Imo, yes. This is where I started to enjoy it a lot more (although not as much as Rebels).People have said the show gets better eventually. Am I at that point now?
Imo, yes. This is where I started to enjoy it a lot more (although not as much as Rebels).People have said the show gets better eventually. Am I at that point now?
I did mention that the series in general gets a bit darker, but also better right around that point.People have said the show gets better eventually. Am I at that point now?
Rebels has a lot of the same problems early on that Clone Wars does, in that it can't decide how serious or how goofy it wants to be. It still measures out to be better than Clone Wars by the end.Imo, yes. This is where I started to enjoy it a lot more (although not as much as Rebels).
It's because it's not about whether or not the masks work, it's about resisting authority (something the South Park guys have always done, look back at the Man Bear Pig stuff) and maintaining the illusion of control. Republicans/conservatives resist mask mandates because it's an easy, performative way to stiggit to the Libs that doesn't have immediate, noticeable consequences that also allows them to pretend that the ongoing crisis isn't real. That it will kill some part of the people who perform it doesn't matter; as long as they can maintain the illusion of control, they can keep living in denial.It confuses me how someone has the cognitive dissonance to be bitterly pro vax but also anti mask?
Just wait until the second half of season 5.I'm having an increasingly harder time turning off Clone Wars. @AshburnerX was right. It gets WAY darker in Season 4.
Clone Troopers executing a Jedi that's turned to the dark side? Anakin dealing with slavers and watching one slave kill themselves? Holy shit.
The moment you realize that Teen Titans Go has had more seasons than the show it spawned from and arguably more good episodes.
I argue to this day that "Finally a Lesson" is one of the best episodes of ether series, by virtue of it being a wholly mean spirited take-that to the fans of the original series complaining about Go's "lack of lessons". The entire joke is that the lesson (how to invest in a rental property) is completely fucking boring and really doesn't pay off until years after the fact and even then only if you use someone else's money for the initial investment. It's just an entire episode of the show runners telling the people who don't watch their show to fuck off.
That seems like a strawman to me. Maybe I missed the larger discourse, but my complaint about TTG has never been about a lack of lessons. It was about Robin straight up acting like a villain for the sake of a joke, and having that done repeatedly. I don't care if there's a lesson. A lot of goofy, funny stories have been told in comics without a lesson, while the heroes still act like heroes.fans of the original series complaining about Go's "lack of lessons".
They definetely do a lot more subversive stuff or just plain commentary about the industry in general these days. The episode about the CoMpetetion trouncing them in the movies until Wonder Woman saves the day comes to mind (DC), or the several episodes about the actual production of the show that indicate the writers and production team are working at South Park's production pace to put out an average of 49 episodes a year.Much like Pez, my issues with TTG were the zanification of the characters into parody caricatures, the shift in tone and character development, and all in all it just started feeling more "producty" than previous. Maybe they decided to leverage their viewership capital into subversive lessons later, I don't know - they lost me at episode 1. Or really, even before that - they lost me in the board meeting where they decided on the change.
It's not a strawman. That episode was literally written because they got that complaint as feedback at one point. So they did the episode and made the lesson boring and adult-centric, despite being sound advice for anyone actually looking to do this. They do this a lot with the "hater episodes", which all invariably involve Control Freak acting as the mouth piece of the 2006 fans and the constant abuse the makers of THIS show get from them when they had nothing to do with the '06 series or it getting cancelled. Whether you like this show or not, they genuinely don't deserve the constant death threats they get and they apparently get a lot of them.That seems like a strawman to me. Maybe I missed the larger discourse, but my complaint about TTG has never been about a lack of lessons. It was about Robin straight up acting like a villain for the sake of a joke, and having that done repeatedly. I don't care if there's a lesson. A lot of goofy, funny stories have been told in comics without a lesson, while the heroes still act like heroes.
I guess that's the thing about strawmen these days, you can find just about anything said in a tweet, and say "See, the fans are saying this," and make it seem like it's not a strawman, because you've got a direct quote! Only that quote may not represent the majority of your critics. Hell, you can find an hour long YouTube video that you can use as "proof" and it won't necessarily be representative of any more than the smallest sliver of fans. I'm sure someone somewhere said "But where are the lessons?" and got some upvotes. Presenting that as the big reason why fans criticize TTGo! isn't necessarily fair, though. It certainly doesn't line up with the criticism I've seen of TTGo! on Tumblr or any of my social media feeds.It's not a strawman. That episode was literally written because they got that complaint as feedback at one point.
Wasn’t sure where to put this, but I think I found the next animation several of y’all will be watching
As with all things, $.If light sabers were do effective against droids, why were they not standard issue for clone troops?
Dude, a farm boy trying to fuck his sister figured it out. Roll Tide! /s(The parts and expertise to make a light saber would probably be several times that of any other man-portable weapon system)
And yet they almost always end up in melee with the droids, which is part of the trope I suppose that comes with the medium of presentation. My favourite example being that droids communicate verbally so the audience can understand.Honestly, it's likely more than ANY quality melee weapon would do the job (vibroblade, electrostaff, etc) but why put your troops into melee range
Yeah, but he was born a space wizard and didn't know it.Dude, a farm boy trying to fuck his sister figured it out. Roll Tide! /s
And 500 MW lasers lose their cohesion at half that distance!One thing I love about the Battletech universe is the economics of it. It's annoying yet realistic, which for a game where long range missiles don't fly over a kilometer is hilarious.
I asked a friend once why, if overheating a mech isn't just a possiblility but a viable battle strategy to the point of carrying around flamethrowers and napalam rockets, they didn't also carry around tanks/missiles filled with liquid nitrogen... the idea being you'd heat up a mech then shatter it's armor via thermal expansion/contraction with the quick changes in temperature.One thing I love about the Battletech universe is the economics of it. It's annoying yet realistic, which for a game where long range missiles don't fly over a kilometer is hilarious.
Nah, some crazy bearded hobo taught him. That kid didn't have a clue until he got his hands on 'im. That's why you don't let 'em near your kids! Owen and Beru were right!Dude, a farm boy trying to fuck his sister figured it out. Roll Tide! /s
Their atmosphere is REALLY thick.500 MW lasers lose their cohesion at half that distance!
Holy shit, that was gorgeous.
I showed Hailey this over Christmas Break. I think the only time Opus and the gang have been animated before.
I get the feeling Trey and Matt also stopped caring a long time ago.I just don't god damn care any more