It’s Captain Lastimover, Pilots.
People keep comparing Tamarian from the episode "Darmok" to brainrotten memespeak, and to that I say:
You heard it here folks, we need every single piece of non-18+ art to be nightshaded as foot fetish art, and every 18+ art to be nightshaded as bored ape NFTs. Oh, they’re trying to create cool concept art for their world, but don’t want to pay an artist? Foot licking. They want to take advantage of the infinite novelty of generative neural networks to titillate themselves? Bored ape. They were the ones who screamed themselves blue in the face claiming those things weren’t dogshit ugly.
I simply must immortalize this text conversation I had with my friend here:
I C A N S E E E V E R Y
E Q U A T I O N
Brennan’s villain backstory really was the Intrepid heroes calling his corn gremlins “cute”.
They are the same guy in Hades II lore.
Thank you @brehaaorgana for coming through with screenshots! They replayed the technical test to find this!
Chronos/Khronos/Chronus/Χρόνος with a chi aka Time “HadesTwoAntagonist” Itself might not even be the same guy as Cronus/Cronos/Kronos/Κρόνος with a kappa aka Saturn “Mel’sGrandpa” DevouringHisSon in the game. Some ancient sources syncretize them. Some do not. Maybe they’re the same person in the game lore, but don’t be surprised if Chronos is never specified to be Hades’ father in the game.
@epitome-of-an-openbook
It appears to just be a pun that they committed hard to.
Is- Is Riz shorter than Kipperlily?
profoundly suspicious of the use of the rat emoji before each contestant name. and accompanied with images of the contestants walking through gray, unidentifiably bland halls? like....a rat in a test maze??
and what else has been utilized in multiple episodes throughout the season? that's right
a maze
It gets better. The "não" in "não é" comes from Old Galician Portuguese “non” which comes from Latin “nōn”, from Old Latin “noenum”, from Porto-Indo-European “*ne”.
P.I.E. “*ne” also descended into the Old Latin “ne” (not) and then the Latin suffix “-ne”, which is added to a word in a phrase to make it a question.
“Kawaii desu ne?” Could be translated into Latin as “Dulcis sumne?”
The same Horse People word split off and incorporated itself into languages used in both Modern Japan, and Ancient Rome. And parallel evolved into something that is phonetically and functionally almost identical in both.
the japanese “-ne?” particle and the british slang term “innit” serve the same function
Every dropout subscriber loves comedy, and beneath that we love psychological horror. And beneath that? Comedy again, but weirder and gay.