almost seems like you don't know what to write to keep the story moving, so you try to distract the reader with hormones..
At that I'm just taken what the story gives me, it's hardly my fault that alot of people sprout inneduo.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Yeah, I'm probably sounding harsh, but what I mean is that if you take a look at my nuzlocke, there is at least tension on Michael's part, but I'm not playing it up for humor. Instead, I'm holding onto it, investing in what I can do with it later. If I wait until I start making jokes with that, I think that it will be funnier, as I personally find that somebody trying hard to hold back feelings before he ends up shoving his foot down his throat to be more amusing than the guy who does so right off the bat.
And yet at the same time I'd need a reason as to why such a guy is so reserved with his feelings. (i.e Trust issues, Reason to fear rejection) At which point the story becomes more about overcoming that.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Melinda's crush also struck me as kind of shallow, with no real setup in earlier encounters with Gary. Yes, it was an honest attempt at character development, but there was nothing the reader could go back to and see where this came from, leading me to think that this was concieved rather recently, as opposed to being in your mind from the start. Yes, I know one can't expect everything that ends up being written in a nuzlocke, but I had almost all the major plot details of mine (and a good amount of the sequel--assuming I ever get there) decided within a few days of starting. Let me use Azorath as an example then. In victory road, she suggested that Illven teach her flash, with obvious innuendo. What made this funny was that there had always been this subtle implication that each of them had cross-group breeding in the back of their minds, and in that moment, it was all unleased like a coiled spring. With the situations in Blazing Hate, however, there is no buildup, the characters just jump in, and the humor is that much weaker for it.
I did try to set it up. Maybe not well, but in the first chapter Melinda was disappointed that Gary went to the lab without her for instance. I tried not to make it too obvious, I guess I did it too much.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
I guess what I'm trying to say is that any story, once again, in my opinion, should teach a lesson. There should be some recurring element in the story that, even (or especally) if it is not obvious, the characters deal with or that the moral of the story is. From Star Wars' themes of hope, trust, and eventual triumph of good to Can We All Survive's tones of friendship and dealing with loss, they have an underlying point to the story, a message the writer was trying to convey. But Blazing Hate seems lost, a series of jokes of increasingly lesser comic effect.
Okay I can understand that.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Can We All Survive was a hillarious story, constantly bubbling with over and underreactions and overly blunt statements (courtesy of a certain Swampert), there was still this vibe of the bond between the characters, the friendship between Illven and Memetic that kept Illven from simply ordering him to shut the hell up, and put up with his trolling. In Blazing Hate, there is no bond, no tie, nothing to ground the humor in, and it becomes just a mess of dark humor that is slowly breaking down into what I fear could be just a long, dark tunnel of horror and smekxy humor that long ago lost its ability to garner a laugh.
Melinda and Biollante do have a bond though, it may be the only bond, but it's still there.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
I know I described Melinda's crush as shallow, but nontheless, it is moments like these that keep me comming here. What I hope is that a platform can be built upon which the rest of the story (including the jokes) can exist, as opposed to being just a series of lesbian jokes followed by a series of two people verbally tearing each other apart, and back to the lesbian jokes.
Okay, well I was planning a equivalent of Tales of Lilycove city after Sabrina and the grinding, so I can at least lay the seeds there at the latest.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
In short, what I would like to see out of this story is:
De-emphasis on "play" humor (just comes across as cheap by now.)
Okay I can do that for all but Fluff (Who does not need to be voted for.)
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
More character development (as right now the characters can probably be best described as static stereotypes of: evil manipulator (Melinda), innocent exploitee (Bolliante), ingrate/foil (Jango), exploitable drug addict (Thumbs), pitiful victm (Sunspot), morally blind servant (Jack), and horny guy (Haddock). It just keeps making the same jokes over and over, the only change being their increased sadism, which does not equal humor or good storytelling.)
Biollante's never really been exploited though. I think I know what you mean though. And Haddock at least thinks he's in love with Melinda, if he's not actually in love with her.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Building up humor, as opposed to just taking all potential jokes and using them right away (as then the joke has a greater effect.)
Okay, I can do that.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Some sort of point to the story, rather than sounding something like the ramblings of a serial killer/rapist in a mental ward (yes, it sometimes feels like the mind that came up with this should be institutionalised.)
Okay, I'll put some more substance in the story.
(The difference between this and real life, is I can control myself.)
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
By all means, keep it as dark and disturbing as you like, but add some sort of frame for the story, something that makes the humor make sense in the world, rather than just a cobbled-together collection of innuendo and rage.
