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Testekill posted:That's the thing about Tropers. They think that everyone is aware of trope names and in-jokes. Case in point, their go-to for "manipulative villain who doesn't lose" is a guy from a forgettable 90's cartoon.
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 08:56 |
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# ? May 24, 2024 15:32 |
Razorwired posted:Case in point, their go-to for "manipulative villain who doesn't lose" is a guy from a forgettable 90's cartoon. poo poo on TVTropes all you want but Gargoyles is loving unimpeachable that show ruuuuuled when I was a lil'un.
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 09:09 |
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Testekill posted:That's the thing about Tropers. They think that everyone is aware of trope names and in-jokes. Yeah, Awakening really brought out the anime creepers and shipping sperglords in full force to the fandom. It's perfect for Tropers. Jerry Manderbilt fucked around with this message at 09:20 on Nov 4, 2013 |
# ? Nov 4, 2013 09:16 |
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Razorwired posted:Case in point, their go-to for "manipulative villain who doesn't lose" is a guy from a forgettable 90's cartoon. I've always been confused about Gargoyles, because over here in Australia it never got any airtime at all. Was that something that some random tropers and such latched onto as a thing in enough people's common knowledge to use as a touchstone, or was it actually big? Either way, the Xanatos Gambit is dumb as poo poo, because that tells you literally nothing about what it is. It's a gambit, but beyond that you're kinda hosed unless you remember the exact cartoon these guys do in the exact same way. It's always confused me how they didn't rename that, but did rename the tangentially-related 'Thirty Five Minutes Ago' (which is now You Are Too Late) despite that both being far more indicative of the trope and a reference to a thing people actually know. Hell, it'd be better for both of those if they renamed it the 'Ozymandias Gambit', because not only was Ozymandias' plan secure no matter what anyone did, he's also loving Ozymandias so anybody who's goign to the site probably knows who he is anyway. I know I know, nitpicking about something we've already covered. But jesus christ, it's so easy to fix!
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 09:16 |
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Cleretic posted:I've always been confused about Gargoyles, because over here in Australia it never got any airtime at all. Was that something that some random tropers and such latched onto as a thing in enough people's common knowledge to use as a touchstone, or was it actually big? I wouldn't say it was particularly huge; it ran for a couple of seasons in syndication in the mid-90s. The main things I remember about it are that a) it was surprisingly dark for a Disney cartoon; and b) it featured a lot of voice actors from Star Trek: TNG.
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 14:47 |
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Cleretic posted:It's always confused me how they didn't rename that, but did rename the tangentially-related 'Thirty Five Minutes Ago' (which is now You Are Too Late) despite that both being far more indicative of the trope and a reference to a thing people actually know. Hell, it'd be better for both of those if they renamed it the 'Ozymandias Gambit', because not only was Ozymandias' plan secure no matter what anyone did, he's also loving Ozymandias so anybody who's goign to the site probably knows who he is anyway. On the other hand, it confused the rear end off me, because I thought you were referring to the Shelley poem. I had a long moment of, 'What on earth kind of character plans to have their own creations fall to dust and be forgotten?' before I realised what you were getting at. Now that might actually make an interesting story.
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 18:31 |
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Have we talked about the Tropes you've always wanted to avert or subvert thread over in Writer's Block? It's the perfect example of what's wrong with the Troper approach to writing. For instance:quote:For me it's Puberty Superpower, don't know why it's just that it's so ubiquitous. Okay, you have a character whose superpower manifests at a time other than puberty. So what? quote:The tropes where children or dogs are not brutally killed on screen. I forgot the actual names but I'd love to see babies bayoneted or animals massacred. Not some blurry aftershots. quote:
That's... a lot of rape talk there. Yikes. quote:Heel-Face Turn, of any sort. Especially High Heel-Face Turn. So you have a villain who... stays a villain? How original. And I haven't even gotten past page 1 of the thread yet.
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 18:51 |
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DaveWoo posted:That's... a lot of rape talk there. Yikes. I dunno, he's speaking against some pretty problematic treatments of rape that actually are common in media, so by troper standards it's not so bad.
