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@spicydoomramen

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Bit of a random headcanon to feed the Digimon fandom, I'm not sure if this is widely accepted or even thought about. But:
The Grudgeful Hand is supposed to be all of the malicious instinctual data from the Dark Area, right? Same as Apocalymon.
Mephistomon is made up of Apocalymon's data-- Apocalymon was born of a similar concept to the Grudgeful Hand (the "negative thoughts gathered through dark power" thing mentioned in the Encyclopedia entry.)
So, I propose this.
Mephistomon is made up of Apocalymon's physical data, while the Grudgeful Hand (and, consequently, Voltobautamon) is made up of Apocalymon's mental data.
It kinda makes a really, really fucked-up version of the Holy Trinity.
As I am looking through the possible writings of the names in Digimon Beatbreak I cannot help but notice the fact that Asuka can be written as 明霞. Bright morning, or, if you excuse my free style reading: Glowing Dawn.
Sure, this is a writing of the name more commonly used for girls. But... Asuka as a name definitely tends to be written with 霞 most of the time and be associated with dawn/morning.
And I am sitting here like: "Wait, did Kyo name the group after Asuka?"
A ship between Wizardmon and Angewomon. She works real hard to serve da world and he’s just her small chunky husband
(yknow, if he DIDNT die)
I enjoy this ship
Wizardmon is very short compared to Angewomon. So he gets a lot of surprise lifts/hugs/kisses by his wife, turning him into a flustered stuttering mess
He knows very well how hard she and their friends work, so he does his best to help her relax when she has the time to. Making dinner, cleaning, talking and soothing her
House-Husband vibes
They like to talk to each other about their lives before they met each other. Angewomon reminisces on her journey and hardships, while Wizardmon marvels with tales of Witchelny and his travels
He'd like to take her there someday, if he could
Angewomon is quick to shut anyone down if they insult her husband. Wizardmon is quick to hex anyone who insults his wife
Both of them will always find time to visit Kari. Kari is their biggest supporter and longtime friend (for obvious reasons)
He probably has a scar from that attack, now that I think about it
Angewomon and Kari both feel bad about it. He reminds them not to, because he wouldn't have been able to stand it if either of them got hurt
Share nightmares, shared comfort
All I got so far
wizard thoughts
thinking about the very real possibility that the black part on the head of wizardmon's staff is meant to be a digital screen. i always assumed it was a hole, like something had burst out of it, but there's that one reference book doodle where wiz is staring intently at it... and the badge that DEFINITELY made it a screen... and the tamagotchi it was based on do have that little cracked/exploded marking AROUND the screen.... and witchelny magic is always described as an advanced PROGRAMMING language, so digital wizard having digital staff is not really strange at all.
also the more i think about it the more i think the original design of wizardmon was a normal organic flesh/blood one with ONLY a stitched mouth and none anywhere else, and the cloth anime version was just a bad (in the sense that it wasn't accurate, i actually HIGHLY prefer it) interpretation, similar to weregarurumon losing his tail and plesiomon gaining a random black forehead marking. also, watanabe gave a LOT of digimon (see meramon, brachiomon, babamon, etc) stitched mouths just for the aesthetic and THEY are clearly not plush-like, after all, nor is wizardmon a puppet or undead type as one would naturally infer if he WERE 'covered' in stitches as other fans like to project for some reason.

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screenshot redraw. i think about him most days
DIGIMON BEATBREAK 13 - Hey guys want to see how hard I can freak out???
I can't even discuss a single thing without it being a spoiler, but I will open up with these three images from the OP and how they've all been quietly explained or had their existence expanded upon with some new information introduced this week:
So.
Without further ado, behold as I try to calmly discuss part of episode 13!
apologies for the length of the post
A pile of poop sketches I have collected, that’ll be used for Aurora blog’s info entries~
Augaramon’s profile doodle, and a portrait of Ayame, one of the field agents and first gen Digimon tamers that works in the organization. Some might remember her from forever ago haha. I decided that she’ll stay Japanese. And her partner, a cute moth Digimon, Satumon~ The poor, unfortunate pair that was saddled with looking after the new tamers and mentor them.
