Art requests are OPEN. Send in any requests you have!!! Please bear in mind this isnāt paid work so:
The final product can range from a sketch to a fully-coloured piece, depending on what inspires me
I have the right to leave requests unanswered if they are sensitive/uninspiring topics [N$FW, extreme violence, and shows I donāt watch] or if the sender is being impolite.
Iām a full-time med student irl so please be patient!!!
Currently enjoying: AOT/SNK, Mob Psycho 100, Spy X Family, Demon Slayer, Jojoās Bizarre Adventure
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the world has been unkind to you so you continue the cycle of unkindness by passing on hatred and indifference to others? Wow. groundbreaking. youāre so cool and tormented
the world has been unkind to you so you continue the cycle of unkindness by passing on hatred and indifference to others? Wow. groundbreaking. youāre so cool and tormented
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Not many people talk about how deep emotional neglect hurts you.
Iām afraid to want things. Iām afraid to ask for help. Iām afraid to tell someone something if they seem in a bad mood. I canāt process when someone is nice to me. I canāt handle rejection, but my brain literally short circuits if someone gives me a compliment to the point where sometimes the rejection is better.
There are lots of overlap with emotional abuse, but emotional neglect hurts just as much. And itās even worse that it usually goes undetected, so a lot of people canāt tell theyāre being neglected until itās too late.
Itās the one on Reigenās āWith our satisfied customers!ā corkboard hung up in the office and it appears specifically when seen by Tsubomi in s2e8.
This corkboard displaying all of Reigenās satisfied clients didnāt show up until s2e6āafter Separation Arc begins. Reigen realizes heās completely alone at the bar, has his panic attack in the alleyway, and then starts his big push for fame with the livestreams and stuff. He puts up this corkboard around that point in the episode, partially to showcase his efficacy to potential clients, and probably also to try and convince himself that heās not alone.
Upon firstāand even subsequentāwatches, I didnāt think anything about the picture. Like, yeah, of course Tsubomi would see some evidence of Mob in the Spirits nā Such office. Heās been there multiple days a week for years. But Iāve been thinking about it more this time around and it kinda just hit me how sweet it is.
This picture of Mob and Reigen is on the corkboard for satisfied clients, where it doesnāt really belong. Mob isnāt a client. Itās markedly more casual than the other photos all taken in the field because itās literally just them hanging out together in the office. Also, Reigen has his arm on Mobās shoulder, so this is the only picture on the entire board where Reigen is initiating contact and demonstrating affection (the one where the lady has her arm around his shoulder doesnāt count because that wasnāt his personal action).
The picture is also pinned beneath two other photos that are layered on top, insinuating that they happened after his picture with Mob. I like to think that Reigen hung this picture up on the board after he and Mob reunited, even though itās a board for clients, just because he loved it and wanted to have it in the office. I think he wanted to have tangible evidence of his connection with Mob after spending so long alone, especially in the office. And the two pictures on top might just be clients that came after the end of Separation Arc but before the events of episode 8. Sneaking photos of a loved one into office space is such a classic dad/big brother move lol.
In addition to this, thereās an illustration that came in the Mob Psycho 100 II DVD/Blu-Ray set thatās very similar to this. (I couldnāt find a full version without the āSAMPLEā š)
It looks like another version of the āsatisfied clientā board with another picture of Reigen and Mob pinned on it, both of them making peace signs and smiling at the camera. I think Reigen just really likes taking cute photos with Mob and pinning them around the office lol. Itās incredibly endearing when you think about itāespecially since Reigen tried to act so cool and unaffected by everything near the start of the series. No one is immune to Mob.
āYou know a lot of big words.ā ā Determining Shigeoās Kanji Literacy
An analysis in four parts:
Jouyou kanji and Japanās compulsory education system, explained.ļæ¼
An introduction to the analysisāwhat I did and why I did it.
A presentation of data, evidence, and counterarguments.
The truth revealed: can Shigeo write a reasonable amount of kanji for his age group?
Jouyou kanji and Japanās compulsory education system, explained
Let us begin this analysis by establishing a basic understanding of how Japanās education system is structured.
As you may already know, only elementary school and middle school are compulsory in Japan, meaning that high school and college are completely optional. Therefore, compulsory education in Japan consists of grades 1-9, with grades 1-6 being å°å¦ę ” (primary school) and grades 7-9 being äøå¦ę ” (middle school).