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 21:10 |
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Flesnolk posted:I dunno, he's speaking against some pretty problematic treatments of rape that actually are common in media, so by troper standards it's not so bad. Yeah, but then you've got the "weak people are weak people" line and a general weird aura of bitterness. This guy's awareness about rape is better than most Tropers, but I still wouldn't want to sit next to him on an airplane.
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 21:24 |
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Antivehicular posted:Yeah, but then you've got the "weak people are weak people" line and a general weird aura of bitterness. This guy's awareness about rape is better than most Tropers, but I still wouldn't want to sit next to him on an airplane. You can tell a lot about the person who wrote all this poo poo too. Dude is probably a homophobe, doesn't like or respect men who are non-traditionally masculine and has obviously spent a lot of time fantasizing about inflicting violence on anyone who dares to buttsex him up.
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 21:52 |
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DaveWoo posted:Okay, you have a character whose superpower manifests at a time other than puberty. So what? How is it even "ubiquitous"? I can't think of a single superhero who got their superpowers at puberty other than the X-Men. Is it an anime thing? Looking at the trope page, they don't even have a lot of anime examples. Most of the examples are tween-targeted TV shows poo poo like Sabrina the Teenage Witch, except half the entries under Live Action TV are aversions or subversions or inversions or other non-examples. (You'd think an inversion would be "the character loses superpowers at puberty", but here the example they give is "After Butcher's wife was raped by a superhero, she dies when the unborn super-powered fetus literally rips itself out of her womb." Non-example + Rape = Inversion! ) Of course, even if it were ubiquitous, any attempts to "subvert" it would be either unremarkable or stupid ("At age 15, Billy gained the power to fly! ...but it was just a dream, instead he gained super-strength at age 37"), but it still seems like a bizarre thing to describe as "ubiquitous". Maybe everything just seems ubiquitous to tropers because everything that isn't an example is a somethingversion and therefore still an example?
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 21:55 |
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Spider-Man, maybe? Although his power wasn't related to puberty, he just happened to get bitten by a spider when he was in his teens and the story dealt with his life as an awkward adolescent as well as being a superhero. Harry Potter, at a pinch, though he'd always had his magic powers, and what he really got was the chance to go to Hogwarts and learn to use them. I can't think of any others, unless you consider coming-of-age stories where a character learns some skills or wisdom to be "getting a superpower".
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 22:16 |
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Yeah, a lot of superheroes are introduced around puberty because the powers are a vehicle to talk about the changes that happen in growing up. "With great power comes great responsibility" is one of the most iconic comic lines because it also speaks to the audience. The X-Men style mutants are the easiest example of adolescent heroes because their power usually manifests literally because of puberty. Spider-Man would count as would The Runaways, the kids in Future Foundation, Captain Marvel or maybe Power Pack. You can also see the theme outside of traditional comics. Gunnerkrigg Court features teenagers/pre-teens discovering supernatural abilities. And they're a year or two off but Cucumber Quest and Paranatural feature kids close to the same age group developing powers/heroic skills. In books you have Harry Potter or The Secrets of Nicholas Flamel. The theme is pervasive because teens and preteens are/were comic books' primary audience. So it was an easy way to convey certain themes to them using an entertaining and engaging tool. If you wanted to invert this in a meaningful way I would guess you could show kids with big, wild powers settling down and becoming more mundane as they grew up. Maybe you could count how Neverland doesn't want you to grow up. Or how the titular monsters of Monsters and Other Childish Things fade away as the kids get older because children are the only ones emotionally vulnerable enough to maintain relationships with the emotionally needy and irrational monsters. Or if you're a troper you could just talk about rape or go into wish-fulfillment. Because everyone knows that Spider-Man would have been a much better character if he was awesome and perfect at first, saved Uncle Ben and walked around being a Deadpan Snarker in a Love Triangle with Tsundere girlfriend Gwen Stacy and Fiery Redhead Mary-Jane
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 22:49 |
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Razorwired posted:Because everyone knows that Spider-Man would have been a much better character if he was awesome and perfect at first, saved Uncle Ben and walked around being a Deadpan Snarker in a Love Triangle with Tsundere girlfriend Gwen Stacy and Fiery Redhead Mary-Jane Believe it or not, the Spider-Man cartoon from the 1990s had Peter Parker meeting versions of himself from alternate universes. One of them came from a universe where he saved Uncle Ben; he is a multi-billionaire, a national celebrity, the world's greatest hero, owner of a giant Spider-Man robot, engaged to Gwen Stacy, and the Kingpin is his lawyer while J. Jonah Jameson is his godfather. He is also a tremendous rear end in a top hat (dare I say, a Deadpan Snarker ) who never has to try (perhaps he is Brilliant But Lazy ) and almost messes up their entire mission because he's so used to winning he doesn't even consider the possibility of failure.
