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IT IS TIME! The whole gang is here! Separated ones under the read more

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Elwing's worst nightmare
Princess Couture: Jupiter
Princess Jupiterâs dress is even more ornate than Venusâ, and thatâs saying something!
The most striking aspect of Jupiterâs gown is how incredibly feminine it is. Gauze, ribbons, and roses are everywhere, and the dress itself is rather revealing; none of the other princess gowns have a slit like that. Of course, all of this ties back into Makoâs personality. Of all of the Senshi, she struggled with her femininity the most; more than anything, she yearned to be as pretty and girly as the rest of her friends and classmates, but felt that she was too masculine and awkward to pull it off.
Over the course of the series, she gradually grows into herself and becomes much more comfortable with exploring her femininity, and the end result is this gown. In addition, the ruffles of Jupiterâs dress somewhat resemble leaves, furthering her association with nature.
As for the color, green is the essence of nature. Green represents growth, abundance, and vitality. Itâs a color that is associated with natural life and represents renewal, growth, health, spring, generosity, fertility, and vigor. It also has connotations with balance, endurance, hope, stability, and safety.Â
All of these concepts tie back into Mako herself, both personality-wise (her generosity towards her friends and how she represents stability and safety to them, for example) and to her life (like the renewal of life she experienced after she became a Senshi).
As always, Naoko designed the perfect dress!

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Let me introduce you to two of my favorite panels in Sailor Moon
And they both involve Makoto.
DO YOU SEE THIS BADASSERY
Sailor Moon, Chibi Moon, and Saturn are trapped in this mirror and everyoneâs trying to break it down to get them out, but itâs incredibly strongâMercury couldnât even shatter it with her most powerful attack!
So what does Jupiter do? She pushes everyone aside, says I GOT THIS, and straight up, with no hesitation, PUNCHES THAT SHIT
AND IT FUCKING BREAKS WITH NO GODDAMN PROBLEM
Itâs times like this when I grab my head and keen at the amazing amount of pure strength these girls have. People mock Sailor Moon for being a magical based show where all their attacks involve ribbons and hearts and sparkles and sometimes elements (no, really; this is what Iâve gotten out of people. As if a goddamn BLAST OF FIRE to the face wasnât damn near impressive. Or being smacked with a hot metal chain shaped like heartsâMinako is goddamn HARDCORE GUYS), but what they clearly donât see is that these girls donât just rely on their abilities.
You mess with any of them and they will fuck you up. Physically. They donât even goddamn blink.
Makotoâs gonna walk away with a bloody hand from that mirror and her main concern is gonna be Is Usagi okay? Why? Because punching a magically enabled mirror is no big deal to motherfucking Jupiter.Â
RESPECT
What I love about Mako is how strong she is. Sheâs the brawn of the Sailor Team; Naoko herself even said so in the Materials Collection. In terms of physical strength, the only other Senshi who can rival her is Uranus, and even then Uranus is more about agility than straight-up muscle.Â
Like Kat said, the girls donât just rely on magic, they use their own bodies in attacks sometimes (Sailor V/Sailor Moon Kick, Sailor Body Attack, etc, as well as countless improvised physical attacks). Theyâre not afraid to get up close and personal with the enemy and smash their fucking faces in.Â
You know what would be cool?
If Mako got a badass hammer.Â
Thor, the Norse god of thunder, had one of those suckers. Someone should hook Mako up with her own thunder hammer.Â
And I mean, it ties in with Makoâs strength, too. Mako is the (physically) strongest Senshi, and wielding a hammer properly takes a lot of strength.Â
Shippers get a lot of lashings for being annoying and âforcing romanceâ but not enough is being said about people who force the nuclear family structure on everything. Nothing against found families, but the amount of people who seem to cram every dynamic into a cookie cutter nuclear family mold is driving me insane. Itâs another lowkey reductive way of engaging with characters that pretends to less reductive than the shippers they constantly complain about. Not every relationship can be categorized as âsibling codedâ or âfather-daughterâ because most relationships are more complicated than that. Donât even get me started on the way these people use âcodingâ *cough* their headcanons *cough* to shut down ships they dislike.
"She who, without asking, understood it all and still came to her fate."
Helaena Targaryen trapped in prophecy
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Also posted on Twitter/X

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The Myth of âFans Killing Showsâ: Hereâs the thing I fundamentally disagree with. It wasnât the fans who âkilled the shows.â It was the writers who killed it.
I came across this Tumblr post and here's why people blaming the fans for the writers fatal flaw is just wrong.
