Hearing a lot about the Doctor Who books lately gave me the willingness to finally read past the first chapter of the book, and now i think i'l start writing some bilingual posts on my thoughts about them!
It will be bilingual because, through my knowledge, Brazilian DW fans are very scarse on Tumblr, and it will also be a very good english training session.
Oh, and it's the first english book that i ever read!
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Recentemente escutei bastante sobre os livros de Doutor Who, e isso acabou me dando a motivação para finalmente passar do primeiro capitulo do livro, e agora eu acho que vou começar a escrever meus pensamentos sobre eles!
E bem, vai ser bilíngue, pois por meu conhecimento, os fans Brasileiros de DW são bem escassos aqui no Tumblr, e também acaba sendo um boa sessão de treino pro meu inglês.
Ah, e este é também o primeiro livro em inglês que leio!
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I didn't really like the plot of the Doctor losing his memory again and so soon after the movie. Felt a little repetitive, but at least is a good concept for a Doctor Who book.
Never did a ever expect that the Doctor would ever hold a bag full of crack. It is sincerely one of the best parts of the book. I just feel a little sorry for past me being unfocused when trying to read earlier.
Also, it's so interesting to look at how big the drug problem was in the 90s and how far my view of the event is. It feels like a footnote, but so many things were impacted by it. (The whole story of GTA: San Andreas is around the drug wars, and one of my biggest impressions of the thing. And having a DW story involving it feels awkwardly matching.)
Going past the whole drug part, i've liked Sam so far. I am looking forward to what will happen to her.
The Eighth Doctor encountering his former selves has been fun, but i'm getting some mixed feelings. I don't know how to express it, just some weird opinions of mine that i still can't define.
Then, i'm also very curious about Lord President Flavia and very intrigued by what the CIA is doing.
When i reached the Third Doctor part, i swear i could hear the characters' voices on my mind. I probably have some kind of favoritism for his era because of how great the whole combination of stuff was. And Delgado continues being the best master. His vingative wife aura is incredible.
I'm having a great read at the moment, and I'm very eager to finish the book soon. And i'm posting at late night again. I probably got a vice of doing this.
Now, I am ending the post with a last question for the people who read until here: I saw half a video on youtube about the 7th Doctor Lungbarrow, and i leaved right before he talked about the book. Should i read it before i continue into the rest of EDA's books? And if so, is any other reading necessary? Or watching his last series already enough?
I wanted to listen more of the 7th doctor main range audios, but felt a little lost with the context when i ended Shadow of the Scourge.
Eu não gostei muito do enredo do Doutor perder a memória de novo e tão cedo após o filme. Me pareceu meio repetitivo, mas pelo menos é um bom conceito para um livro de Doctor Who.
Nunca que eu esperaria ver o Doutor acabar carregando uma sacola cheia de crack. E sinceramente é uma das melhores coisas do livro. Só sinto um pouco de dó sobre meu eu do passado, que estava desatento quando foi ler pela primeira vez e perdeu esse momento de ouro.
Também é interessante olhar o quão grande o problema das drogas era nos anos 90, e o quão longe minha visão dos eventos está. Parece uma nota de rodapé, mas teve tanta coisa afetada por isso. (A história do GTA: San Andreas involve a guerra das drogas e é minha maior impressão sobre a coisa. E é estranhamento compatível uma história de DW envolver esse tema.)
Deixando a parte das drogas de lado, estou gostado bastante da Sam. Estou curioso com o que acontece com ela depois.
O Doutor encontrando seus eus do passado está divertido, mas acabei com uns sentimentos misturados. Não sei muito como expressar, só umas opiniões estranhas que não sei definir.
Também estou curioso com a Lorde Presidente Flavia, e bastanre jntrigado com o que a CIA está fazendo.
Quando cheguei na parte do Terceiro Doutor pude jurar que comecei a escutar as vozes dos personagens na cabeça. Provavelmente tenho um favoritismo pela sua era, e também o quão espetacular toda combinação de coisas que tinha. E o Delgado continua sendo o melhor mestre. A aura de esposa traída e vingativa que ele tem é incrível.
Estou tendo uma boa leitura no momento, e bem ansioso pra terminar logo. E estou novamente postando na madruga. Provavelmente eu peguei vicio.