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 23:06 |
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Lottery of Babylon posted:Is it an anime thing? The answer to this is always yes. "Teenage girls who get themed powers to fight demons or aliens or whatever" is an entire genre in and of itself. Also, the plot premise of almost literally every single Sci Fi or Fantasy Young Adult series is about the main characters balancing their new secret powers and/or destiny with everyday teenager stuff.
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 23:15 |
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And don't forget that Deboss Approved™ timeless classic: the Animorphs cycle.
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# ? Nov 4, 2013 23:55 |
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Lottery of Babylon posted:Of course, even if it were ubiquitous, any attempts to "subvert" it would be either unremarkable or stupid ("At age 15, Billy gained the power to fly! ...but it was just a dream, instead he gained super-strength at age 37"), but it still seems like a bizarre thing to describe as "ubiquitous". Maybe everything just seems ubiquitous to tropers because everything that isn't an example is a somethingversion and therefore still an example? I dunno, I think it would be kind of neat to have a story where you have some superkid who has spent their elementary school years showing amazing powers and everyone expects they're going to be this amazing hero and then he or she hits puberty and all their powers suddenly disappear and they become an ordinary person and have to deal with that. Or a story where a kid develops magical or psychic powers when they start high school, but it's all a delusion, leading to failure after failure. Not that I think any troper could actually pull something like that off, or any really skillful "subversion." When you are so caught up in obsessing over pop culture, I think it's a stretch that you are going to be able to produce anything but pale imitations of the stuff you admire.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 00:27 |
Lowly posted:I dunno, I think it would be kind of neat to have a story where you have some superkid who has spent their elementary school years showing amazing powers and everyone expects they're going to be this amazing hero and then he or she hits puberty and all their powers suddenly disappear and they become an ordinary person and have to deal with that. Or a story where a kid develops magical or psychic powers when they start high school, but it's all a delusion, leading to failure after failure. To an extent, this sort of reminds me of Matilda. The kid protagonist is clearly at least several years smarter than she actually is, and eventually starts exhibiting psychic/magic powers. At the very end, it's mentioned in passing that, thanks to being placed several years ahead in school, she's become too distracted with her schoolwork to be able to focus on her powers any more.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 00:58 |
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The thing that bothers me with the "subverted trope" thing on TV Tropes is that playing with cliches and concepts of a genre is something writers often do, at least if they're any good -- but that's different from just "something other than this trope happened," which is the criteria Tropers use. Like, I guess you could have a setting where the superpowers are held by children/teens, who maybe even want to do good but are too immature and overemotional to understand their actions. It'd be sort of like that one apocryphal gospel where Kid Jesus gets mad at a playmate and strikes him down with God's power... but then brings him back to life later when his parents properly explain death's consequences. A work like that might be an intentional reversal of the way that most superheroes are either maturing or mature when they get their powers, but it also could just be someone who came up with that idea from looking at or raising kids and seeing what they do when they pretend to have superpowers. And it's definitely not the case with some character who just... got powers at some other time because the writer didn't care about that part of writing a superhero. Incidentally, as another example of how Tropers have trouble with writing, here's someone talking about what went wrong with a horrible pony fanfic that they wrote: quote:Project Horizons is too large. Simply stated, I messed up. I tried to weave three or four novels into one and it hasn't worked as well as I would like. I would have been much better served writing 4 consecutive novels with one overarching metaplot than trying to get everything in one go. Unfortunately, I was so desperate to keep ONE goal in mind that I just threw them all together. You know, it's rare to find someone willing to be even a little self-critical on the TV Tropes forums, so I guess I'll give a little credit for that, but all of what this guy says is very telling about how this community tends to approach writing: you start at the beginning, and you write until the end, and you never, ever stop.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 01:04 |
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Oh god, Project Horizons. The fact that the author is a troper explains so much, including the disgustingly long TV Tropes page.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 01:15 |
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Reminder that Project Horizons is fanfic based off of My Little Pony/Fallout 3 fanfic. Also it's full of rape and pissing and making GBS threads with a lot more rape on the top. I know this because a sample was posted in an earlier TV Tropes thread and I will never ever be able to forget what it contained.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 01:23 |
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Vincent Van Goatse posted:Reminder that Project Horizons is fanfic based off of My Little Pony/Fallout 3 fanfic. Also it's full of rape and pissing and making GBS threads with a lot more rape on the top. I know this because a sample was posted in an earlier TV Tropes thread and I will never ever be able to forget what it contained. that just makes it even more perfect.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 01:25 |