And sketchy emblem of that human-Digimon research/military organization, EOS. Which, as you can see, was renamed to ARCHANGEL. Because of reasons that’ll be explained, durr.
Impmon @ Calumon before the digital world arc: Weak!!! Fite me!! I’ll take your data!!!!
During the final arc:
“You’ve done more than enough, now it’s up to us”
Teehee Digimon, around ~40 minutes
kill me I’m sick but need to go to work waahhh

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Even though this season explained that Digimon like children due to their imagination, it would make sense if that theory broke because Yamaki constantly deals with Digimon... I swear he's just TK Falldown Mode.
In this AU, a digital field has formed and Hypnos tried facing it themselves. Then tada! Angemon to the rescue! Yet, the data for this one in particular had a mix up from the in-universe show... It's like he was searching for his partner for a long time.
Once he came from the Digital World to theirs, the resemblance we all thought of striked him. That alone convinced him this was the "TK" he was destined to meet.
Ranting and complaining about fandom stuff (it's the usual topic if you know me lol)
Sometimes I see Digimon fandom takes so bad that they drive me insane. The insistence some people have on digimon being extensions of their partners and not their own individuals with thoughts and feelings is crazy...
I guess it's not even intentional most times, it's just so ingrained in their brains they don't realize what they're doing. They'll go out of their way to read the digimon as metaphors and representations of some part of the human they're partnered with, and completely forget to acknowledge them as characters, as an active part of the narrative. Even when the focus is on the digimon, how they feel and what they want, somehow people will make it about their human partner instead.
And yeah, sometimes the actual canon material is a bit at fault too, when most of the focus of the story is on the human characters rather than the digimon. And I wish that didn't happen so often. But that's still no reason to ignore them. In fact, it's all the more reason for fans to give them the focus they don't get.
This treatment by fans is especially prevalent with stories in which the partner pairs share some sort of deeper connection, like Survive's whole soulmate thing (literal soulmates and you're focusing on one half rather than the whole, really?), or the idea of "mirror images" in Beatbreak, to mention some recent examples. Suddenly, the digimon are no longer themselves. Instead they represent some part of their partner, they exist as a tool through which you can analyze the human characters. The fact that they're walking around interacting with others and expressing themselves means nothing anymore. Not gonna lie, it's a bit infuriating to see this. Maybe I shouldn't take it so seriously, but... ugh, it frustrates me so much.
(And it's funny you never see it done the other way around. You don't see people dissecting the behavior of the human characters in an attempt to figure out what it says about their digimon partners. Which you can do, by the way. The whole soul/mind connection works both ways.)
People see the digimon as different just because they look different (most of the time), despite intelectually being the same as humans (sometimes even superior). One fun exercise I like to do is replace all the digimon with humans in my mind and ponder how differently the fandom would treat them, both the digimon individually as well as their relationships with each other and the human cast. Try it, you might reach some interesting conclusions.
But y'know, be the change you want to see in the world, I suppose. Best I can do is try my best to acknowledge the digimon as characters whenever other people don't, and hope that maybe that will rub off on others. (Besides, it's not like I have never made that mistake myself — sometimes it's really easy to just gravitate towards the human cast. And canon doesn't help sometimes! I get it!!)
At the very least the one positive this has is that seeing this attitude motivates me to share my own perspective on things. Like that post I made last night, I had started writing it earlier and saved it on my drafts unsure if I should even post it cause I know some people are weird about that subject matter, but then I saw one of the aforementioned bad takes and went "nah y'know what, I need to get this out of my system". So... yay?
At the end of the day none of this is that serious, but it's still annoying. I just gotta vent about it sometimes.