The term ćåøøēØę¼¢åć(jouyou kanji, āDaily-Use Kanjiā) refers to a list of 2136 kanji that the Japanese Ministry of Education requires be taught throughout education grades in Japan due to their importance and frequency of use in Japanese daily life. Knowing all 2136 is defined by the Japanese government as the baseline for basic, functional literacy in Japanese. The jouyou kanji list is further divided into two sub-categories: ćęč²ę¼¢åć(kyouiku kanji, āEducation Kanjiā) and ćäøå¦ć»é«ę ”ę¼¢åć(chuugaku ⢠koukou kanji, āSecondary School Kanjiā).
ęč²ę¼¢å (kyouiku kanji, āEducation Kanjiā) (A.K.A. å¦å¹“å„ę¼¢åé å½č”Ø [gakunenbetsu kanji haitouhyou, ālist of kanji by school yearā]) is the Japanese term for the 1006 kanji that are taught over the 6 years of primary school in Japan, grouped into different grade levels by difficulty and complexity.
ćäøå¦ć»é«ę ”ę¼¢åć(chuugaku ⢠koukou kanji, āSecondary School Kanjiā) is the term for the 1130 kanji that students are expected to learn throughout middle school and high school. This list of kanji is not strictly divided by grade level, though a general grade level is often provided, because students in secondary schoolāwhether it be middle or highāare expected to learn kanji more independently. Though the responsibility of learning these kanji is shifted from the classroom to the individual, the importance of knowing these kanji by the end of oneās education, if that be middle school or high school, cannot be overstated. Once again, these 2136 kanji are considered the basics of Japanese kanji fluency.
According to the āKanji Frequency Number Survey/ę¼¢åé »åŗ¦ę°čŖæę»ā conducted by the National Cultural Affairs Division in 2000, in 385 books published by a major publishing company, 8474 different kanji were used (not including duplicates). However, speakers are able to understand 99% of them if they know the top 2457 kanji, and 99.9% of them if they know the top 4208 kanji. And as is true for speakers of every other language, people can generally read more words than they can write.
I determined the āgrade levelā of each kanji in this analysis according to the grade level provided in my Japanese-English dictionaries, but consideration will be made for Secondary School Kanji due to the lack of official grade divisions and the less organized circumstances involved with learning them.
An introduction to the analysisāwhat I did and why I did it
In this analysis, I focused specifically on Shigeoās ability to write kanji, not to read them. This is most obviously because itās much harder to determine whether or not someone can actually read something, especially in anime, without it being explicitly mentioned. However, it is also because the meaning of kanji can be inferred from knowing the meaning of radicals, and as mentioned above, it is common for people to be able to read more words than they can write. The true mark of knowing a kanji is being able to write it.
To determine Shigeoās kanji-writing ability, I studied screenshots from a few scenes from the anime, specifically a couple of scenes from the Reigen OVA where Shigeo is writing a LOT, and a couple scenes from the regular anime where Shigeo is explicitly seen writing stuff down and the audience is shown the writing.
The data has been organized into two different excel chartsāone for kanji he uses correctly, and one for kanji he doesnāt know or messes up. The kanji in each of these charts have been color-coded and organized by grade level, with readings, translations, and explanations provided. There is only one kanji in the entire analysis that is not considered a part of the jouyou kanji, and this kanji has been marked by āN/Aā in the grade level section.
I will provide each chart alongside a percentage likelihood that Mob will know any given kanji from each grade level based on the information gathered from the anime. Please note that the sample size is obviously limited, but Iām working with what I have. If there is a kanji with some sort of detail worth consideration, Iāve marked it with a (**) in the chart and will explain below.
Lastly, I included kanji used in names in the chart here after some deliberation. Name kanji are tricky in general, because multiple kanji share the same pronunciation and people usually donāt know what kanji are used in someoneās name unless they are shown by that person (unless itās some crazy common name like é«ē° or 森 or ē°äø).
A presentation of data, evidence, and counterarguments.