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You know, I've just remembered something which I discovered between this thread and the previous one. I shall share it now. Behold The Stationery Voyagers. I have no idea what this is supposed to be.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 01:41 |
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DaveWoo posted:Have we talked about the Tropes you've always wanted to avert or subvert thread over in Writer's Block? It's the perfect example of what's wrong with the Troper approach to writing. For instance: Make the character a woman whose superpowers develop at menopause. Now, everyone laugh as you try to imagine Tropers writing not just women but women who are over 50 or so.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 02:03 |
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crowfeathers posted:TLike, I guess you could have a setting where the superpowers are held by children/teens, who maybe even want to do good but are too immature and overemotional to understand their actions. It'd be sort of like that one apocryphal gospel where Kid Jesus gets mad at a playmate and strikes him down with God's power... but then brings him back to life later when his parents properly explain death's consequences. A work like that might be an intentional reversal of the way that most superheroes are either maturing or mature when they get their powers, but it also could just be someone who came up with that idea from looking at or raising kids and seeing what they do when they pretend to have superpowers. And it's definitely not the case with some character who just... got powers at some other time because the writer didn't care about that part of writing a superhero. I remember seeing someone once write about a mutant who had his powers develop when he was fifty. It was a bit unconventional, but it worked since he seemed to be playing up the whole 'life turned upside-down by unexpected change' thing. Something destroying someone's life works so much better when it's an extremely established one, and it works with the metaphor for homosexuality that seems really popular among people writing mutants.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 02:12 |
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Cleretic posted:Either way, the Xanatos Gambit is dumb as poo poo, because that tells you literally nothing about what it is. It's a gambit, but beyond that you're kinda hosed unless you remember the exact cartoon these guys do in the exact same way. My favorite thing about the nerd-worship of Xanatos is that he literally does two things in the first season of Gargoyles. He engages in business ventures in order to gain profit. He hires some mercenaries under a fake persona to steal items he wants acquired/attack people he doesn't like. To Tropers, these things apparently make him some sort of incredible mastermind the likes of which has never been matched.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 02:38 |
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I thought my memory wasn't playing tricks on me. I watched the series last year, and it totally holds up, but yeah, when you get right down to it, a Xanatos Gambit is really just making deals, double-crossing, and finding ways to take advantage of any situation. By this logic, Doctor Doom uses a Xanatos Gambit every time it turns out it was a Doombot. I suppose he comes close when he travels back in time and mails himself the coin that he received when he was young that was so valuable by then that it launched his fortune and oh god what am I doing.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 03:05 |
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I thought the original point of the whole "Xanatos" things was how often he set up binary situations where, either way, he "wins" - you know, that thing every single recurring villain in every series does? It's just that TvTropes missed the point that you're supposed to hate the guy doing the "which one will you save, Mr. Bond?" routine, and cheer when the hero finds a third option.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 04:04 |
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It's the Troper perspective on fiction, where stories occur organically as a result of another, fixed universe's conditions and not the whim of a human author. So Xanatos's various plots always coming together make him a cunning, all-seeing genius, rather than a pile of contrivances and "That was the plan all along" retcons.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 06:50 |
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Cease to Hope posted:It's the Troper perspective on fiction, where stories occur organically as a result of another, fixed universe's conditions and not the whim of a human author. So Xanatos's various plots always coming together make him a cunning, all-seeing genius, rather than a pile of contrivances and "That was the plan all along" retcons. I'm pretty sure that is another different trope that I can't remember the name of because tropers are horrible and are actively destroying language.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 06:59 |
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Hoover Dam posted:Make the character a woman whose superpowers develop at menopause. Now, everyone laugh as you try to imagine Tropers writing not just women but women who are over 50 or so. There was a show like this. It was called Super Gran. TVTropes Entry for Super Gran posted:We don't have an article named Main/SuperGran. If you want to start this new page, just click the edit button above. Be careful, though, the only things that go in the Main namespace are tropes. Don't put in redirects for shows, books, etc.. Use the right namespace for those. Well, thank loving god for that.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 07:39 |
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So, what horrors are Tropers making this November?
