@MidgetInCrisis@StephenKing Link it then, pussy. You're not going to though, because you're a huge retard that has no fucking clue what they're talking about.
@ravenowl2988@Comfort77267488@SenMarkKelly That feeling in your head right now, your need to relentlessly polish Trump's balls with your tongue, while simultaneously reading that absolutely fucking retarded deal he capitulated with Iran, is called "cognitive dissonance." Get used to it, you retarded mouthbreather.
@Doug75360657@DJcalligraphy@JamesTate121 Wait, are you saying people in the south don't fly confederate flags? 'Cause that's the most fucking retarded thing I've heard all day.
@ZannyToy@Nerdcognito So my 8 STR wizard has a 5 percent chance each time he encounters a new building to proceed to lift it above his head? Be fr now.
I’ve watched a few anime over the years.
Started as a fan of Dragon Ball & followed it all the way through Super.
Grew up in the early era of Toonami so I was introduced to shows like Outlaw Star and Yu Yu Hakusho.
I even got into early Naruto, but never made it past the Gaara fight.
It’s funny how often we look at this kind of media and think, “it’s just a dumb cartoon.”
I used to feel that way about One Piece. I didn’t want to give it a chance because of how silly the old 4Kids version made it seem.
And sure... Yeah death happens in shows like Dragon Ball or Yu Yu Hakusho, but it rarely feels permanent. In Dragon Ball, characters can literally be wished back. In Yu Yu Hakusho, the connection to the Spirit World softens the loss.
But One Piece… hit me in a way I didn’t expect.
I started watching it as a distraction for myself and for something to escape my own depression. But the more I watched, the deeper I seem to be falling into it.
It's such a emotional rollercoaster, Especially with how it goes from such light hearted and hopeful moments to despair.
In most anime I’ve seen, death feels rare or reversible.
So with what I have seen right now
It hits hard... But I must keep watching.