To be fair, it’s mostly an issue with settings that draw from Adventure Classic itself though not necessarily 02 since Veemon, Hawkmon and Armadillomon presumably only partnered with Davis/Daisuke, Yolei/Miyako and Cody/Iori respectively because the trio were the ones to release them from hibernation and the International DigiDestined are presumably not connected to the original event that made Tai(chi) and co DigiDestined not to mention Lui, Menoa, Daigo and Maki muddying the waters
Settings that instead draw from Tamers like Xros Wars, Ghost Game and Liberator have arguably far less of an issue with this mindset because these settings tend to emphasize Digimon autonomy, especially XW and GG due to the former being faction based rather than individual partnerships prior to Hunters and the latter using Digimon autonomy as a recurring plot point most notably with Angoramon
Yeah, like I mentioned it is especially notorious in settings like that, but I see it happening with a bit of everything to some extent. I do notice a difference with fans who prefer shows like Xros Wars and Ghost Game, but even then I always run into some people here and there who treat the digimon as a completely secondary thing...
Beatbreak is an especially frustrating case because people are so fixated on the mirror image idea, even though it is a very surface level concept in the show itself and hasn't really been expanded upon much further since it first came up. The story makes it clear that digimon can be born from strong momentary emotions and actually be completely different from their partners, so this method of analysis isn't reliable to begin with. Not to mention that from the moment they're born, they become their own person. They're not a literal part of their partners, they simply feed on their emotions, and seeing them as a literal reflection feels really reductive when even the show doesn't do that.
Anyway sorry for rambling! I agree with your addition, just thought I'd expand on it
I unfortunately got a real skewed perspective of digimon when my first experience was one of the comics (v tamer 01) where the digimon has a name and the human provided tactical support. Every now n then I hear the echo of my scandalised younger self once more "what do you MEAN they don't get names"
And you're SO valid for that!
My first contact with Digimon was through the anime so for a long time I didn't put much thought into why they didn't have names, kinda assumed it was a general digimon culture thing. But the more I got familiar with other parts of the franchise the more I started questioning that. Why did they leave names behind when they used to be a thing? My best guess is that it's a marketing thing to ensure you remember them more easily or something, but it's really weird and I think it also contributes to this view people have of the digimon as inferior to humans. Who knows
If you were to replace every digimon character with a human, the vast majority of partnerships in the franchise would probably have people going "omg they're so in love, it's canon!!!" and pondering this leads me to two conclusions:
1. That people severely downplay the intensity of the bonds between the digimon and humans and don't even consider the possibility of a romantic interpretation of said bonds simply based on their appearances (and this really is an appearance thing, because Yuujin is even less human than that and gets a pass simply for looking like a human)
and
2. That people have a really hard time acknowledging strong platonic bonds between human characters without jumping to the conclusion that they must be inherently romantic (as in, believing this to be the authorial intent with no other possible interpretation)
Where am I trying to get with this? Idk, it would be pretty silly to try to tell people how to correctly engage with these stories (there is no such thing). But it's something interesting to think about.
Digimon and the Adults
You know what? As I am reading so much about adultism and the oppression of children right now, I cannot help but think about how Digimon deals with it. Especially as Beatbreak right now has a ton of actual things to say on this topic. And I find it somewhat interesting how the series traces this specific issue. So... Let me just ramble on it.
Digimon Adventure/02
Digimon Adventure starts off as an isekai and like a lot of isekais of the time, it just puts the kids for the moment into a world without adults, so adult supervision is something the show has not to worry about for the moment. Yes, those kids normally have adults. Yes, those adults do occassionally parent them. But that is not important for the moment.
It becomes important though in the latter half of the series, when the kids are back in the real world. And there a big theme is first them keeping the Digimon secret, but then also - as the parents find out - to assert their own agency over the parents.
To this day, I find it somewhat sad that we never see Jyou interact with his father, though. Given so much of Jyou's arc is about him being unable to fit (arguably unreasonable) expectations of his father.
