JustNewGuy
Getting out there.
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2018
- Messages
- 12
- Likes received
- 59
The guy is American, so he is biased.Fair enough, but he would hardly be the first historical Servant who did some bad shit in life.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
The guy is American, so he is biased.Fair enough, but he would hardly be the first historical Servant who did some bad shit in life.
I don't get why this is such a surprise. Andrew Jackson is among the more interesting presidents the US has had. Especially with a victory like the Battle of New Orleans under his belt.
Three words: Trail of Tears.
It's not that it's a surprise, it's that it's a disappointment.
Fair enough, but he would hardly be the first historical Servant who did some bad shit in life.
He's very much like a car wreck.
A horrible tragedy, but you just can't look away.
Yes, but Jackson and he share a closer connection than the other Servants.
That being both of them are Americans, so Charlie feels more shame and disappointment when he thinks of him, the same way a German may feel shame and disappointment that they share a connection with Hitler.
Then what happened here:
Unless it was Karna screaming that.
That would be hilarious!
That was in one of the Micro-Singularities.
Duryodhana's wrestling kingdom perished before the combined might of the Pandavas.
So they summoned him not in Chaldea, but when they were on a mission, or they summoned him in Chaldea, but he died on a mssion?
Hopefully they summon him again soon.
Would love to see something like this:
Just imagine him doing this while Hans comments on it.
Just don't mention that wrestling has become fake to him, he may not take it well.
They didn't summon him at all. They walked in on a modern reenactment of the Kurukshetra War. In Kansas.
They didn't summon him at all. They walked in on a modern reenactment of the Kurukshetra War. In Kansas.
Speaking of odd battles, is it possible for any future battles to involve rap?
Kinda like this:
Some of the historical characters portrayed have had...odd personality traits, so a desire to do a rap battle with an enemy isn't all that strange.
Ohh and as of now anytime Caesar speaks I will hear him in the voice of the guy who played Caesar in the video above.
You gotta admit the voice just fits.
Sending Lancelot after everything and anything; Arthur, you've sure gotten lazy with your rule if your answer to every problem is "send Lancelot at it". But then again, a lot of FGO players solve their problems with "Send Cu after it". So I can't say I have any room to judge.
It's not that Arthur was lazy, exactly, it's more that Lancelot was basically Camelot's Special Forces.Charlie, your previous chapter was misnumbered.
Sending Lancelot after everything and anything; Arthur, you've sure gotten lazy with your rule if your answer to every problem is "send Lancelot at it". But then again, a lot of FGO players solve their problems with "Send Cu after it". So I can't say I have any room to judge.
But then again, a lot of FGO players solve their problems with "Send Cu after it". So I can't say I have any room to judge.
Bedivere is in fact the same as he was in the game, give or take a kidney.Bedivere is like in the game, right? Because that guy was one precious waifu.
Also, that humanizing moment with Cursed Arm was nice.
"Do you know why the other Servants all went Leeroy Jenkins on me
Cursed Arm, despite being a fearsome antagonist, is also a very... human character.
Further, Galahad having some grim truths about his own life exposed by Bedievere's Laser Accurate Insight.
They already act like an old married couple, a few snags in the relationship isn't something that they can't work out eventually.Charlie seems to be getting a bit better at being a decent human being, so it's possible he can help Galahad with some of his problems now.
They already act like an old married couple, a few snags in the relationship isn't something that they can't work out eventually.
They also wouldn't be the first time travelers that fell in love.
I'm of course speaking of Doc Brown and Marty.
a loaf of bread so hard and stale it could quite likely be used as a murder weapon
"He was Camelot's greatest knight at the age sixteen?" I repeat incredulously.
"A sentiment that I find myself sharing," Bedivere admits. "I find myself rather glad to have made your acquaintance, Mister Flynn, even if it has left me short a kidney."
It's another fours days after Bedivere joined us, and a full six after the massacre at the gates, when we finally come into sight of the mountains. During that time, I took the opportunity to call in just about the last Assassin I thought I'd make use of: Mata Hari. After all, it just wouldn't do to leave the weakness Bedivere revealed to me unexploited, and no man of chivalry can ever truly turn his back on a damsel in distress.
but then Cu ended up setting it on fire while he was dropping off the Stone, and it adapted admirably to its new circumstances.)
(I am at least 90% positive that Cu took the opportunity to seduce the vast majority of said hissing hordes, along with the Queen, because it took him two days to plant all three MacGuffins, [Lancelot had already arrived and set off in search of the first one by the time Cu got back] and when he came back, he was covered in serpentine hickeys.)
"While their leader, the white man covered in sunburns, is little more than a petty thug and a weakling who coasts off the strength of his subordinates, the men who serve him are all good and honorable.
By confessing to the action posthaste, and treating it as an obvious necessity (which it was, even though my reasoning at the time was more along the lines of "Oh God, they're going to trample me to death") I defuse the underlying stabbing=bad argument, remind them that I saved all their lives, and, furthermore, guilt-trip them, both for hindering my efforts to save them, and by reminding them of the people killed when trampled underfoot. It's the perfect response. I'm actually impressed with myself for thinking of it so quickly.
Good thing it wasn't Serenity or Hundred-face. They might've been insulted, especially tiny Hundred-face.
Killing this version would just be pointless, actually. The whole reason he's seeking out the Hashashin is to team up with them. Thus, he's actively trying to be diplomatic.Yeah, I think Charlie would have told them to kill this version of Cursed Arm if he didn't let them in.
While Chaldea Cursed Arm may not have exactly been insulted here, he was certainly embarrassed at his counterparts behavior.
If this gets back to Chaldea then I predict people are going to be amused that he's capable of being so melodramatic, because they've seen him as being highly stoic and borderline emotionless most of the time.
Granted they'll probably not be amused in front of his face since he's still a highly skilled killer, but the amusement will most likely happen.