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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
One special commission for Nathan! ( commissions are still open, info here )
Fujimo, from Ponyo, my favorite Ghibli movie ♥
Fuck ai fuck ai fuck ai fuck ai fuck ai anyways here's a drawing of the scene that completely changed my brain chemistry at age 9
NEED👏THAT👏MAN👏PREGNANT *SEASON TWO* ROUND 2 POLL 44
TUMBLR! Who's getting pregnant?
Clippit/Clippy (Microsoft Office Assistant)
Fujimoto (Ponyo)
PROPAGANDA:
[Clippy]
"Look I have no excuse for this one other than I think it would be funny."
"Where would the baby bump even be? Science needs an answer."
[Fujimoto]
"He has a giant goddess wife and I think she should breed him like crazy."
“but a girl who’s just perfect for you will appear eventually.”

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
ohoho denji~
How should we analyze the end of CSM ??
I think the only way for you to accept this ending is to realize that Fujimoto didn’t intend to write a proper conclusion. Wrapping up a series like Chainsaw Man with all its loose ends would have required at least fifty more chapters, and I think Fujimoto chose to end the series prematurely out of exhaustion. He wrapped it up with a generic “what if” scenario that’s almost a caricature of bad movies, because after all, he considers Chainsaw Man to be a bad soap opera.
Like many mangaka, Fujimoto needs time to create, to not be constrained by fans’ expectations every week, and to have the rest necessary to refine the story and artwork. As time went on, Chainsaw Man became increasingly sloppy, and this situation—seeing his flagship work become more and more of a sketch rather than a finished painting—showed the author, in my opinion, that he couldn’t produce anything truly satisfying from it and that he needed to finish the work so he could create again, but under much better conditions.
And now you’re probably thinking: “Well, how do you know all this ???” I think any reader has actually noticed this decline—major plot points being ignored (death, Nostradamus’s prophecy), or even main characters (Asa has been completely sidelined). Above all, not that I’m an expert, but I think I’ve been scrutinizing Chainsaw Man for three years, and I suddenly noticed that Fujimoto had hit the fast-forward button. To the point where I myself stopped analyzing the latest chapters because the rich material that was there before was no longer there: the chapters were straightforward and required no perspective, which is unusual for Fujimoto’s writing.
In short, you have a rushed ending by an exhausted author, and if you complain about this ending without any perspective—as if it were intended by the author—you’re just feeding another coin into the infernal machine that is the manga industry.
Look Back has beautifully rendered backgrounds; breathtaking landscapes
While the characters themselves are drawn with swift and expressive strokes, filled with emotion and movement
How...peculiar right?