Though that is generally a bit of an issue in Adventure. Because while it addresses things where the children were suffering due to the action or neglect of their parents, this is something the children have to overcome as part of their character development - rather than something the adults are confronted with.
I find Taichi the best example here. Taichi is insanely parentified. We see this. And we can also look at the flashbacks of Hikari ending in the hospital and him getting punished for it was unfair, because he should not have to have been the sole keeper of his sick toddler sister when he was like 8. I am all for freedom for children - but man, that is just too much for a kid of that age to deal with. He should not have to deal with this. But the series never acknowledges it this way. Instead it is just that Taichi needs to overcome his associated trauma.
02 does not do a whole lot with most of the parents. Daisuke's parents are there, but that's it. Miyako's parents as well. Iori's father is dead (which is a part of his story) but his mother is not that much of a character. Though his grandfather is, technically. The parents of Taichi and Hikari are once more mostly sidelined. The two parents that have a tiny little arc about it are Ken's parents, who actually do have to face that maybe the way they dealt with their children being geniuses was actually detremental to those two kids. Which is actually kinda nice.
And, well... the parents of Takeru and Yamato do interact with the plot and are supportive of the kids. Though there is still not much of them facing any failures as parents.
Digimon Tamers
The main reason I got so attached to Digimon Tamers kinda was the fact that the kids in this series felt like they actually existed in the real world, mostly because their social environment (and especially Takato's social environment) was such a big factor. We know for all three main characters a lot about their parents. We know that Takato's parents own the bakery, and that they made the active decision to only have one child. We also know that the father is a bit more lenient than the mother. And we also know that the mother has Ryukyuan roots.
For Jian we know that his father is a computer scientist, and his mother is a graphics designer. We know the father is from Hongkong, while the mother is Japanese. We know they wanted a lot of kids - which is why they have 4 kids.
For Ruki we know that her father is absent from her life, and her mother - who became a mother as a teenager - is kinda not emotionally ready to be a mom, which is what is kinda part of the main issue for Ruki. Because Ruki wants a parent, but her mother acts more like a sister, while expecting Ruki's grandmother to parent her. And Seiko does parent Ruki to a certain extent, but for the most part she just let Ruki do whatever.
Hirokazu's and Kenta's respective parents are not as detailed in their background. We know who they are. Their names. Their ages. But that is it.
But then there is also Juri. And I actually have to say that one of the main things that I still love so much about this series is this: Juri's parents are abusive. Not in an actively malicious way, but by being callous with her. And this is why Juri is traumatized. And it is why D-Reaper uses her as a host. And Juri's father is confronted with this, and does realize that actually, yes, what he did was wrong. And he has to apologize for it. And explicitly it is acknowledged that his crime was not even outright screaming at her or anything, but simply emotional neglect. He is a Japanese man. He has never been taught how to communicate his feelings. So when his wife died, he was not equipped to handle the household, food, and the emotional well-being of his daughter. He was overwhelmed. There was no structural support for him. And this traumatized Juri. She never had a safe environment to grieve her mother. Her father remarried quite quickly - partially so that Juri could have a mother again - but this made it even worse, as Juri now was under the impression that she had to be okay, and had to acknowledge this new woman as her mother. And the show looks at all of this, makes the viewer understand this, and goes: "What the father did or rathere did not do was wrong. Juri is not to be blamed for it, but he."
Frontier & Savers
I am grouping those those two together, as there is not a whole lot to be said about Frontier. As Frontier is 100% isekai, the parents mostly show up in flashbacks and do not really have a role in regards to the character arcs. Takuya has parents. That is all we know. Kouichi and Kouji have parents who got divorced. Kouichi's mother is struggling financially. Kouji's struggles with his step mother. But that is it. We do not see a whole lot of interaction. All of it is backdrop. Izumi's parents moved to Japan from Italy, but we never see them. Junpei's parents are never mentioned as well. And Tomoki does miss his mother, but his real world backstory has more to do with bullies and his relationship to his brother.
