@Michell51016773@ashesofignominy@motherofndcats@CBSMornings There are four ingredients in ejuice: Vegetable glycerin, Propelyne Glycol [which btw is considered safe to inhale, it is used in *albuterol breathing treatments*. If you are using albuterol, you are inhaling PG], nicotine, and PG based flavorings.
@LockedCutie@surfacage Same goes for Venat's actions against the Ancients, difference is, the game straight up condemns Emet for it, as do most of us. It lauds Venat. Double standard much? In other words, @surfacage ignore the stupid haters.
@Kiddy7180 @FF_XIV_EN I am one of those people who thought the timeloop was bullshit, and really want a homebrew that is a "what if we branched the timeline like G'raha instead of looped it?"
@Dothalia696969 @ID_10680 No, Emet was saying the *rejoinings* would not have stopped a problem he had *no idea* existed because guess what? Venat never shared what she *knew* with him. If she had, they coulda, I dunno, formed Zodiark out of ambient aether instead of sacrifices and bought <c>
@galacticlord00@jlist It's an argument that began because 90s dubs *genuinely* destroyed the plots of some of the anime that got brought over to make it more palatable for parents.
@Ultimate__Ace@otvkugvmer316@jlist Sailor Moon is a particularly bad dub. Some key plot points got wrecked by DiC because they think kids have never seen gay people before.
@otvkugvmer316@jlist This is true for *later* dubs for the most part, or those released straight to video. Those localized for TV are another matter. Sailor Moon and DBZ got *destroyed* by DiC and Funimation respectively when they were localized for US audiences.
@eroticaprincess At least Harmony Gold didn't utterly *destroy* Macross/Southern Cross/Genesis Climber Mospeada when they localized it as Robotech for US audiences.
@eroticaprincess I don't like localization *dumbing down* a show because it either #1 has an LGBT couple in it [Sailor Moon] or they think it has too much foul language/violence for children [DBZ] when children are not the intended audience in the first place.