Agora, estou terminando o post com uma última pergunta para as pessoas que leram até aqui: Eu vi metade de um vídeo no YouTube sobre Lungbarrow do 7° Doutor, e saí logo antes de ele falar sobre o livro. Devo lê-lo antes de continuar com o resto do "EDA's"? Se sim, é necessária alguma outra leitura? Ou assistir à sua última temporada ja é suficiente?
Eu queria ouvir mais áudios da main range do 7º Doutor, mas me senti um pouco perdido com o contexto quando terminei Shadow of the Scourge.
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Primeiro post meu aqui no tumblr.
Já vou começar dizendo que o mestre do Roger Delgado é o Responsável por fazer toda a era do 3º doutor ser 100% mais assistível e icônica. (Além do próprio John Pertwee mesmo)
Achei uma adaptação muito fiel ao jogo original, e adorei as liberdades criativas que a autora fez. Estou ansioso para ler as sequências e ver o que rola.
Talvez eu faça uma resenha no futuro, mas no momento só vou marcar e compartilhar que li.
Terminei de assistir todos os arcos do 4ºdoutor. Foram 172 - 190 episódios, e posso dizer que fez ele ser um dos meus doutores favoritos. Minha parte favorita de tudo foi a introdução do Davros, de dois novos Mestres e do melhor companheiro de todos K-9!
Vou sentir falta da presença dele, (na série, alegria dele estar vivo ainda) e bem, ele vai marcar para mim uma era muito boa para reassistir, e o Tom Baker vai ficar junto com o Roger Delgado e o John Pertwee como meus favoritos da Série Clássica. E bem, que venha mais atores marcantes durante os 4 doutores que ainda tenho que assistir.
Desculpas se acabou saindo como Resenha review depois de noticia importante. Eu geralmente não me expresso muito então acaba saindo coisa assim. E é isso.
Continuação do primeiro post pois tem limite de imagem.
Status: Leitura concluída. Opinião: Saleiros nazistas são engraçados de ver até matarem seus novos amigos e lhe colocar para trabalhar num campo de concentração. Nota: 4/5. Não é a toa que o atual 15° doutor pois o 10° doutor, agora 14° na terapia.
Status: Terminar de Ler. Opinião: Do que li até agora, todas as histórias são boas. Além de encapsular bem os doutores clássicos. Nota: A definir, mas provavelmente 4,5/5
Status: Terminar de Ler. Opinião: O começo e o livro em si é hilário. Não sei por que não terminei ainda. Nota: A definir, mas provavelmente entre 4 a 4,5/5.
Status: Parei nos últimos capítulos. Opinião: O livro é bom. Faltou só estabelecer o cenário melhor. Mas foi um livro difícil para eu gostar. No meio dele o clima cai muito, e vamos de tristeza para tristeza coletiva, com o clima não dando nem um sinal direito de subir. Não sou muito bom para obras assim e quando comprei o livro não esperava ficar tão sombrio. É um livro que não tem nota muito alta para MIM, mas que eu poderia muito bem recomendar para alguém que gosta. Então veja mais minha nota como preferência e não critica. Nota: Entre 3 e 3,5/5
Status: Terminar de ler. Opinião: Excelente livro clássico sobre mitologia greco-romana. Bom para estudar e conhecer mitologia como iniciante. Nota: 5/5.
Status: To bem no começo. Opinião: Livro velho, escrito no português do começo de 1900. O autor morreu antes do meu avô nascer, então leia com cautela e tenha múltiplas perspectivas pra não cair em ladainha da direita ou da esquerda. Nota: Não li nem o suficiente pra opinar direito, e minha perspectiva da história do brasil vem primariamente: da escola estadual, ensino médio, faculdade de letras, videos e jogos de história. Método complicado e longo de dizer "Não Posso Opinar" ou dar uma nota.
Status: No começo do livro. Opinião: O começo é bom, e o autor é famoso por dirigir documentários sobre a China, e premiado pela china por eles. Diria uma boa leitura. Nota: Cedo demais para dar uma.
Bem, essa foi minha leitura esse ano. Bem extensa eu diria. Mas ainda vai ter mais! Não hoje, mas pretendo colocar o que li de HQ's na parte 3, e talvez audiodramas também. Mas por enquanto é só.
Doutor Who classico em preto e branco, tem umas imagens mais doidas possiveis. (1° Doutor, Arco Marco Polo, Esqueci o episódio.)
Por qual razão Doutor Who clássico tinha tara por Sacrifício e magia negra????
My first brand new full-length release in a few months is now out!
I attempted to take the Tenth Doctor’s theme from S4 into a theme for the 8th Doctor in Debney’s style from ‘96.