Savers is meanwhile a bit... weird. Yoshino is 18, so off age. So while we know theoretically about her family, we never see her parents. Touma has a dead mother and a father who gets minor villain role later, but this, too, is less defining of him. The show basically runs under the presumption that because he is a genius he does not need to be parented by adults.
Masaru meanwhile actually is a character who has a mother - and of course his father will eventually become a central player within the story. But even with him... While the mother is there, she is not a figure who tells him much of "you should not do this, this is dangerous". Nor does Masaru going to school ever come up as much. We see him in his school uniform, but that is it. (I noted before: Yamaguchi does seem actually have beef with the concept of mandatory schooling - a good beef to have, mind you, because mandatory schooling kinda sucks - but it is quite noticable.)
The one character whose family and relation to it is actually brought up interestingly is Ikuto. Because his parentage is brought up. Yukidarumon was his mother, and treated him as her son. And when he is dealing with having human parents, the show actually gives him the grace of saying: "Yes, those people are your parents. They are going to love you. But you do not need to be instantly alright with this new arrangement. You are a person of your own, and get to do this on your own timescale." Which is actually quite nice.
Xros Wars, Applimon & Ghost Game
Jumping over the Adventure remake once more as I did not watch it enough - though in what I watched the adults were just not there.
Those three do generally have a lot of overlap in this regard, though. Xros Wars once more is a show primarily set in the isekai. From what I remember: while the families or rather the lack thereoff was a plot beat for Nene and Yuu, and the entire "rich family" thing also was a Kiriha backstory thingie, for the most part this was a show that was just utterly uninterested in the social life of those kids before or after the digital world. It was kind of one of the main reason I hated this.
Applimon did have parents. Haru has a mother. Eri has a mother. Astra has both parents. And with Rei the absence of the parents is kinda the point. But generally this show also just vaguely handwaved at the idea of parenting, then shrugged, and then moved on. There are single episodes were the parents are affected by Appmon shenanigans, but the show is not interested in exploring the idea of agency of youngsters in a world where usually youngsters are living under constant supervision.
And Ghost Game, well... Ghost Game put two of the three characters into a boarding school. Hiro's dad is technically involved in what little plot there is, but is never actively there as a parent, and the teachers, too, are kinda absent. And Ruli's parents... uhm. Did they even show up? I don't remember.
Beatbreak
Beatbreak is actually kinda interesting because while this series is very inherently defined by the absence of most actual parents, this is the series were it is making the point. Beatbreak very explicitly engages with the concept of youths and children being oppressed in this system, and them basically being unable to win within it.
School was a bad experience for Tomoro. School did not work for him. Arguably because of neurodivergence. Makoto ran from his home, partially because he was not able to keep Chiropmon while at his home, but he generally made the active choice of choosing his partner over his family. Reina was abandoned by the family she had left. And Kyo - who is still very young - is actually parenting those three by being kind and allowing them freedom and agency in a way that most adults would not do. When Tomoro says: "School does not work for me." Kyo says basically: "Yeah, that is alright as well." From all we see, neither of our main trio goes to school, and this is not framed as a failure, but a free choice those kids made.
And we also see with the Tactics Team Seven, how the three of them are abused and exploited by the capitalist military system they are in.
The thing I really find the most fascinating in the series so far is Raito. Because the show puts him up, shows you how bad he is, and how much he is willing to risk the lives of others. And then the series goes: "Okay, but you get that this is an abused kid who is just acting in this way because it was all he was ever taught, right?"
The series is so far quite interested in how kids are experiencing this post-apocalypse in a way that feels quite deliberate. And I am quite interested to see where this is going.

