- Joined
- Mar 12, 2019
Oh no. Blindfold bros, I don't feel so good...JJK literally ended with a page showing Sukuna's middle finger to the reader. Lol.
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Oh no. Blindfold bros, I don't feel so good...JJK literally ended with a page showing Sukuna's middle finger to the reader. Lol.
More like Sukuna big fat cockJJK literally ended with a page showing Sukuna's middle finger to the reader. Lol.
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thnks for 6 years dorks, Off to write idol manga
i feel so vindicated right nowOh no. Blindfold bros, I don't feel so good...
Ah you probably confused it with the humble "Faggots" scene, where the mild mannered Mechazawa is called a fairy by the 16-year old 30-year olds in high school.I could have sworn it originally said "and you'll look like a fag."
That's a throwback, there used to be a trailer for that on my Revenge of Cooler dvd where it showed a holographic outline of the pilot sitting in the mech and it would crack us up every time because the music wants you to take it very seriouslyBlue Gender
basically giant bug monsters have taken over the earth and the saviour to defeat them as the guys were in cryogenic storage it's one of the older animes so it has that nineties 2000s look
also it's funny that the monsters appear in 2017 clearly this is an allegory for the social justice warriors
Trvke doe. If anime wasn't McDonald's conveyor belt slop nowadays, there wouldn't be so many isekai that all look and feel the same, and most battle shonen wouldn't fall apart so easily.
it's not even remotely what the anime is about I'd be kinda it just has one of those really bad endings where it's literally not even a final confrontation people need to stop writing these endings there's gotta be some deep philosophical meaning no I just wanna see giant Mecca beating bugs to death.That's a throwback, there used to be a trailer for that on my Revenge of Cooler dvd where it showed a holographic outline of the pilot sitting in the mech and it would crack us up every time because the music wants you to take it very seriously
I blame the popularity of that genre of anime more on the fact that society is basically falling apart and no one has a sense of community so why wouldn't people want the idea of starting over in a world free of suffering.Trvke doe. If anime wasn't McDonald's conveyor belt slop nowadays, there wouldn't be so many isekai that all look and feel the same, and most battle shonen wouldn't fall apart so easily.
I don’t think I care about “Grimjoker5572” from the YT comment section liking the same media as me.To think, despite how much anime has been beating the rest of media nowadays, some still call it little more than "Disney-lite McMedia corporate slop."
Sayuri sang theme songs for Lycoris Recoil, Scum's Wish, ERASED, My Hero Academia
The official X (formerly Twitter) account of singer Sayuri announced on Friday that Sayuri died on September 20. She was 28. Her relatives and close associates held a private funeral.
Sayuri's husband, the musician Amaarashi, said on his X/Twitter account that Sayuri had been fighting a chronic illness.
On July 25 earlier this year, Sayuri announced that she would go on hiatus due to suffering from functional dysphonia, a condition that causes someone's voice to sound strained or otherwise irregular, with no obvious physiological or neurological reasons. At the time, she said that she was seeing a speech therapist and vocal coach, but that she was feeling frustrated at not being able to express herself and connect to the world.
Sayuri has been active as a singer-guitarist in the local scene of her hometown of Fukuoka since her teenage years, forming the musical duo LONGTAL and performing in small music venues and busking. When she was 19 years old she made her major solo debut with the single "Mikazuki" in August 2016, which also served as the ending theme song for the Rampo Kitan: Game of Laplace anime. She has since performed theme songs for other anime, with some of her popular anime songs including "Hana no Tō" (Tower of Flower) from 2022's Lycoris Recoil, "Heikōsen" (Parallel Lines) from 2017's Scum's Wish, "Sore wa Chiisa na Hikari no yō na" (That Was Like a Small Light) from 2016's ERASED, and "Kōkai no Uta" (Song of Regret) from the fourth season of My Hero Academia in 2019, to name a few.
Sayuri married musician and vocalist Amaarashi on March 18 earlier this year.
There used to be a time when anime was so obscure people couldn't even bully you for being into it.It is a bit odd to see nowadays though, given how much more accepted the medium has become.

Last one for me was Alice in Borderland after i watched the Netflix show's first season. It had an interesting premise but is losing itself fast in its own bullshit and turns into complete slop a couple of volumes in. I just powered through it because i at least wanted to know how it ended. It must've been utterly shit because i couldn't remember how it did end even if my life depended on it. 2010+ manga just don't seem to do it for me in almost all cases. Ajin is a notable exception.You ever read a series and just hate it?
Yamamoto is an excellent mangaka, completely unique style. I'm a big fan of "Homonculus" even if it's full with troonery (to be fair, it came out long before troons went mainstream and ruined everything). Ichi was the first scan i've ever downloaded, love it.One of these days I'll reread Ichi The Killer, since last weeks it was reminded to me multiple times on Kiwifarms.
Loved the manga the first time.
I tried twice now to watch it and dropped it a couple of episodes in. I don't know why, it's fucking excellent and right up my alley. Well-animated, original story, great characters. I need to give it another shot.TEXHNOLYZE