Check it out!
Doctor Who: The Doctor's Theme (Series 4): 1996 Version
Muito bom. Maravilhoso.
Literalmente Doutor Who + Starship Troopers + Sacrifício.
Ainda por cima os aliens insetos do audio tinham aparecido na série antes. Nem lembrava mas quando falaram no making off, lembrei do episódio excelente que apareceram antes.
E ainda mais! Tinha os atores da Sarah Jane Adventures dublando uns personagens. Esse ja virou um dos meus audios favoritos.
Ark in Space do 4° Doutor e a infecção de plástico bolha pintado de verde:
Bioware games can absolutely fascinate me, in part because of their worldbuilding, and in part because of where the worldbuilding ends. I mean, I did a whole long series of posts on the grammar of Qunlat and I have at least a dozen essays worth of material of exegetical analysis of religion in Dragon Age kicking around in my brain, which I keep threatening to actually manifest.
But since I'm here with my worldbuilding hat on, I'm going to ramble about Star Wars: The Old Republic, focusing on some of the sometimes-hilarious drama that's implied by the plot, and the implications for how these shenanigans remade a major galactic society in the process. Involved will be a man who faked his death to get out of going to meetings, a wine uncle who might become emperor, a living scowl with dangerous shoulders, and other assorted animals.
Expect a lot of bonus rambles in the image alt-texts, which is where I store commentary and jokes that I can't fit into the flow of the main post.
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Before I dig into the topic at hand, I have to set the scene for those who don't know the game, or have forgotten in the fourteen years since the game launched.
Spoilers in the post below for Act 3 of the Sith Warrior and Inquisitor storylines, Act 1 of the Jedi Knight and Imperial Agent storylines, the post-Act 3 Battle of Ilum flashpoint, and for various expansions including Rise of the Emperor, Knights of the Fallen Empire, Onslaught, and Legacy of the Sith. Assume that all reference links to Wookieepedia contain major spoilers.
SWTOR is an MMO set 3600 years before the Skywalkers crashed through the ceiling tiles of the galaxy, though it's not to say anything was less chaotic back then, just different chaos.
(Pictured: Anakin Skywalker, circa 32 BBY-4 ABY)
In this time, the titular Old Republic is opposed by a Sith Empire, which is precisely as functional as one might expect. After a decades-long conflict that ended with a Sith victory but left both sides exhausted, a state of cold war began. The Jedi, their Grand Temple destroyed, left Republic space to settle on an ancestral world. The Republic, battered and reeling, tried to recover its stride through use of its superior size and resources, and producing a truly unhinged number of superweapons.
The Sith Empire, in some ways, tried to pretend everything was fine for quite a while. They had successfully forced the Republic into a favorable treaty to end the war. They'd gained territory, they had a lot of work to do there.
…But as things started to look more and more like war again, they were left with the uncomfortable realization that they had sorta kinda killed most of the Sith in the last war, and Imperial citizens in good standing weren't producing enough Force-sensitive kids fast enough to rebuild the losses. Might've had something to do with most of them being dead.
The Empire, of course, is an absolute clusterfuck of a society. Slaves toil to maintain its power. Children of a slave and a citizen will be citizens themselves—unless they're "aliens", a category that includes everyone that isn't a human or a Sith pureblood, the original Sith species.
Being a citizen isn't great either: The Force-blind face mandatory conscription into the military, and can never rise to the highest echelons of society. Above them, the Sith act as a semi-hereditary aristocracy of evil space-wizards that serve an immortal, eldritch Emperor, their living god who has also kiiiind of gone AWOL for reasons only a few of them understand. He's torn between doing his job or staring at a living paperweight, and the paperweight has been winning. He also recently got trapped by an evil hole in the ground, it's complicated.
With the Emperor incommunicado, the duties of the state fall to the Dark Council, a ruling body of up to twelve Dark Lords of the Sith. Each have their own sphere of governmental influence, which are, one can only assume, very dark as well.
Presumably, the Dark Council had something to do with the inevitable yet still surprising solution to their space wizard deficit: over a thousand years of laws were suddenly overturned. Slaves, aliens, and prisoners were not only permitted to become Sith, it was now mandatory that they report for induction into training programs if they possessed any hint of Force-sensitivity.
This is how one of the eight protagonists of the MMO gets their start: if you play the Sith Inquisitor plotline, you begin as a former slave who has survived basic training and made it to the Sith Academy, where your teacher dearly wants to kill you. Your first mission: survive school.
