Waytfm wrote:I'm the father. It happened during my short tenure as a dev. Our eyes met, and we were carried away on the rapids of raging hormones. It was wonderful. I regret nothing.
Sounds like a perfect porn plot. Will this be in Con Amore?
"With words like these, we DON'T CURE patients, we make them INCURABLE"
Saint Peter Canisius, S.J., on polemical attacks against John Calvin & Melanchton
Waytfm wrote:I'm the father. It happened during my short tenure as a dev. Our eyes met, and we were carried away on the rapids of raging hormones. It was wonderful. I regret nothing.
AAARRRRGH THE IMAGES!
The Last Melody wrote:The past doesn't forgive, it only teaches.
Terra of the Left, God's Right Seat wrote:Challenge me to your hearts content, then give up to your hearts content
Waytfm wrote:I'm the father. It happened during my short tenure as a dev. Our eyes met, and we were carried away on the rapids of raging hormones. It was wonderful. I regret nothing.
Sounds like a perfect porn plot. Will this be in Con Amore?
There might be a cameo.
Over the wintry
forest, winds howl in rage
with no leaves to blow.
-Soseki
Y'know, it's all well and good to celebrate certain character tropes that you enjoy when you see them in fiction, but it's another thing entirely to induce as many of them as possible while writing what should ideally be an original work. Not only does it result in downright bad writing most of the, it's one of the things I absolutely hate about the Tvtropes style of media fanboy.
I'm referring to those who trivialize fiction to the point where they seem to see it as nothing more than a collection of overplayed (or underplayed, pending personal opinion) parts which they seem to see as pretty much interchangeable.
I realize pretty much all products of creative thought are in some way derivative, but good fiction has an obligation to downplay this fact.
“It is sometimes an appropriate response to reality to go insane.”
― Philip K. Dick
This is part of why I dislike a lot of anime; people have too much of an obsession with certain character archetypes and story settings, and the producers, like all good capitalists, respond in kind.
It's gotten so bad that whenever there IS something produced which is either unique in an enjoyable, fashion or offers characters or settings which are relatable in a new way it gets swamped with attention. (Think Mahou Shoujo Madoka Magicka or It's Not My Fault I'm Not Popular!). This last part is really as it should be anyway, but I feel it does lend credence to my point.
“It is sometimes an appropriate response to reality to go insane.”
― Philip K. Dick
Snuffkin wrote:I'm referring to those who trivialize fiction to the point where they seem to see it as nothing more than a collection of overplayed (or underplayed, pending personal opinion) parts which they seem to see as pretty much interchangeable.