Nine years anniversary and happy Valentine's Day to Lewyn & Dithorba! Thank you to @t0bey for taking my request, they came out lovely.

seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Switzerland

seen from Switzerland
seen from Kazakhstan

seen from Switzerland

seen from Switzerland

seen from Switzerland

seen from Switzerland

seen from Switzerland
seen from China
Nine years anniversary and happy Valentine's Day to Lewyn & Dithorba! Thank you to @t0bey for taking my request, they came out lovely.

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.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
ROUND 1: Fun fact, one quarter of these matches include an Od baby
Which woman is more fuckable?
Larcei
Dithorba
Feel free to reblog and comment with your reasons!
my favorite iteration of the women pegasus knights squad are the 4 heavenly knights from fe4 because they allowed dithorba and pamela to be complicated pawns of a political scheme even bigger than them. dithorba gets done in by her hubris but pamela is legitimately angry at the silessian throne because lewyn abandoned all of them at a critical hour, out of all the characters in the silessian conflict i think pamelas motivations are the most empathetic
interestingly enough you'll only get her motivations dialogue if lewyn is the one to engage her in combat.
Alear 1 for the ask meme?
Why do you like or dislike this character?
Ooh, where do I begin? I adore them and I love all the tiny details they put int them. Their character arc feels so satisfying and I absolutely live for their dynamic with Veyle, I love how everything about them feels like it gets a satisfying payoff (even the hair for crying out loud), and overall, they just feel so... genuine. Especially in their interactions with other people.
Mr. Strong. My beloved. I knew you for... like maybe an hour and thirty. But yeah, I agree. He seems like a genuinely nice guy who seems like a great father.
Daemon is funny but utterly stinky man why Rhaenyra?
"an hour and thirty" LMAO he was really gone too soon </3
honestly, i don't know if i can blame rhaenyra for that since we watched him groom her (yikes) and also she is desperately attracted to the freedom he has (that she wants for herself </3)

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.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Might I ask what the Corpul phenomenon is?
THE BRIEF EXPLANATION: we gassed up coirpre so much during cyl7 + looked at his wiki page for so long that we tricked ourselves into believing he’s a major character
THE LONG EXPLANATION:
In regards to Gangrel, and not to get too Paulo Freire, any hatred or violence enacted by the Oppressed against their Oppressors is 100% the fault of the Oppressor. The Oppressor has the power to end this dynamic and all the responsibility to make amends for it. It's rather paternalistic and insulting to ask, demand, or, more often, FORCE the Oppressed to accept their oppression and the terms of how their oppression ends (if it ever does). And the Oppressor often makes the terms to end oppression for their interests first and foremost.
NO SEE THIS IS AN EXTREMELY GOOD AND VALID POINT and one that I don't see discussed in Fire Emblem...at all, honestly. One of my biggest gripes about Awakening has always been how it handles the Ylissean crusade against Plegia. It's made pretty clear in Chapter 5 that Gangrel is acting this way based on historic crimes committed against his nation by his neighbor, and Emmeryn admits that his accusations are valid. In the next chapter Chrom goes a little further in describing things...but pivots almost immediately to framing how the war affected Ylisse, rather than what it did to Plegia (emphasis mine).
…Not everything Gangrel said was a lie. The last exalt, my father, waged war on Plegia for many years. The violence… It was a brutal campaign, ending only with his death 15 years ago. Plegia rightfully remembers their suffering, but his war was no kinder to his own people. As the fighting dragged on, our army became more and more diminished. Farmers who could barely wield a pitchfork were conscripted and sent to their deaths. Soon there was no food at all, and the kingdom began to collapse. I was young, but I remember those dark times.
So immediately the heir to the man who committed atrocities against Plegia is pivoting the conversation to highlight the suffering of the aggressor nation. And, of course, immediately after that Validar attacks Ylisstol Castle and Emmeryn shortly thereafter ends up kidnapped by Gangrel and her martyrdom leads to yet another war with Plegia that they lose.
I completely understand where Gangrel is coming from in his aggression. Do I think that kidnapping and murder is a step too far? Personally yes -- but that doesn't change that he has valid reasons to be angry and to demand accountability from Ylisse. Ylisse is implied to have never accepted responsibility for what happened, and rather than addressing that Gangrel's got a point and that Ylisse needs to re-examine their handling of that whole situation, the game treats Gangrel's actions as unconscionable and the former Exalt's war as a crime against his own people as much as, if not more, than one against Plegia.
I ended up trying to tackle some of this in Affectionately Yours, most notably in Chapter 2 where Robin snaps on Chrom about individual responsibility versus national responsibility: no, Emmeryn's not the one who mounted the crusade, but her country is no less at fault for the attempted genocide just because she's now leading it, so she's responsible for taking action to acknowledge and atone for those crimes. And yes, it is a complicated situation: there's a lot of historic enmity between Ylisse and Plegia, and a lot of fears and suspicions on both sides -- some valid, some not. I don't know if I handled it all well, but I did my best to be fair with it, and to better highlight Plegia's situation where the game didn't.
Villainssss