If I was viktor I wouldn't even feel bad abt my ambiguously bisexual lab partner sleeping with mel. I would just look at her and be like yeah. I get it. And then mel would look at viktor and be like hmm I wonder if I can get a two for one deal outta this and this how how meljayvik can still win
A cоmmission for @cawsket. Thank you for trusting me with this!
I had a sudden vision: two psychics burdened with prophetic visions who illustrate what they see in their chosen mediums. Yves paints exclusively in blue, while Tim's tool of choice is a ballpoint pen. Yves' technical skill far surpasses Tim's, as someone said to have been born a prodigy, but Tim finds that art soothes his endless anxiety and as such enjoys art much more than Yves does and is much less prone to artist's block. One day they both have visions of the end of the world, and so it's up to them to figure out what happens and how to stop it. Also, Tim has a massive and painfully obvious crush on Yves, but Yves is far too jealous of Tim's quick improvement to realise it.
They say a Klingon's ridges are as unique as the human fingerprint...
Oh, by the way: Vander is swayed by Jinx and Vi first, but then he attacks Viktor (because Viktor was bleeding or going to attack Jinx/Vi or both), who instinctively defends himself and ends up killing him. Jinx tries to blows Viktor up (again lol) but Jayce whacks the missile with his hammer before it can reach Viktor, and Viktor, seeing Jayce hurt, breaks out of the mind control.
Horrible AU where the transformation after Viktor's death in the commune was forced on him by Singed, and he is now both Rio and the weapon he hoped Hextech would never become. Ambessa uses him to invade Piltover, and he has to fight Jayce, who even as he's defending himself keeps trying to reach him, break him out of the mind control - and meanwhile, Jinx and Vi are doing the same with Vander.
My character Cupid. He's not as friendly as he seems...
I think the problem I have with the dragon prince (beyond a surprising lack of dragons), while finding most of it decently entertaining, is that by far the most interesting aspect of their magic system is dark magic and the other magic doesn't even remotely compare to the point where it feel unintentionally imbalanced. Not to sound like Viren but it IS clever and practical and until any of the other kinds of magic can prove that they're able to cure full body paralysis for the price of a single deer (who get hunted for their meat daily anyway) they don't hold a candle to it.
Yes, other dark magic spells bad, don't trap people in coins forever, but like, for a series that likes to dip its toe into grey morality sometimes, it's weird how 'we should evaluate spells on a case by case basis instead of painting all of a certain kind with the same brush because some of them are incredibly helpful' doesn't seem to be the final conclusion the series is/was headed towards. Am I supposed to give up all helpful drugs because some of them are poisonous or addictive? No, it's about which ones are used in which context and in what amount. Maybe 'regulations good' is just too boring a conclusion or something.