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 08:00 |
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Anticheese posted:So, what horrors are Tropers making this November? Horror? Let's roleplay with the tropers in this spooky survival horror RP! Character introductions! quote:Saito of Public Security Section 9 found himself on an empty, abandoned and eerily quiet subway station platform underground. Spooky worldbuilding! Who else is joining us in our venture into terror? quote:"Those weapons will be the least of my wounds...." Why it's Zangief, a character from the famous Street Fighter series of horror games! And who's that over there? quote:Singed came to in a strange tunnel of some kind, with some sort of standoff happening before him. I don't remember this map. How badly have the summoners screwed up, anyway? Singed thinks, grabbing his poison gas switch, being careful not to flick it on, and approaching the standoff. These are strange champions. In fact, I can't see their health bar. Missing health bars? Terrifying! quote:Red released three of his best 'mons. ...yes. But I was too scared to continue, so we'll have to stop here.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 08:12 |
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crowfeathers posted:Why it's Zangief I'm not sure what it says about me that that description of the 'gief is the most legitimately enjoyable thing I've ever seen on TVTropes. I hope that dude just has Zangief wrassle the inevitable zombies of the weeaboo apocalypse.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 09:11 |
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Antivehicular posted:I'm not sure what it says about me that that description of the 'gief is the most legitimately enjoyable thing I've ever seen on TVTropes. I hope that dude just has Zangief wrassle the inevitable zombies of the weeaboo apocalypse. Even Tropers can't ruin Zangief. Fact.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 09:25 |
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Antivehicular posted:I'm not sure what it says about me that that description of the 'gief is the most legitimately enjoyable thing I've ever seen on TVTropes. I hope that dude just has Zangief wrassle the inevitable zombies of the weeaboo apocalypse. Hope fulfilled: quote:"Better form, my ugly friend!" Zangief shouted at the charging Napad, "But not quite enough!" The towering communist sought to use the momentum and weight of the bio-weapon against it, using it's slightly superior height as a means of grabbing at it's right leg, and using his other hand to block the corresponding arm's movement by locking the armpit.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 09:33 |
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Metal Loaf posted:You know, I've just remembered something which I discovered between this thread and the previous one. I shall share it now. Behold The Stationery Voyagers. I have no idea what this is supposed to be. That is a loving wormhole to a land of insanity and lovely Sims-based comics. From what I can gather from the ridiculously extensive trope pages and the literal wiki this guy made for his works, it's someone who is about a 8.33 repeating with a plus or minus five percent on a scale of 1 to Ulililia. (Note that this is all one guy. 'Dozerfleet' is his name for anything he does.) Dozerfleet Productions posted:Dozerfleet Productions is an independent entertainment think tank and warehouse founded on October 12th of 1994, receiving its current name on May 10th of 2006. It has several outlets for entertainment purposes, including a DeviantArt outlet. Showcases of Dozerfleet content are on AmIRight as well. Dozerfleet Productions also has DozerfleetWiki, The Dozerfleet Blog, and a few other major divisions. Fact of the Month, November 2012 posted:In October of 2006, it was predicted that the Dozerfleet founder's Facebook page had a greater likelihood of lasting long-term. It was assumed, however, that the MySpace page would also be around for a while. Instead, the latter only lasted three years total. Fact of the Month, August 2013 posted:Sodality: Battle for Metheel is the first major video game pitch for Dozerfleet Comics ever to have an article about its premise feature on DozerfleetWiki. While other thoughts did exist for a possible video game, none were taken that far prior. Around the same time, a second game