Fanstuff, flotsam

Apr 19, 2007 01:21

1) Global warming is an unpredictable enemy; every season it's something different. This winter's theme was "oh hey let's switch December and April and see if anyone notices". D: South of here it's all been rain, but we got rain and snow - three huge blizzards in as many weeks that turned to slush as soon as they hit the ground. It's a hard ( Read more... )

trinity blood, real life, weather

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woodburner April 19 2007, 05:29:26 UTC
I LOVE SETH SO MUCH. She is my favorite female character from that series. I'm rather fond of Aste, too. She's, um. Kind of sort of really hot. In the way that boys are hot. Despite the boobs and all. I mean.

(cough)

I once dreamed I had a teacher that looked exactly like an older version of one of my characters, and this kind of freaked me out, because the character is sort of trying to obliterate all existence. I don't think I've ever actually run across a person in real life that looked much like one of my characters, though.

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sub_divided April 19 2007, 06:19:07 UTC
I didn't watch too many episodes of Trinity Blade (the anime) but I saw enough to know that I HATE TRES. He'd have these scenes where he was supposed to be cool or something! And I was like, might as well think my blender is cool, it doesn't have a gun or a pretty face but it has whirling blades and can chop ice into tiny pieces.

...

I think you can consider him as having Robot Clone Moe if on top of the amputee thing and the secretly-awesome-just-shy thing, you add in the thing whereby insane fans will watch paint dry for five or six hours for the sake of one second of what-might-have-been-a-smile. Personally I think there's something masochistic about latching on to the most inexpressive character in a series hoping against hope that they will one day show expression. Futility! Give up! He's a damn robot!

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re_miel April 19 2007, 14:45:50 UTC
ROM III is where the series really starts to pick up. Esther never becomes less annoying or less a walking plot device artifact, but the sophistication of the world and the depth of its realisation begins at last to compensate for it. The real gems are ROM V and VI - they are a two-parter set in Albion, with all the British goodness one could hope for, and the nastiest cliffhanger at the end of V one could possibly imagine. I mean - if I was one of the Japanese readers who actually had to wait few months for ROM VI release, I'd be over to Kyoto with a large-caliber pump-action shotgun to do me some Yoshida-sensei hunting ( ... )

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