Shigeoās known kanji:
Shigeoās unknown kanji:
IMPORTANT NOTE: There are one or two instances of Shigeo NOT using a kanji at all that Iāve decided not to include on the chart. This is because it is common for Japanese speakers to omit kanji for super common verbs and write them in kana instead, either for personal style reasons or for convenience. Since the verbs are so fundamental and commonly-used, itās unlikely that they will be misunderstood or mistaken for another word if written in kana. So, if Shigeo wrote the verb for āto readā or āto eatā without using kanji, I didnāt include it, as I highly highly highly doubt he doesnāt know those kanji and I felt like it would unfairly skew the results against him.
ē±³** = I donāt blame Shigeo for not knowing this kanji. Itās fair to assume that Mob might not have seen Mezatoās name written out and therefore wouldnāt know which kanji to use. On TOP of that, āmeā for ē±³ is a special nanori (used for names only) reading and is super obscure and uncommon. I couldnāt even find it in my name dictionary by searching āMezatoā, I had to find her name written in kanji in S1E3 and go from there. I wouldnāt expect this kanji to be in anyoneās top ten possible kanji guesses for the āmeā in āmezatoā. I included it because rules are rules, but wanted to mention this to make it fairer on the boy.
äø** = I want to make it known that Shigeo does successfully write this kanji in the image shown here, when he writes ćäøē“ć(century):
HOWEVER. However. He messed it up SO BAD before that I think it actually overpowers him using it correctly and brings it back around to a ānot properly knownā kanji, especially because itās a kanji taught in second grade that he shouldnāt be messing up at all:
The subtitles intersect it but Iāve rewritten what Shigeo wrote there at the bottom. He tried to write ćäøć®äøć«ćÆćāIn the worldā¦ā, but tried to write the kanji, messed up, crossed it out, and then rewrote it in kana. Didnāt even try to write it a second time. This is egregious and, in my jurorās power, cancels out his later usage. This would be like misspelling āworldā in English. Iām willing to entertain arguments that he just wanted to write it in kana for some reason, but as it is now, I donāt think that excuse is compelling enough against such damning evidence, so in āmissed kanjiā it goes. (Itās partly cut off but what gets me is that it doesnāt even look wrong in the first place lol but if he crossed it out, it means he didnāt know it well enough, which allowed him to doubt, which is still damning enough.)
é ** = Just like above, Shigeo actually does successfully use this kanji once in the show when heās filling out his paperwork for the Body Improvement Club in S1E2 (forgive my awful kanji, itās hard to draw on the phone lol): ļæ¼
However, that was not only on an official school document, it was also in the presence of a student council member and Saruta (#2 in the grade lol) so I have to assume he either asked someone for help or got corrected. Either way, the instance where he doesnāt use the kanji is when heās in his bedroom alone, writing in his personal notebookāa much more casual environment, and one that takes place AFTER s1e2 (canāt argue he learned it):
This leads me to believe that Shigeo does not naturally know the kanji, as he canāt reproduce it in casual day-to-day or when alone.
ē** = This kanji is not only not included in the jouyou kanji, but it is also used in an obscure word. In fact, it took me a minute to locate it in my Japanese-English dictionary app. It is absolutely not reasonable to expect Shigeo to know this kanji off the top of his head, and he probably wouldnāt know it even if he were a kanji ace. It is included and working against him, however, because the kanji he initially tried to write in its place was ćåć, a.k.a. the kanji for YEN/Ā„:
Sure, ććććis a reading forćåć, that part makes sense. But ćēµēćmeans āthe finals years in oneās lifeā, so Iām really struggling to understand why Mob would think the yen money kanji would be a part of that word and why he would try to write it with that kanji instead of just writing it in kana first, like the majority of the kanji he didnāt know. Itās truly an enigma to me. Iām bewildered he even tried that, and for that, Iām holding it against him.
BASIC STATS:
GRADE 1 KANJI:
- Total known: 17
- Total unknown: 0
- Grand total: 17
- Shigeo knows: 17 out of 17
- Percentage likelihood of Shigeo knowing a grade 1 kanji: 100%
GRADE 2 KANJI:
- Total known: 16
- Total unknown: 3
- Grand total: 19
- Shigeo knows: 16 out of 19
- Percentage likelihood of Shigeo knowing a grade 2 kanji: 84.2%
GRADE 3 KANJI:
- Total known: 13
- Total unknown: 6
- Grand total: 19
- Shigeo knows: 13 out of 19
- Percentage likelihood of Shigeo knowing a grade 3 kanji: 68.4%
GRADE 4 KANJI:
- Total known: 11
- Total unknown: 0
- Grand total: 11
- Shigeo knows: 11 out of 11
- Percentage likelihood of Shigeo knowing a grade 4 kanji: 100%
(Baby apparently had a great year in fourth grade.)