premise was inceived; dubbed The Gerosha Chronicles: Centipede + 49. Fact of the Month, May 2012: loving Batshit Edition posted:The so-called "War on Women" that Nancy Pelosi speaks of is nothing more than a buzzword catchphrase for "anyone who opposes the modern-day worship of Moloch that abortion is." Michele Bachmann laughs this off below: DVD-Storybook-Hybrid Webcomic posted:A DVD-Storybook-Hybrid Webcomic, or DSHW, is a special format of online comic, the term being coined by the founder of Dozerfleet on Friday, May 23rd of 2008 around 10:50 PM EDT. A few Dozerfleet works were created using the format. In 2013, further pursuit of the format was put on a shelf, as complications in its improvement and development came to a screeching halt in late 2012. Promotion of the format became even more complicated in April of 2013 with the announcement by DeviantArt of having teamed up with MadeFire to produce the MotionBook format, which was seen as more marketable. DSHW Version 3 posted:The planned third version of DSHW comes in two main flavors: Basic and Throwback. Specified along with automation options, there are a total of six children that make up the third generation of this format: DSHW-3-BA, DSHW-3-BS, DSHW-3-BM, DSHW-3-TA, DSHW-3-TS, and DSHW-3-TM. The BM and TM versions would be the most common, since the automation in BA and TA are for very special occasions where full DVD script behavior is desired. The BS and TS would also be rare as those semi-automatic versions are only beneficial for short slideshow DSHWs. Note that what he's talking about is literally just a webcomic. Maybe with an autotimer to go to the next page. He has 'history' pages detailing the history of his 'company'. What's Hot This Year 1984 posted:The Dozerfleet founder's first high school crush, Carly, was born on March 28th of 1984. What's Hot This Year 1986 posted:This is the earliest that the Dozerfleet founder can remember being allowed to watch The Empire Strikes Back on VHS. The brothers were hooked on Star Wars, watching the film repeatedly. The Dozerfleet founder began analyzing every scene that he could comprehend, and found himself both aspiring to one day make a movie as well as having a thing for critiquing film. He wished R2-D2 could have been real. And not understanding cauterization at the time, he found the bloodless amputation of Luke's hand "very unrealistic." A 3-year-old found the scene unrealistic. Other films were watched frequently back then on VHS, such as Charlotte's Web. What's Hot This Year 1989 posted:This was a brief move, as the new house wasn't ready yet; but the rent expired on the Kenosha house. A new rental house popped up soon thereafter. This year marked the beginning of the end of Ronald Regan's shining star. Virtually everything he did to save America was soon being undone by the RINO known as George H.W. Bush. However, the Dozerfleet founder was not politically aware in this year; other than being aware that the news media was completely obsessed with this thing called "global warming" that made no sense. What's Hot This Year 1998 posted:The new kids, with one girl in particular being a ringleader, lured several of the main class to a party. At said party, they passed around illegally-obtained cigarettes and encouraged the kids to smoke. In the case of some, they practically hazed/blackmailed them into trying it. Foolishly, but also out of rebellion for the school being "stupidly strict" about its enforcement of even the pettiest regulations, the kids decided to act out and accept the offer. What's Hot This Year 1999 posted:As the end of school neared, she felt she needed to get it off her chest. Carly informed the Dozerfleet founder that she would not be returning to SML for the fall of 1999. After all they'd been through together, it shocked him that this would be it. In the days before Comcast Xfinity high-speed internet at the Grand Ledge House, there was only the 1995-purchased Compaq Presario. It had dial-up, and ran old-school CompuServe. That was pretty much it as far as Internet access. Carly herself didn't really have much in the way of web access either. There was no Facebook or MySpace or Pinterest or Google+. Cell phones were not ubiquitous. Long distance landline calls were a fortune. Though she was only 14-some miles away, she may as well have been moving to the moon. What's Hot This Year 1999 posted:[He starts working at a grocery store and injures