I'm sure this is very relatable to quite a lot of you.
Now that I've got my PhD with only a few gray hairs, I'm looking back at this premise and thinking: This would completely upend the social framework of the Empire. You'd have every established Sith Lord in the Empire scrambling to kill these threats to their power, or harness them against their enemies, or both.
This is actually canon, but canon never touches on the broader, systemic implications of what the new Sith would do, and who they were before—Sure, the overseers of the training programs seem to be doing their damnedest to kill and undermine the newbies while maintaining plausible deniability, but enough of them survive to reshape the Empire. We know that. You play as one of them.
How in the fuck did the Dark Council ever manage to get this policy implemented in the first place? Obviously they did somehow, but the specifics are never mentioned.
But the specifics have the possibility to be hilarious.
The Dark Council itself is composed of Sith who either killed their way to the top, or inherited their seat from their Sith master—who they probably murdered. Turnover on most Council seats is incredibly high. The Spheres of Ancient Knowledge, Technology, and Military Offense each have three different Councilors within a single year, for example.
This also means that whoever ends up in charge of a Sphere might be entirely unsuited for it. Who heads up the Sphere of Expansion and Diplomacy? The least diplomatic guy on the Council, naturally. He goes by Darth Ravage, which fits in well enough with the three different Darths whose names mean 'death' (Thanaton, Mortis, and Rictus). The player can even end up as Darth Nox--'Darth Night'. You get the title by killing one of the Darth Deaths.
So, which of these barely-domesticated evil goths probably voted to allow 'inferior' beings to become Sith, overturning a fundamental tenet of imperial sith philosophy? Probably not the guy in charge of Sith Philosophy! We never see him, but he seems to have been a traditionalist. On the other hand, Darth "Murder has no rules" Ravage might not be huge on tradition, so we can mark him down as a "maybe". But he doesn't seem to be an instigator for something like this.
But on the subject of instigators: Darth Jadus.
Darth Jadus is an experience. While many of the other Council members make it quite clear they're angry enough to chew on the furniture, Jadus unnerves all of them by being utterly calm and composed, as long as you don't count how intensely fervent and irrational he sounds when he starts talking about the Dark Side. He's unhinged in a distressingly hinged-seeming way.
Heading up the Sphere of Intelligence, Jadus is a noted iconoclast on the Dark Council, using his authority to open Imperial Intelligence positions to aliens. He chooses slaves and Force-blind citizens to be his advisors and agents, ignoring the traditional power structures of the Sith. He prefers his literal cult following of fanatical adherents instead, who see him as a visionary savior, a terrifying inevitability, or both.
This means he seems to have basically no interest in elevating other Sith. In fact, he hates the way the rest of them run the Empire. Making more of them might potentially be against his interests.
Or at least it would be, if he didn't have some long-running secret plans that he wants to keep the other Dark Council members from catching wind of. Advocating for slaves, aliens and convicts to become Sith would superficially fall in line with his philosophy, and just raising the idea in public could cause such social chaos that his true plans would benefit from it. Jadus is also the most genre-savvy sith in the entire game: he seems to almost be aware at points that he's neither the protagonist nor main antagonist, and thus his evil plans involve not messing with either of them. When he jostles up against the main plot and realizes he has no plausible means to derail it, he responds by leaving the plot entirely.
Given the tactical chaos and uncomfortably fourth wall-touching strategies Jadus makes use of, let's mark him down as a "yes".
But Jadus is an unpopular one on the Council. He's creepy. Sith HATE feeling creeped out. That's supposed to happen to other people, dammit, not them! And with his disinterest in politics and his deep interest in foisting his manifesto on everyone, he's not the most effective Dark Councilor.
He might be able to pull in a few—Darth Decimus, head of Military Strategy, seems to have been quite willing to exploit any advantage he might be able to squeeze out of a situation. Fun side note, his voice actor also played the First Order officer who was just so done with Hux at the beginning of The Last Jedi.
[Video Description: A compilation of Mark Lewis Jones as Captain Moden Canady from The Last Jedi, with the video quality partially encrunchified by YouTube. This includes all of his shots from the film, from arrival of the Seige Dreadnought Fulminatrix, to the extremely annoyed look he gives the fireball that kills him. Sound supervisor Matt Wood was apparently pretty sure "FIRE ON THE BASE!" was going to be used as an EDM drop, and I can confirm, I've heard it out in the wild.]