And now I'll get to the most unpopular opinion I've ever shared online - fully aware that what I've already said very few people on here would agree with: I don't think it's Rob Thomas who killed the show with his ill-adviced decision, it's the fans who did that. Not that they are not aware of it, but they still refuse to take the blame for it, as if there could not have been any other reaction. And clearly they don't regret it. After they paid to bring Veronica Mars back once before. They collectively decided that season 4 was a crime against the fandom and that it never happened. Therefore making it impossible for anyone who did not feel the same way to get more content and have some closure. I know I don't get to be mad about that, but it is sad. And I've been on the other side of this a few times and stopped watching a show after a certain point, but that never triggered a cancellation. I've seen favorite characters killed off many times without it ever leading to a fandom turning hostile like that, sometimes even ripping everything else apart about the show. And it's not even like Veronica Mars was a cosy show where people didn't die. It was neo noir. It started out with her solving the murder of her best friend ffs. So, how did this happen? How did one character's death kill the show? Was it because he was the main love interest over more than a decade? Why does it now feel like he was more important than the protagonist? Or was it maybe because the fans campaigned for it's return and even funded the movie? Was it because they felt more invested in a way and later betrayed although they did not pay for the last season to get made?
I know this take circulates a lot: âThe fans killed Veronica Mars. If they hadnât reacted so strongly to Season 4, weâd have gotten more.â
But after watching this happen over and over, across shows I love, shows that shaped me, shows that built entirely new corners of fandom culture. I just donât buy it.
Fans arenât killing shows. Writers are breaking the emotional contract, torching the narrative spine, and then blaming the audience for the smoke.
And if Veronica Mars were the only example, maybe we could write it off. But this specific heartbreak, this implosion of trust, has now happened on too many shows, in too many fandoms, with too similar a pattern to chalk up to âone overreacting audience.â
It didnât start with Season 4. It didnât start with Logan Echolls. And it didnât end there.
Itâs The Handmaidâs Tale. Itâs Game of Thrones. Itâs The 100. And on and on.
This is a cultural pattern. A breaking point between audiences and creators, and VM is just the case study where people still argue about who struck the match.
The pattern is the same every time: the writers kill the relationship they spent years telling us mattered most.
This is the part critics pretend not to understand.
Fandom doesnât melt down because a character dies. Characters die constantly in television, and people grieve them, yell about them, move on. They melt down when a character dies in a way that breaks the storyâs thesis. Let's take a deeper look:
Veronica Mars: Logan Echolls
Years of storytelling, marketing, PR, revival hype, and arc-building told us:
Logan is Veronicaâs person. Heâs the love story that grows with her. This relationship is the heart of the show.
Season 4 then kills him in the last 90 seconds as a plot device. Not a turning point, not a thematic evolution, just a twist that contradicts everything the show told us about her healing.
The Handmaidâs Tale: Nick Blaine
Four seasons of narrative work (and two books) told us:
Nick is Juneâs equal, mirror, moral counterweight, and match. Their love is radical, raw, complicated, feminist, and central.
Then Seasons 5 and 6 decide:
Actually, punish him. Actually, flatten him. Actually, the story is about motherhood, not womanhood or desire. Actually, June belongs with the safe man.
That isnât a character arc. Thatâs an ideological pivot.
Game of Thrones: Daenerys Targaryen
Eight seasons told us:
Daenerys is the heart of the myth. She breaks chains. She frees people. Sheâs the emotional and moral center of the showâs grand design.
The final three episodes say:
Forget that. She snaps because⌠trauma? lineage? vibes? The woman who liberated millions is actually a tyrant.
A series that built itself on emotional logic ends on plot logic. The single most disorienting pivot a story can make.
When the ending contradicts what the story was, fans donât feel shocked. They feel gaslit.
Killing the love interest isnât the issue. Killing the thesis is.
This is the part nobody wants to talk about, because it forces a reckoning with the power and legitimacy of fandom interpretation.
Logan wasnât just Veronicaâs boyfriend. Nick wasnât just Juneâs romantic partner. Daenerys wasnât just another lead.
These characters were:
thematic mirrors
emotional anchors
narrative engines
symbolic structures
the emotional grammar of the show
and the embodiment of the protagonistâs arc
You donât just rip those out. Not without re-breaking everything around them. Itâs like pulling the keystone from a bridge and then blaming drivers for falling into the river.
Why does this keep happening? Because TV writers mistake cynicism for prestige.
