Some kind of high powered mutant never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die.
Icon by @louceph
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@YhwLord It's really funny how around 40 years ago, this was considered shocking and audacious but has now been copied and popularized so much that its become a bigger cliché than what it set out to go against.
@wariocolosseum I mean at this point it's basically a large scale mix of cargo cult and MLM scheme where the techbros believe if they feed enough data into their blind idiot machine god, it will grant them infinite money.
@HubPointless I watched the first three seasons of Fear the Walking Dead because it sounded interesting (and I knew it would get retooled in Season 4) and besides a wonky 3rd season, I thought it was alright if still beholden to The Walking Dead formula.
@TheWillowFox22 Not sure if it's still canon, but 40K does have a lore-only species called the Q'orl who are indeed a race of intelligent ants,they lack FTL but are implied to be learning it which would be a huge problem since they're a stone's throw away from Terra.
Insane that Maxwell Atoms, one of the best to ever do it, has one of the best animation podcasts on Youtube, interviews industry legends all the time and barely gets any views. That should tell you how broke the system is.
@_TheSmartAlec1 Personally found it funny how Night Raid kept emphasizing how they "weren't heroes" yet 95% of the antagonists were amoral psychopaths.
Although I will give it this, it was at least more bold about killing off protagonists than Attack on Titan was ever hyped to be.
@eventualforever My hypothesis is that it has to do with "lore" being easier to access now and the cottage industry of content creators spending several videos "explaining" or speculating which, consciously or not, the audience starts to conflate as being as integral as the media itself.