Wow, that turned into one heck of a rant. Sorry about the length there. Don't worry, I'm still reading, I just feel that this story falls far short of what it could be. This nuzlocke could be a story for the ages, worthy of being recorded and passed down till the end of time like, in my opinion again, Can We All Survive is. But unless you turn this into more than just a series of brutal killings and lesbian jokes, I fear that it will degenerate into some abomination of pointless idiocy that it will be lost in the eternal trash heap that is the forgotten graveyard of stories that failed to live up to what they could have been.
Okay, that's fair.
It's fine you wouldn't write such a long response if you didn't care.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Thanks for taking the time to respond in-depth like that, rather than some people I've come across who just go "whatever" when a wall of text shows up in their thread.
Quote:
At that I'm just taken what the story gives me, it's hardly my fault that alot of people sprout inneduo.
I'm guessing you mean the game itself, and yeah, I remember all the dirty things that came to my mind playing though FireRed. I think Haddock was really the turning point in this, though. Haddock really seems to me to have taken what was a fairly funny recurring joke, and turned it into this overused mess.
Quote:
And yet at the same time I'd need a reason as to why such a guy is so reserved with his feelings. (i.e Trust issues, Reason to fear rejection) At which point the story becomes more about overcoming that.
I see where you're comming from there. I know you're not trying to make a drama, but it's just that if you beat the reader over and over again with "play" jokes, they loose the value they hold when used in moderation
Quote:
I did try to set it up. Maybe not well, but in the first chapter Melinda was disappointed that Gary went to the lab without her for instance. I tried not to make it too obvious, I guess I did it too much.
*Looks back* Yeah, I see that. I'm also now seeing Melinda's :smalltongue: when she called Gary neither smart nor tough at nugget bridge. So, yeah, that looks a lot more clear in hindsight. I guess I'm just used to being inside the character's head. I mean, due to the italicized narrations that pop up, this is technically a first-person writing, and first-person usually offeres the most insight into the character's mind. I'm not saying you should ammend that, it's just not that common to see, or rather not see, the protaganists thoughts like that.
Quote:
Melinda and Biollante do have a bond though, it may be the only bond, but it's still there.
Biollante's never really been exploited though. I think I know what you mean though. And Haddock at least thinks he's in love with Melinda, if he's not actually in love with her.
What I meant is that Biollante is like Nino, so desperate to make mommy happy, he doesn't realise the horrible things he's doing.
Quote:
Okay, well I was planning a equivalent of Tales of Lilycove city after Sabrina and the grinding, so I can at least lay the seeds there at the latest.
I look forward to it. Tales of Lilycove was one of my favorite parts of Can We All Survive.
Quote:
Okay I can do that for all but Fluff (Who does not need to be voted for.)
Yeah, Fluff is just, well... that was the whole point of the character.
Quote:
(The difference between this and real life, is I can control myself.)
It's beautiful, the things you can get away with saying behind the anonymous curtain of the internet.
Quote:
It's fine you wouldn't write such a long response if you didn't care.
That's what I love so much about let's plays. They're a collaborative project between the readers and the writer. And feel free to drop something like this on my nuzlocke if you ever feel like I'm doing something wrong.
(Support level increased)
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Thanks for taking the time to respond in-depth like that, rather than some people I've come across who just go "whatever" when a wall of text shows up in their thread.
Well you have legimate complaints and I should do what I can to fix them. Art fails if the intended reader or readers get a completely wrong message.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
I'm guessing you mean the game itself, and yeah, I remember all the dirty things that came to my mind playing though FireRed. I think Haddock was really the turning point in this, though. Haddock really seems to me to have taken what was a fairly funny recurring joke, and turned it into this overused mess.
Okay, so show Haddock not being perverted, and make a point of showing some guys and girls explicitly not attracted to Melinda.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
I see where you're comming from there. I know you're not trying to make a drama, but it's just that if you beat the reader over and over again with "play" jokes, they loose the value they hold when used in moderation
So if I want to keep the same level of drama and comedy at least vary the jokes?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
*Looks back* Yeah, I see that. I'm also now seeing Melinda's :smalltongue: when she called Gary neither smart nor tough at nugget bridge. So, yeah, that looks a lot more clear in hindsight. I guess I'm just used to being inside the character's head. I mean, due to the italicized narrations that pop up, this is technically a first-person writing, and first-person usually offeres the most insight into the character's mind. I'm not saying you should ammend that, it's just not that common to see, or rather not see, the protaganists thoughts like that.
Well I tried showing Melinda's thoughts in the beginning. But it just didn't fit with her, she's not an open person. She's always looking for an angle or remaining guarded with her feelings. I felt that would be lost if I told you what she was thinking
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
What I meant is that Biollante is like Nino, so desperate to make mommy happy, he doesn't realise the horrible things he's doing.
I know what you're saying, but did Nino ever really do anything horrible.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
I look forward to it. Tales of Lilycove was one of my favorite parts of Can We All Survive.
