Silver Tongue
santas-413th-doctor:
“ bakabutt-nerdlord:
“ remember that time when rose used a burning planet as a fucking booklight
”
This is the post that made me start reading homestuck
”

santas-413th-doctor:

bakabutt-nerdlord:

remember that time when rose used a burning planet as a fucking booklight

This is the post that made me start reading homestuck

Nothing has excited me more than finagling my way to a place i shouldnt be able to yet in the randomizer

silver-tongues-blog:

Streaming wind waker randomizer

Streaming wind waker randomizer

pyrlspite:
“ spikedbat:
“” ”

bellatrixship:

teaboot:

teaboot:

teaboot:

The Male Chivalry fandom absolutely ruins their pants over the Defending A Woman’s Honor trope but cannot comprehend the Woman Defends Her Own Honor scenario and that’s why strong female characters get dumped on

Man punches a man who catcalls me on the street? A hero. A role model. I should marry him. I punch a man who catcalls me on the street? Overreaction. Crazy SJW feminist. It was a compliment. Why do we glorify violence. I’m the real bad guy

Kinda makes you wonder if my honor is really the motive here tbh

image

Originally posted by giantmonster

comicberks:
“#I believe in Battinson
”

comicberks:

#I believe in Battinson

neurodivergent-crow:

batmanisagatewaydrug:

johnnythirteenguns:

andromeda3116:

so i saw some people discussing how loki in ragnarok shouldn’t have been at all phased or subverted by dr. strange – which i agree with, but also, hey, it’s comedic and you can argue that he was taken off-guard, but upon re-watch, something stuck out to me –

there’s this moment when they appear at the bottom of the stairs and thor rolls down the last couple and stands up and he says

we could’ve just walked.

and it made me think of how magic works in terry pratchett’s novels, how (to paraphrase) the hard part wasn’t turning someone into a frog, it was not turning someone into a frog when you knew how easy it was.

like, the whole scene with dr. strange is just. all magic. all pointless magic. unnecessary magic, when, well. they could have just walked.

whereas loki doesn’t really rely on magic overmuch in the movie – he uses it as a tool, when he needs it, but if the job can be done with plain old non-magical trickery or a knife, he just uses those. he resorts to magic when he’s cornered by valkyrie, he uses it when his goals are most directly accomplished by using magic rather than by other means.

whereas dr. strange is using magic all over his scene, just to use it. just because he can. magic was unnecessary for ninety percent of what he did in that scene, the only time he needed magic was to whisk them away to norway. but he teleported all over the place even when he only needed to move a few feet, gave thor an ever-refilling beer that just spilled everywhere, floated around to make a show of how ~magical~ he was, when…

he could have just walked.

i mean, i’m very sure that the filmmakers intended it for comedic effect, but there’s also a layer there of dr. strange being much less comfortable with magic than loki is – loki doesn’t need to bust out the magic at every opportunity, it’s simply a skill, a tool that is completely under his control and at his disposal. whereas dr. strange (at least in his scene in ragnarok) is showing off, which reeks of insecurity.

i guess i’m thinking… if you take the magic away, loki is still a deadly, formidable opponent with many tricks up his sleeve, but dr. strange is just a guy in a cape.

this is good and true because in the comics loki and dr strange got in a fight in a parking lot and then both of them had their magic taken away so loki just punched stephen through a wall and called it a gay ass day

in fairness most days for Loki are gay ass days regardless of how many wizards he punches

Good post everyone