Who else have we got rattling around in this Council, who might have extremely ridiculous reasons to vote yes? Well, we have Darth Vengean, head of Military Offense, was all about the Offense. Who needs defense? That nerd Darth Marr? HA! No, Vengean wanted to restart the war with the Republic. More bodies for the war machine would probably be fine with him.
Speaking of that nerd Darth Marr, Darth Marr.
Apparently he designed this armor himself. Solid effort, my man.
Marr is in his sixties by the time the game happens. He's one of the longest-surviving Dark Councilors, and he sounds so tired of his coworkers in every scene he's in. Heading up the Defense of the Empire, Marr also is the de facto leader of the Dark Council, by dint of being the only adult in the room.
Much like Jadus, he distances himself from the backstabbery and rivalries among the Council members. Unlike Jadus, he 100% means it, and has been focused on not making the Empire explode. He eventually ends up as the unofficial leader of the Empire until he gets one-shotted so hard it makes his ghost chill out a bit. He keeps the spikes, though.
So, if there's anyone on the Council who might vote for this on purely practical grounds, and has the power to push others into agreeing with him, because so help him if they don't stop holding duels in the conference room he's going to turn this Empire around—
Nobody listens to him on that, by the way. Both the Sith main plots involve duels in the conference room.
In fact, one of those duels is egged on by our last suspect. Marr might be a contender for longest-running Dark Councilor, but there is another candidate: Darth Vowrawn, who seems to be having a much better time being on the Council than Marr. I suspect the only reason why he doesn't have a bucket of popcorn with him in the Council chambers is because somebody made a rule that he had to stop doing that.
Vowrawn is a surprisingly cheerful old bastard who seems to have turned his hobby into his job. He shows up 'fashionably late' to someone else's attempted coup, after lamenting he can't sell tickets to the clusterfuck that's about to commence. In the expansions to the game, he can outmaneuver and outlive all of the competition and end up becoming the Emperor, at the age of 87.
Vowrawn is also indifferent to against the Empire's policies--he supports the ascension of a Zabrak to the Dark Council, and takes one as an apprentice as well. Beyond that, Vowrawn would have to support this move, because he's instrumental in any large project like this, both politically and practically. While the others I've mentioned all have roles explicitly to do with the aggressive expansion or protection of the Empire, Vowrawn heads the Sphere of Production and Logistics. In essence, he's the one who can decide whether all these other bozos get to eat or not.
If Vowrawn didn't accept this change, then it would have failed. So, he's a definite "yes" by default.
Speaking of bastards who are still active well into their eighties, we have one last major figure who isn't on the Council that likely advocated for this: Darth Malgus.
[Video Description: The "Deceived" trailer, set ten years before the game. God, I love this thing. This was the first trailer I saw for the game, and it got me, it really did. The Sith are just as ridiculous as they should be, combined with choreography that feels a lot more crunchy than lightsaber combat had been before, with distinct combat styles for the two main fighters. It's quick, it's impactful, and it's got a memorable conclusion. Love it.]
Malgus is as anti-racist and anti-classist as Jadus is, but without the insane transcendental Dark Side philosophy. Instead, he has an insane philosophy of bettering the Empire through eternal war, which he believes everyone should have an equal ability to participate in. He is what would happen if a Warhammer 40k character had an inside voice.
[Video Description: The "Disorder" cinematic trailer, set before the Legacy of the Sith expansion. Malgus is 75 here. Man's held together by spite and screws and whatever nutrients you can absorb by being thrown through walls. He's fully given up on the Sith Order at this point and is trying to do his own thing, and he makes it look rad. The choreography has only gotten better, goddamn. Why did it take me three goddamn years to watch this. IT'S REALLY GOOD.]
Malgus is a big deal in the military, with a lot of support from both the Force-blind soldiers and earning the loyalty of a surprising cross-section of Sith. We know this, because he nearly hijacks the Empire at one point in the early expansions. He'd be into this idea, and he probably advocated for it. While he'd have the most direct interaction with the military-related Councilors we already have in the "yes" column, he also has a history of annoying the bejeezus out of other Sith on "his" turf, so who knows! He may have been more persuasive to the others we haven't dug into.
