@JordanInHell Bro, you're just, a horrible person. Okay I'm gonna say this right now cause EVERYONE on the internet needs to hear it. You're allowed, to not like things. No one actually cares if you don't like Gameoversez or HH or TADC. People, hating something, isn't a fucking personality.
@CraftyAdrian360 I didn't say it was good, I said the series was always like this. Using the "don't reference modern shit that's not comedy" doesn't work becuase this series has ALWAYS refrenced modern shit
Hmmm, mayhaps we should look into the history of YOUR region of origin. Cause I can tell you right now, every country on this planet, has a bloody background
'There's no good reason why "Megas XLR" didn't become an era-defining cartoon. A Mech sent back in time, Coop (David DeLuise), learns to pilot it. Kiva (Wendee Lee) travels back in time, teaches Coop how to work it just as aliens arrive on Earth. 💙
https://t.co/jRpievPJ45
@josiah_awkward I'm sorry didn't you delete your account because you wished for the death of Gooseworks so you could laugh at her corpse? Here's an idea, how about you ACTUALLY delete your shit and get a fucki g job you worthless shitlord
Azula was already too for gone for Iroh to help. She was smiling gleefully when Zuko was burned in the agnikai against his father. She spent just as much time followinf Zuko to bring him back as Zuko spent trying to hunt Aang
That’s a fair critique, and it actually highlights a limitation in how Iroh is often portrayed.
He likely did understand both Zuko and Azula to some degree, especially how Ozai’s influence shaped them. So he wasn’t blind to Azula’s situation.
But the main difference is access and openness. Zuko was already conflicted and searching for guidance, which made him reachable. Azula, on the other hand, was deeply aligned with Ozai’s worldview for most of the series and didn’t show real willingness to accept help or question her path.
Also, Iroh wasn’t in a position where he could freely mentor both children. He was essentially a fugitive, and Azula was firmly inside the Fire Nation power structure with guards, authority, and control.
So while it’s true Iroh could’ve tried, the story frames it as: he invested in the one person who was actually ready to change. That doesn’t make him perfect, it just shows his choices were practical, not all-encompassing.