@ChristianMSwan Yeah i made it up yesterday. Grabbed a midi and a (frankly not great) mmz soundfont. I really rushed most of it, specially the begining. It was 1 a.m.
@Tealflames@astrofemina For such a high IQ guy, you seem irrationaly angry. Maybe that's why you're having such a hard time with this. I'm going to sleep now it's late as fuck here. Consider taking a rest yourself
@Tealflames@astrofemina OP: takes issue with "mexican" being used as the american "ethnicity" view of the word instead of plain national as the mexicans use it
You: "um actually it's a mexican born in México saying it"
Me:"that's wrong, and even if it were true that doesn't change their critique"
@Tealflames@astrofemina "Kid" is crazy. But i've repeated myself like 3 times now, i don't know why you keep thinking that i must be saying or implying more than what my first 2 replies say. That your first comment ("The person you are quoting is a Mexican"), was irrelevant to what OP was saying.
@Th3scarletsaint As overused as it is in crossovers and promotional stuff, be thankful that (somehow) they haven't yet recycled it in an actual main line game, other than remakes.
@Tealflames@astrofemina Beyond whatever personal or "racial" intent some people may have, to most latinos the term means first and foremost nationality. It's just a different colloquial use. Same way we use "americano" to mean someone from the continent and not the U.S, a different view of the same word
@Tealflames@astrofemina I get that and it's true. What i'm saying is that Mexicans born in Mexico, don't call childs of Mexicans borned in America "Mexican". You may make the distinction but still call them "Mexicans", while Mexican (borned and raised) don't, and not as a badge of dishonor (necessarily)
@Tealflames@astrofemina A bit out of the topic, they'd likely get nicknames and be teased based of their apperance, but that's in line with argentinian friendships. We name eachother "the fat one", "the short one", "the big headed one" and such with no ill intent, i doubt people would walk on eggshells
@Tealflames@astrofemina My guess is they wouldn't be label them based off having american parents per se. It would absolutely be noticable that they're being rasided in a differently cultural household, but i can't imagine anyone going "those kids aren't argentinian"
@Tealflames@astrofemina You'd be an american (or "gringo") in the eyes of the general public. Legally, an U.S american argentinian. And your son would be argentinian if borned in the country of Argetina.
@Tealflames@astrofemina I'm not trying to be vauge. Mexicans don't commonly use "Mexican" to mean their ethnicity, they mean "borned in/citizen of Mexico". While in the US people may use "Mexican" for someone of Mexican descent despite not being borned in Mexico. That's what i mean "american centric"
@Tealflames@astrofemina All i've really said was that your point about "The guy being seemingly born in Mexico" was irrelevant and untrue. And that his definition of ethnicity is more american centric. You just started barking at me about things i've not argued about.
@Tealflames@astrofemina All i've really said was that your point about "The guy being seemingly born in Mexico" was irrelevant and untrue. And that his definition of ethnicity is more american centric. You just started barking at me about things i've not argued about.
@Tealflames@astrofemina Alright but are you then agreeing that saying "mexican is an ethnicity" is, at least on a very petty and semantic level, technically incorrect and that Mexican refers more accurately to nationality?
@Tealflames@astrofemina Don't know why you felt like making 3 separated replies instead of a single thread, makes it a bit annoying to follow.
What do you mean him calling it ethinicty is the wrong word? Beacuse it feels like that's at odds with your other replies. What would've been the correct word?