GRADE 5 KANJI:
- Total known: 3
- Total unknown: 4
- Grand total: 7
- Shigeo knows: 3 out of 7
- Percentage likelihood of Shigeo knowing a grade 5 kanji: 43.9%
GRADE 6 KANJI:
- Total known: 0
- Total unknown: 2
- Grand total: 2
- Shigeo knows: 0 out of 2
- Percentage likelihood of Shigeo knowing a grade 6 kanji: 0%
š
GRADE 7 KANJI:
(No known or unknown 7th grade kanji found)
GRADE 8 KANJI
- Total known: 5
- Total unknown: 6
- Grand total: 11
- Shigeo knows: 5 out of 11
- Percentage likelihood of Shigeo knowing a grade 8 kanji: 45.5%
^ To Shigeoās credit, this isnāt bad at all considering heās only halfway through his eight grade year at this point in the story.
% OF JOUYOU KANJI SHIGEO KNOWS:
% known from observed data:
65/86
75.6%
# of jouyou kanji: 2136
75.6% of 2136 = 1615 jouyou kanji
Hereās a graph for your visualizing pleasure:
Finally:
(All values are rounded up)
There are 1006 kyouiku kanji. There are 1130 secondary school kanji. Because high school in Japan is not compulsory, weāll assume that the secondary kanji are to be learned over the three years of middle school. That means about 377 words per middle school grade. If Shigeo is halfway through eighth grade, letās say he should generally know 1006 + 377 + (377/2) kanji, which comes out to 1,572.
There are 80 kyouiku kanji assigned to first grade, which Shigeo should know 100% ofā80 total.
There are 160 kyouiku kanji assigned to second grade, which Shigeo should know 84.2% ofā135 total.
There are 200 kanji assigned to third grade, which Shigeo should know 68.4% ofā137 total.
There are 200 kanji assigned to fourth grade, which Shigeo should know 100% ofā200 total.
There are 185 kanji assigned to fifth grade, which Shigeo should know 43.9% ofā81 total.
There are 181 kanji assigned to sixth grade, which Shigeo should know⦠0% ofā¦. 0 total.
This all totals out to:
80 + 135 + 137 + 200 + 81 + 0 = 633/1006 elementary school-level kanji. Thatās 63% of the kanji required for elementary school.
(Didnāt include a calculation for middle school kanji due to having 0 data on seventh-grade kanji and also him being halfway through eighth.)
The truth revealed: can Shigeo write a reasonable amount of kanji for his age group?
Uh⦠no. Maybe? Well⦠probably not, no.
I mean, of course there are flaws with my methods. I had a super small sample group and applied the stats there to all of the jouyou kanji, which is almost guaranteed to be lower than reality. I just didnāt really have another choice. Also, Iām very certain that Shigeo MUST know some 6th grade kanji, even if in the results here I considered the probability to be 0%. Thatās assuredly not accurate. There were just, by chance, only two instances of sixth-grade kanji in all of the sample writing and he happened not to know either of them. This is just for fun, anyway. I can say with confidence, though, that he certainly isnāt a writer, and he definitely knows less kanji than the average eighth grader, but I wouldnāt take my numbers for anything more than entertainment.
But yeah. Shigeo isā¦. a little kanji-impaired. Which explains why he struggled with Emiās writing and is only ever seen reading Shounen Jump volumes lmao. I believe in him though. He makes it work. My illiterate king. Who needs the other half of your elementary sight-words anyway?