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DigiMonday - DAGOMON (aka Dragomon)
(Perfect Level/Virus Attribute/Aquatic beast Man Type)
As anyone with even the slightest familiarity with the work of famed American horror writer and noted air conditioner fearer H.P Lovecraft will no doubt notice, Dagomon's design is based heavily on that of easily Lovecraft's most famous creation, Cthulhu. First described in 1928 in the short story "The Call of Cthulhu" (although interestingly the big man himself never actually makes an in-person appearance in his debut story) and apparently intended to be pronounced "koh-luhh-looh", Cthulhu is an enormous, unfathomably old being described as being vaguely humanoid in shape but with scaly green skin and features of both an octopus and a dragon. Like the other "Great Old Ones" who appeared both in Lovecraft's other works and in many later works by other authors inspired by Lovecraft in the form of "The Cthulhu Mythos", Cthulhu was said to have originated in distant space but have been lying in a deep sleep on earth (in his case on an undocumented island surrounded by a twisted, geometrically impossible city called R'lyeh,) with the story ending with the revelation that everyone's favourite mollusc-headed monster man had been awoken and was now lurking somewhere in the eastern pacific ocean while his legions of worshipers prepare to hunt the story's point-of-view character down.
(A statue of Cthulhu as drawn by Lovecraft, image source here. What a specimen...)
While Dagomon's design is clearly heavily Cthulhu-inspired, it also features a few interesting little pieces of religious imagery; the golden bands around its right leg (or, like, right leg-shaped mass of tentacles) appear to be holy rings (little trinkets that appear on a variety of Digis associated with goodness and holiness, and which in the lore(tm) are apparently indicative that a Digimon carries "holy data",) while the necklace of beads around its neck (described as a rosary in its official description) appears to be based on a mala, a type of prayer beads used as tools of worship in certain Hindu Buddhist, Sikh, Jain, Muslim and Christian rituals. Dagomon's official description calls it an "undersea priest", and its title combined with the religious imagery in its design may link to consistent idea in the Cthulhu Mythos that many of the Great Old Ones are worship for their terrible power. The generous sprinkling of worship-related imagery in Dagomon's design may also be an allusion to the origin of its name; first alluded to in a 1919 short story of the same name (pre-dating Call of Cthulhu) and later being fleshed out in 1936's The Shadow over Innsmouth, (Lovecraft's first published book,) Dagon (or Father Dagon, if you're one of his many fishy followers) is another ancient aquatic being and debatably another Great Old One worshipped by a species of fish-like humanoids called The Deep Ones, alongside Cthulhu and a third ancient being, Mother Hydra.
(A doodle from the Digital Monster Artbook Ver. Pendulum of a Dagomon attending to its undersea religious duties (possibly referencing the real-world Abhayamuda pose) while also threatening to clobber a disrespectful Octomon.)
Dagomon debuted in 1998 in the second version of the Digimon Pendulum VPet, "Deep Savers" (which featured various marine-themed Digimon.) Since then its appeared in several pieces of Digimon media (usually depicted as an extremely powerful antagonist,) but in my mind the most interesting Dagomon appearance to date is in the episodic horror-themed anime series Digimon Ghost Game (think Scooby Doo but with Digimon,) where the episode "The Call" takes heavy inspiration from both The Call of Cthulhu and The Shadow over Innsmouth (featuring a Dagomon luring humans towards the ocean and turning them into Deep One-style fish people to worship it.) Perhaps the strangest Dagomon appearance was a total nonsequiter of an appearence in the very much non-episodic Digimon Adventure 02's "The Call of Dagomon", which also referenced The Shadows over Innsmouth and spent the entire episode building up to shot of a Dagomon rising from the ocean in the last few minutes of the episode...only to never address the events of the episode again, apparently as the result of an arc that would have heavily featured Dagomon being cancelled. Oops.
Favourite Dagomon Art: This image from the Digital Monster Artbook Ver. Pendulum, showing a Dagomon and a MarineDevimon feuding over who gets to be the definitive horror of the deep while an Octomon and a Gesomon goad them on.