his leg while mowing the lawn.] What's Hot This Year 2000 posted:When the Dozerfleet founder visited Carly in the summer of 2000, he asked her if she'd read the recent issue about the inception of Stationery Voyagers. She seemed confused. He walked away, convinced that she didn't care. After all, she wasn't even bothering to read Yo-Splaz! anymore. If she cared, she wouldn't be so clueless. Deep down, he cared about her, and always would. But it hurt too much to think about. So he tried to bury his feelings for her, and find someone else to care about. Purging his need for Carly would prove a fruitless exercise, however. The other girls at SML were not the innocent creatures that were advertised. There were constantly on the prowl, looking for bad boys that they could use. These girls had issues with their home lives, and wanted to act out by drinking and having sex without getting in trouble. The boys at SML, for the most part, were too squeaky clean for purposes of that agenda. And since the Dozerfleet founder was practically a Boy Scout compared to what they wanted, he stood no chance and had no credibility with them. The flirting process went nowhere, providing a constant source of frustration. You hear that Carly? TRIVIAL What's Hot This Year 2001 posted:[He starts getting feelings for a friend's sister.]
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 09:50 |
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crowfeathers posted:Hope fulfilled: "The big socialist piledrivered the zombie ..." "The doddering crypto-anarchist shouted very loudly ..." "The huge democrat swung the chain horizontally ..."
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 10:44 |
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Vincent Van Goatse posted:Reminder that Project Horizons is fanfic based off of My Little Pony/Fallout 3 fanfic. Also it's full of rape and pissing and making GBS threads with a lot more rape on the top. I know this because a sample was posted in an earlier TV Tropes thread and I will never ever be able to forget what it contained. Please tell me you have a link to this.
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 12:38 |
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# ? May 24, 2024 15:32 |
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Oh man this Dozerfleet stuff is amazing. It's like if Henry Darger was a troper.quote:Cataclysmic Gerosha is one of many narrative universes to comprise the overall Gerosha multiverse, homeworld of The Gerosha Chronicles in Dozerfleet Comics, with the Earth number designation of Earth-G7. It is a deviation from the historical timeline in Comprehensive Gerosha, predicting a very different world. Comprehensive Gerosha was based on the assumption of a thriving US economy following a victory by Romney for president in 2012. When that didn't happen, there were suspicions that much of the continuity beyond the year 2018 would be unreliable. Therefore, Cataclysmic Gerosha reimagines the Ciem mythos in particular around the premise that Obama's winning of a second term will lead to the United States being dissolved in the year 2018. THANKS OBAMA, NOW MY CONTINUITY IS hosed quote:Early history 'Marlquaan' links to a page under construction. quote:Candi is the single most-frequently-decapitated character second only to Laura Herrante in Stationery Voyagers: Final Hope. The Hebbleskins have specific orders for how they want her beheading carried out: fully nude, on a block, her facing down, the ax falling down on her from her left side, head into a basket, no blindfold. To date, counting all versions of the character, her head has been chopped off 13 times. quote:Due to Sam's history of being a (mostly) mute serial rapist, he and his bond to the Marlquaan are cursed. His descendants have a supernaturally intensified libido that complicates their lives. If they live in a sex-obsessed culture, this problem increases ten-fold. Any daughter of any descendant of Samuel will merely be plagued with a libido powerful enough to make her consider foregoing self-respect. Any son, if conceived in rape, will be prone to becoming a mute serial rapist like his father. ...I unironically love the titles he comes up with, though. 'Vile Magenta Cloak'. '90 Has No Secant'. 'Caloric Attitudes'. Also there is a character called Sniperbadger which is badass ok
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# ? Nov 5, 2013 14:06 |