This is the actual disease that keeps killing fan-beloved shows:
Prestige = tragedy
Prestige = subversion
Prestige = women alone
Prestige = punishing love
Prestige = nihilism masquerading as maturity
Itâs a worldview that sees romance arcs, emotional continuity, loyal love interests, or morally gray partners as âcheap,â âfan service,â or âtoo soapy.â And because of that mindset, writers keep doing one of two things:
1. They kill the love interest to seem edgy or surprising.
2. They rewrite the protagonist or their partner beyond recognition.
And sometimes both. Either way, the show loses the very thing that made it groundbreaking. The fans didnât kill Veronica Mars. They mourned what the creator killed first. If a fandom was powerful enough to:
campaign for a return
fund a movie
keep the discourse alive for a decade
pull the show into the 2010s streaming era
âŚthen maybe, just maybe, they had a point about the storyâs emotional core.
People didnât walk away because Logan died. They walked away because his death dismantled the showâs moral vocabulary.
Just like:
People walked away from The Handmaidâs Tale, especially 6x10, because they dismantled the showâs feminist thesis and punished the very arc they built around love, agency, and liberation. (Ahem Hulu's TT because I will be shocked if it's not heading for a similar exit.)
People walked away from Game of Thrones because the finale dismantled eight years of character logic and replaced it with plot convenience.
This isnât âtoxicity.â This is narrative literacy.
Fans understood the assignment better than the people writing the final chapters. The truth is this: fans donât kill shows. Shows kill themselves when they decide the audience was wrong about what mattered.
And here's the irony that never gets talked about: Writers taught us what mattered.
They built these love stories. They crafted these arcs. They centered these relationships. They marketed these dynamics. They put these characters in promos, posters, finales, interviews, season-long narratives. They told us these bonds mattered.
So when they then turn around and say:
Actually, wrong. Actually, silly of you to care. Actually, this was never the point.
Of course people walk.
Itâs not immaturity. Itâs not entitlement. Itâs not âfandom killing the show.â
Itâs the audience refusing to be told that the story they meaningfully engaged with for years was a mistake.
^ If you cultivate a specific audience for multiple years and then they all abandon your work en masse because of a writing decision in the work then they didn't fuck up, you did. Skill issue. Gaining and losing some audience over time is normal but a mass exodus like this is the result of (borrowing some lingo from Brandon Sanderson) a creator failing to keep their promises.
If you're writing anything involving cons, scams, heists, or morally questionable characters who are very good at lying, here are some free resources I've been using for research. Saving you the "why is this in my search history" anxiety.
1. The FBI's Famous Cases & Criminals archive (fbi.gov/history/famous-cases) has detailed breakdowns of real fraud cases, Ponzi schemes, and confidence operations. The language they use is clinical and precise, which is perfect for getting the procedural details right.
2. The FTC Consumer Sentinel Network publishes annual reports on the most common fraud tactics in the US. Great for understanding how modern scams actually work and what makes people fall for them.
3. The Smithsonian's American Art Museum has a free digital collection of forgery case studies. If your character forges documents or art, this is gold.
4. Court Listener (courtlistener.com) is a free legal database where you can read actual court transcripts from fraud trials. Want to know how a real con artist talks under oath? This is where you find out.
5. The Internet Archive's collection of old newspaper crime sections. Search for "confidence man" or "swindle" in papers from the 1920s through 1960s and you'll find incredible real stories that would feel too dramatic for fiction.
Bonus: The Psychology of Fraud section on the Association for Psychological Science website has accessible articles about why people trust, how deception works cognitively, and what makes someone a convincing liar. Essential reading if you want your con artist characters to feel psychologically real.
Reblog to save for later. Your WIP will thank you.
Bonnieâs story couldâve been a great arc about breaking generational curses and trauma. It actually makes no sense how Grams didnât put pressure on Bonnie once she came into her witch powers. Abby leaving shouldâve been a much bigger deal for Bennetts as a whole.
Playing around with my Helen design
PSA to fan creators who don't have a lot of regular contact with children: They are almost always bigger than you think. A 1-year-old baby may already be walking. A toddler is likely already hip-high. A 10-year-old may already be taller than at least one of their parents. A 14/15 year old may already have reached their adult height.
Via @watertightvines
Here's the link. It was actually not immediately easy to find, so I thought this might help.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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BUFFY & DAWN SUMMERS
Buffy the Vampire Slayer - 6x03
Penelope, Clytemnestra and Helen.
Commissioned art, made by @ube-kun