I got the inspiration from Tales of Ba-sing-se in Avatar the last airbender.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Yeah, Fluff is just, well... that was the whole point of the character.
Honestly to me, in a way it's less creepy. Think about it everyone uses Ditto for the production of eggs. Sometimes lots of eggs. If the ditto were like a normal person/pokemon, 9 times out of 10 you are probably having the other pokemon force itself on the ditto. At least this way the dittos like it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
It's beautiful, the things you can get away with saying behind the anonymous curtain of the internet.
Beautiful, and terrifying and I wouldn't want it any-other way.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
That's what I love so much about let's plays. They're a collaborative project between the readers and the writer. And feel free to drop something like this on my nuzlocke if you ever feel like I'm doing something wrong.
Okay thank you.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
(Support level increased)
Okay so you know my affinity, what's yours. :smalltongue:
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Light (Which kinda explains everything.)
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Okay, now that I have the time to do a full response:
Quote:
Okay, so show Haddock not being perverted, and make a point of showing some guys and girls explicitly not attracted to Melinda.
I addition to/instead of they non-interest, in my experience, guys usually try to build up a relationship to somebody they are attracted to, rather than proposition her right off the bat.
Quote:
So if I want to keep the same level of drama and comedy at least vary the jokes?
Yeah, jokes get old after a while, with the occasional exception of the well-used recurring joke.
Quote:
Well I tried showing Melinda's thoughts in the beginning. But it just didn't fit with her, she's not an open person. She's always looking for an angle or remaining guarded with her feelings. I felt that would be lost if I told you what she was thinking
It's an interesting difference from the norm, keep at it.
Quote:
I know what you're saying, but did Nino ever really do anything horrible.
How do you think Nino learned Elfire? Sonia wasn't going to teach her if she couldn't get some use out of her other than a scapegoat.
Quote:
Honestly to me, in a way it's less creepy. Think about it everyone uses Ditto for the production of eggs. Sometimes lots of eggs. If the ditto were like a normal person/pokemon, 9 times out of 10 you are probably having the other pokemon force itself on the ditto. At least this way the dittos like it.
I always had a slightly different mental portrayal of dittos. Namely, I have joked that ditto was an interesting if somewhat underpowered Pokemon in Gen I, but the introduction of breeding relegated it to the role of sex slave.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Okay, now that I have the time to do a full response:
I addition to/instead of they non-interest, in my experience, guys usually try to build up a relationship to somebody they are attracted to, rather than proposition her right off the bat.
Okay
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Yeah, jokes get old after a while, with the occasional exception of the well-used recurring joke.
I understand.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
It's an interesting difference from the norm, keep at it.
Okay. It helps that she has a mind reader so if I really need to show her thoughts I can have Jango say them.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
How do you think Nino learned Elfire? Sonia wasn't going to teach her if she couldn't get some use out of her other than a scapegoat.
Nino's illiterate though, Sonia didn't teach her anything, Nino spied on Sonia, and learned how to say the chants and memorized that.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
I always had a slightly different mental portrayal of dittos. Namely, I have joked that ditto was an interesting if somewhat underpowered Pokemon in Gen I, but the introduction of breeding relegated it to the role of sex slave.
Well if everyone uses the dittos for that, then they might as well like it.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Nino's illiterate though, Sonia didn't teach her anything, Nino spied on Sonia, and learned how to say the chants and memorized that.
Saying the verbal component without actually having the spell memorised doesn't do anything, though, like when V said SONIC really loud.
Quote:
Well if everyone uses the dittos for that, then they might as well like it.
Yeah. It just felt a little overboard.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Saying the verbal component without actually having the spell memorised doesn't do anything, though, like when V said SONIC really loud.
Yeah. It just felt a little overboard.
Different rules system though. Something about spirits and being magically gifted.
Okay I understand that.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Being Magically gifted is part of the D&D system, with spirits depending on campaign setting.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Illven
Wait. Since when can you use B word on the forum. I could have sworn that it was blocked. (I remember an argument that Rich had used it in the comic and people were arguing that they couldn't. Maybe I'm misremembering. :smallconfused:)
Luc used it once.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Illven
I don't get the reference.
Monty Python's The Argument Sketch? It's a classic, you really ought to see it.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YakYak
Being Magically gifted is part of the D&D system, with spirits depending on campaign setting.
Yeah but we're talking about Fire emblem,
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Penguinator
Luc used it once.
Monty Python's The Argument Sketch? It's a classic, you really ought to see it.
Well yeah but saying it in color is a way to go around the filter.
I've never watched Monty Python. I only know bits and pieces of it.
-
Re: Blazing hate A fire red nuzlocke
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Illven
Yeah but we're talking about Fire emblem,
Which is obviously based on D&D.