#this is literally the last thing you should say to your son who is clearly in the middle of a psychological breakdown #after learning he was adopted from a race he was taught to hate his whole life #and is now hanging over the abyss of space pleading with you to accept the monster he thinks he is #after you went to sleep right in the middle of the big reveal and left him to rule a whole planet #in what is probably the most emotionally crippling state of his life #literally the last thing you should fucking say
Also of notice: this is the last time Loki called Odin “Father”. He didn’t stop doing it after learning of his origin. He stopped after THIS.
Alright RPC – We Gotta Talk About Passive Replies.
This is one of my worst pet peeves in Role playing or doing any
collaborative writing with other people. It’s something I myself have
been guilty of, especially if my muse is running low and I am forcing
out replies. It’s something I see a lot of even from very good
writers. It’s a widespread problem, that is exhausting for an RP
partner to deal with in threads especially if it’s every reply.And just like any problem – the first step in resolving it is
looking out for it and realizing it’s there to begin with. Being
conscious about this I personally believe separates a good RP partner
from a great one.I’m talking about passive replies.
Passive replies come in various forms. They can be anything from a
novella sized reply – to a one-liner but they all share a similar
trait. They do not contribute to pushing the action of a thread
forward. They tend to be a summary of the reply preceding it
through their character’s eyes with a small verbal or nonverbal
reaction to the character they are interacting with. They do not add
any new information for the other character to react to because the
reply is pure reaction without any proactive elements.This means your thread basically becomes the equivalent of a
conversation like this:Hey, you!
Oh, Hey!
How are you?
Oh, I’m good.
What are you up to?
Nothing
much, really.
Have any plans?
No. Not really.It’s a functional conversation – sure, but it’s one-sided and
relies on one person driving the action while the other simply
responds. It is exhausting for one mun to constantly be the one
driving the action of a scene forward. It makes things harder to
respond to because you’re giving your RP partner fairly little to
work with. The example above is obviously an extremely simplified example – but I hope you can get the gist of what I am getting at.Even if your character is shy, or anti-social, or maladjusted in
someway – your replies can still play and active role in the
situation. Being an active participant in a thread doesn’t meant that
your muse has to be crazy and outgoing. It means that you have to do
more than simply react to what is happening. Every reply should add
at least one new thing for your partner to react to.This can be anything from adding to the conversation – not just
reacting to what was said prior. This can be your character doing
some non verbal action. This could be and NPC or outside situation or
the weather doing something to react to. No matter what the situation
is – there are things your muse can do to be an active part of the
scene, and not just a reactionary prop.If your replies or even your starters are one of these two things:
1) Expecting someone to find or stumble upon your muse in someway. Or
relies on your partner to initiate some action between your
characters.
2) Is just a summary of what happened in their reply
through your character’s eyes without adding anything new.It’s a passive reply – and by nature harder to respond to. It
means you should consider looking over your reply and tweaking it to
give the other character something more to work with to take the
pressure off and your partners should be doing the same for you.
After all a conversation like this:
Hey, haven’t seen you in forever!
I know right? What have you been
up to?
Honestly – nothing much. Work’s been murder. What about
you?
Ah that’s unfortunate. I’m the same, but I’m going out for drinks
later want to come?
I can’t tonight, have to wake up early
tomorrow. Maybe we can catch up later?Is a much more
interesting conversation because both parties are doing their part to
drive the action forward.It’s easy to say that passive replies are spawned from laziness or
poor writing. But they’re not (the vast majority of the time anyway).
Even good writers who make beautiful replies do it. I personally
think it spawns from equal parts insecurity and good intentions.
People don’t want to rock the boat, or take risks with their writing
in case they accidentally step on any toes. Not realizing of course
that they are putting strain on the writer they are working with by
letting them drive all the action.It can be exhausting.
Roleplaying is a collaborative writing experience. A great RP partner
is someone who works with you as a team to tell the story of both
your characters. Each person should be putting forth new things to
react to and being an active part in building something awesome.
It makes for a more interesting read and more dynamic plots and quite
frankly more chances for characters to build genuine chemistry.Otherwise, you end up with a lopsided plot and a burnt out RP
partner. No one wants that.
Thor: The Dark World (deleted scene)
I wish they would have kept this in. 😦
i scare people lots because i walk very softly and they don’t hear me enter rooms so when they turn around i’m just kind of there and their fear fuels me
The tears in his eyes. My heart!
Everyone’s going on about how Infinity War Loki was depowered and useless and was a “lazy whiny twink until his dad yelled at him that one time” and is so “pathetic” compared to comics Loki and I’m just like:
1) Consider this:
2) No.
3) There is still a strong chance that Infinity War Loki is already involved in a plot to revise events in time, to the point that the plot twist is blatantly obvious, rendering this entire scene a clever act that is part of the long con,
4) Last time I checked self-sacrifice on behalf of a loved one wasn’t “pathetic,” EVEN THOUGH I AGREE THAT LOKI DOING SO SENDS AN UNHEALTHY MESSAGE THAT HEROISM ONLY EXISTS IN EXTREMIS,
5) Can we please not behave as if Loki led a charmed silver-spoon life free of emotional and psychological complication before the events of the first Thor movie, and that it was just Odin “yelling at” Loki that prompted a genuine nervous breakdown? Or are we just gonna be ableist like that lmao.
Normally I stay quiet about this stuff these days but I honestly can’t stand this new popular trend in interpreting the character. It’s like no matter how he’s written someone will find a way to continue hating him lmfao.
I am more tired and the ancient wound opens again and aches;







