And we can't really dig into all of them at the depth we have with some. Despite how bogglingly huge SWTOR is and the two thousand four hundred and ninety-five named characters and "Additional Voices" credits in IMDb, we never meet some of the Dark Councilors. If you don't play all the eight main storylines, you won't see all of them in the game. I'll admit, I've never seen Darth Hadra, because I've never gotten that far in a Republic-aligned storyline! The Sith you encounter in their stories can often be more one-note, because they're purely there as antagonists rather than people you are legally required to hang out with, and thus have more opportunity to pester mercilessly.
[Video Description: A clip from my own Warrior run-through, featuring my big lad Rejalgar, his coolest friend Vette, and his boss, Darth Baras, who is presently having a screaming tantrum, which Rejalgar makes worse with the most delightfully straight-faced "Is there a problem here?". The Warrior plotline lets you play things sincerely evil, sincerely noble, or sincerely hilarious. Do you want to see Jedi bluescreen when a Sith just straight-up refuses to be violent? Do you want to sidestep a boss fight by offering a family a government pension, something your boss commends as being very devious and evil? Do you want to break up a fight between gangs by threatening to eat them? Come play the Sith Warrior storyline, and be the chaos you want to see in the galaxy!]
[Video Description, from a clip I uploaded to YT specifically for this post after I found out you can only upload one video per tumblr post wtf: A clip from my Inquisitor run-through, featuring my extremely shirtless lad, Sericus, playing coy and a little airheaded when called up by his Sith master, Darth Zash. Back in the day, Purebloods weren't supposed to be played as canon for this storyline, but there were tweaks later made to dialog that provided a canon explanation for how someone with visible Sith ancestry could end up in this situation. The storyline, however, unfortunately does not fully account for a character whose ideal job description is 'villain's beautiful and deceptively intelligent consort, the true power behind the throne'. It assumes you're playing a character who wants to go conquer and/or do mad wizard-science. Bonus points for eventually letting you marry your eight foot tall razor-faced cannibal thrall though, that's very fun.]
Why don't we see all of the Dark Council? Well, because they're ultimately not important to the story as a group. Events keep you locked tightly under the purview of just one or two of them on the Sith side of things, before the post-game and expansion plots launch you into the experience of being a major player in Imperial affairs, and Imperial affairs launch themselves at you in return.
Everyone realizes the Emperor wants to eat them. Then he dies, except he doesn't. Malgus takes over the Empire for a few weeks. Marr takes over, but half the Council is dead and the rest are still in orientation and are probably also dead, because their would-be successors assassinated them. The Emperor, only mildly inconvenienced by also being dead, eats a planet. Then things go completely off the deep end, and the Dark Council is no longer your concern at all.
It's economical storytelling to not belabor the rest of the Councilors, and playing through as an ex-slave Inquisitor, you continue to face enough challenges directly linked to your background that the resistance feels systemic, even if you don't actually see all that many others who are facing the same issues.
But I think there's a lot of potential for some really wild storytelling in there. Your character receives some level of basic training before they reach the Sith Academy, along with a whole batch of ex-slaves. What did that entail? How was it organized? What happens when folks from abolitionist movements start being trained as sith, gaining all the attendant legal authority over the life and death of others?
And what about the prisoners who were released for training? While one canon option is to play a character who was facing immediate execution for participation in violent anti-Imperial resistance, at least a fair chunk of Force-sensitive prisoners were probably serving longer sentences. What happens when prison gangs start gaining a foothold in the Sith Academy, where they're too dysfunctional to even form Mean Girl cliques? What happens when some of their members become full Sith? How many of them might have Hutt backing, or even funding from the Republic Secret Intelligence Service?
These are the sorts of things the Sith themselves are terrified of. This earns a very sarcastic thoughts and prayers to them, of course. Yet it truly is wild to think about the decision-making process that went into this massive societal shift that the game treats as simply a piece of inciting incident for two plotlines out of eight: Twelve unhinged people sat down in some extremely high-backed chairs one day and voted to give everyone equal access to lightning.
I love Star Wars, it's just the funniest shit imaginable sometimes.
Tenho 19 anos e sou Brasileiro. Meus gostos de mais destaque são Ler, Jogos velhos, RPG, Doctor Who, Star Wars, História e Ficção científica. Aspirante ou pelo menos querendo ser um Escritor. Meu jogo favorito é Crash Team Racing de ps1. (Mas o remake também é muito bom) Eu também amo a série "The legend of Spyro" Escuto qualquer tipo de musica. No momento estou escutando audio dramas de doctor who, cursando faculdade e lendo ficção. Os jogos na Thumb e foto de perfil é: Il-2 Sturmovik e Battlefield 1942 respectivamente.
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