All jokes aside though, he really started to scare me with the äø and å things ššššš
lol i hate todayās era of absolutely zero nuance takes. a friend didnāt behave exactly as youād wanted them to? cut them off. a guy didnāt text you back instantly bc he has his own life? heās just giving you breadcrumbs. doing something makes you uncomfortable? donāt do it anymore. someone isnāt instantly available for you? disinterest. just absolutist statements that often donāt apply to the multilayer situations of everyday life. like. stop. literally just stop it
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absolutely in love with the fact that reigen uses google calendar like everyone else. it doesn't only reinforce that he's just some guy - i know in my heart reigen's afternoons look like having 2-4pm "SINK EXORCISM" blocked out with 7-8pm "date night :) w/ serizawa" right below
I will never get over how weird it feels to have tragic and emotional chapters of your life where you just also still go to work, and the grocery store, and see funny videos online all while feeling such paralyzing fear and heartache
this absolute dork!!!! him!!!!! This is just sort of an experiment in character design - itās how I think heād look in a more realistic sorta way. Havenāt had much time to do art stuff so this really is the most I can do š
Iām a little sad we didnāt get to see canonical kid versions of the rest of the Lupgang in Lupin Zero SO take these headcanons of the 2 best characters in the gang:
KÅichi Zenigata had always been a good student, a real old-fashioned gentleman through and through. He was hardworking, helpful, and one of the best Class Presidents you could ever hope to vote in. He had no shortage of admirers (both secret and not) too. But where he really shone was on the schoolās baseball team.
Zenigata was his high schoolās star pitcher. His signature move was, ironically, āThe Handcuffā ā a hard-hit ground ball that bounces directly at an infielder, causing it to be difficult for the ball to be hit. (Look it up, itās a real thing!)
He joined law enforcement because that was what his father did too, and he grew up believing that it was the right and noble thing to do. With his impeccable work ethic and strategic intelligence, he quickly landed a job with the ICPO.
On one of Zenigataās first cases with the ICPO, he was among a squad deployed to the USA to investigate rumours of a midnight heist on the Japanese wing of a prestigious art gallery.
Hours before the rumoured heist, Zenigata was patrolling the area near the gallery while undercover, when he stumbled upon a group of rowdy teenagers gathered around a narrow alley. At that time, the sun had already set, and it was odd for a group of teens to be out this late ā Zenigata, ever the Boy Scout, began to approach them to ask what they were doing, when he noticed that the group was gathered around a small child. A small child that was red-faced, clearly trying to hide his tears.
And as he got closer, Zenigata could hear the teens jeering and taunting the boy in English, while the boy seemed to only be able to stutter out Japanese sentences: āPlease leave me aloneā, āI didnāt do anything to youā, āI donāt understand youā.
Now, Zenigata was no stranger to the way most of the world treated people like him ā having been deployed outside Japan many times even as a rookie officer, Zenigata knew how racist and xenophobic people could be. And so it was with a stern look and flash of his badge that the teens quickly scattered.
The boy, still crying softly, now tried to stand up as tall as possible, smoothing out the scuffs on his Haori and Kimono in a strangely dignified way. A Haori and Kimono! A strangely formal outfit for a child no older than 10.
That aside, this was no hour for a child to be out alone. Zenigata asked where the kidās parents were, in Japanese and the softest voice he could manage. The child only said, āThey said Iām supposed to look out for them here.ā
Zenigata hummed. He disappeared, then minutes later returned with a pack of convenience store sushi. āWell, if youāre gonna wait here alone, I think itās best if a cop waits with you.ā
The child said nothing, but nodded and crammed another tuna roll in his mouth. (Quite the appetite this kid had, thought Zenigata.)
The hours flew by, Zenigata keeping an eye on the stragglers heading in and out of the art gallery, accompanied by a kid who looked like heād stepped straight out of a Japanese folk tale but demolished almost a whole 7/11ās worth of sushi. The boy seemed quite happy to have someone who spoke his language, chattering away to Zenigata about the strange things heād seen in America.
Soon, Zenigata was interrupted by the crackling of his radio ā indeed, a gang of thieves had arrived to break into the gallery, and all officers were called in to apprehend them. Apologising to the boy, Zenigata rushed off.
A couple hours later, in a flurry of adrenaline, blaring sirens, and blue and red lights, the thieves had been apprehended ā a Japanese gang intending to take back a rightful piece of their history. (Zenigata couldnāt say he disagreed with the sentiment, but the job was the job.)
By the time Zenigata returned to where heād left the boy, he was gone. Wherever he was, Zenigata could only pray that the adorable, old-fashioned little boy with the ravenous appetite was safe.
(Of course, unbeknownst to him, Zenigata would meet the little boy again ā this time, Zenigata would have a couple more grey hairs, and the little boy would have a katana sharp enough to cut lightning.)
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