I HAD TO GUYS IM SORRY IM SO HYPED
Rainy day in Kyoto
Was watching a reaction video to the Predator Badlands trailer, and one of the people reacting said something along the lines of, āI donāt care about predator culture, I donāt want to learn a single thing about them. I just want them to be mysterious alien hunters.ā
Okay, but isnāt this way of thinking precisely what has been suffocating the franchise for the last decade? We never get anything new or anything interesting because film makers keep sticking to the same old formula in order to keep the predator species āmysteriousā. Well, I hate to break it to you folks, but an alien species that has appeared in seven films has ceased to be mysterious a long time ago.
Nintendo: Maintains the msrp at $70 for Breath of the Wild (despite it coming out almost 10 years ago), does not include the DLC for the switch 2 edition (making you pay an extra $20) and then charges you for the graphical upgrade ($10), making the total purchase approximately $100.
Bethesda: Remasters Elder Scrolls Oblivion using all new assets, gives it a pretty visual overhaul with nice lighting, upgrades the gameplay and leveling system, gives us new animations and records new voice lines all for the price of $50 (not to mention the DLC is included in the base price).
Yeah, I know who's getting my money this year.
DID SOMEONE SAY BURY THE LIGHT?!!!
Smoking Behind the Supermarket with You | Super no Ura de Yani Suu Futari by Jinushi āĀ Chapter 14
Nero decided it was high time he started asking the real questions.
For those monster x reader story connoisseurs out there, I am genuinely curious about something.
In the stories you read, do you prefer the monster be more like an OC (i.e., a character that is named, has a more detailed physical description, and has a backstory and unique personality) or a more generic monster (similar to the reader character, who is nameless but has some surface level physical or personality descriptions)?
Rating: G Summary: A short story about a woman searching for the person who abandoned her long ago. cw: family angst, child abandonment wc: 1.3k
Estelle held her breath, stilling completely before she took her first step onto the lifeless planet. In her suspended silence, she could distinctly feel the resounding shudder of gravity pull her forward, beckoning her to venture forth into a strange, new world.
ā You have arrived on EX 6G12 .ā Computerās voice crackled in her earpiece. āAtmosphere composition, 97% carbon dioxide and 3% nitrogen. Conclusion, unsustainable for human life. Please be advised that your current oxygen reserves sit at 73% .ā
Estelle released her held breath, fogging up the glass dome surrounding her head as she lowered herself down from the shuttle. It was silly to think that something as seemingly fragile as a glass fishbowl was the only thing separating her from certain death.Ā
āAcknowledged. Thank you.ā
The moment Estelleās boot came into contact with the surface of the planet, a cloud of bright red dust scattered about her legs. Estelle paused, momentarily enchanted as she watched the disturbed particles flickering like a thousand tiny stars, curiously dancing in the light beaming off her helmet.
Computer, like always, took note of Estelleās interest and fuelled her boundless wonder.
āEvery 112 years, this planetās orbit brings it within close proximity of a star, HR 17C3. According to my data logs, this increases the planetās temperature to 1278 degrees Celsius. Glass storms typically form as a result of the winds and fluctuating temperatures of the planetās day and night cycles.ā
A glass storm. Estelle couldnāt imagine anything as simultaneously captivating as it was terrifying. Thank goodness her timing had brought her to this planet before it had left its tranquil phase. Otherwise, sheād have had no hope of finding the person she was looking for.Ā
āComputer, how far is he?ā
Estelle turned and used her light to survey the pitch black space that surrounded her. She couldnāt see anything on the dark horizon. No rocks, no shadows, no lights. No sign of any life whatsoever. Nothing but red dust and glimmering glass.
āAcquiring signal. Calculating. Estimated distance to target: 3 kilometres, southwest.ā
Southwest.Ā
A strange sense of deja vu befell her. Southwest; the same direction sheād taken on that night many years ago. With vivid clarity Estelle remembered the way her chilled fingers felt combing through the cooled foliage of her grandparentās cornfield as she searched for the strange light she had seen glowing in the distance from her bedroom window. Sheād ventured forth that night, armed with nothing but a flashlight and her childish curiosity.
Stupid was certainly one word for what sheād been back then, but yet here she was again, searching for that same light; except this time she was millions of miles away from that quaint little cornfield.Ā
āSignal lost.ā Computer abruptly deadpanned in her ear and Estelle's heart nearly stopped.
āWhat? What do you mean you lost hisāā
āSignal found,ā Computer interrupted. āBut it is fading. The targetās estimated power reserves have depleted to 4.3% of max capacity.ā
The rest of Computerās words fell on deaf ears as Estelle quickly made a grab for her lazer rifle and tore into the darkness of the unknown. God, she was shaking, but she held fast to that rifle, clutching it to her chest like a lifeline. Sheād never ventured this far from her system before, and she was scared of what lay beyond the light of her shuttle, but there was no way she was turning back now, not after everything sheād been through in her search to find him.
Estelle's hurried footsteps were surprisingly silent, the red sand and thick darkness easily swallowing up whatever sound she made, making her feel that much more vulnerable and alone. It was eerie, like the inside of a coffin buried hundreds of meters down.
How fitting that she would find him in a place like this. After all that time he spent shut away from her during her childhood...after all that time she spent believing that he was dead.
āIām sorry Starlight. But this work is very important. It will help people. It will save the world.ā
Estelleās molars gnaw on the inside of her cheekāa nasty habit sheād acquired in her youth. To save the world. It was a noble pursuit, her grandparents always told her, and she knew that painfully well even back then.Ā
Butā¦despite that manās sacrifice, Estelle couldnāt help but feel that she was the one who paid the price. In the name of the greater good, Estelle lost the only person in the world she longed for the most. It didn't feel fair that she was made to sacrifice the one person who was supposed to love her above all else. All for a rotting blue planet filled with selfish people who cared nothing but themselves.
But then again, Estelle knew deep down that she was no different from them. After all, she had walked away from it all and abandoned those people just like he'd abandoned her.
āApproaching target.ā
Estelleās focus recentered on the vastness before her. Her eyes darted about the darkness, desperately hoping to find any sign of him, until there, far in the distance she saw something.
Levitating just above the ground Estelle saw two glowing orange lights. She'd recognize that warm glow anywhere.
Gasping out a sob she didnāt even know she was holding, Estelle ran for that faint ray of hope. With each step forward, her vision grew progressively more blurry and the lights flickered with each desperate gasp that exploded from her lungs. In the back of her mind, Estelle prayed that the flicker was just a trick of her welling tears.
Please. Don't disappear, not now. Not after Iāve finally found you.
And then, Estelle finally reached him. Her headlight sharply reflected against the metallic face of the one she had been searching for for so long. He lay there, immobilized on his front, his rusted body covered in windswept dust. His glowing eyes immediately landed on Estelleās face, softening in spite of the emotive shortcomings of his robotic face.
āS-s-starrlight?ā
The sound of his artificial voice vibrated through the empty darkness. It was so bittersweet, an imperfect replica of the man who Estelle could no longer vividly remember, such was the cruel march of time.
āYes, Itās me.ā
Estelle dropped her rifle and fell to her knees in front of the massive, mechanical man. She no longer fought back her stinging tears as she brushed the years of rusted dirt off of his dented and scratched face.
She heard the gentle whir of his optics as they travelled up and down her body. She must look so different to him now, being almost 20 years since he'd seen her last.
āI would have never imagined th-th-thatā¦ā
His voice cut off momentarily and a static sound reminiscent of grinding of sand filled the darkened night. Estelle wondered how long heād been out here, eroding away in this state. 10 years? Perhaps even longer.Ā
āL-look how b-big youāve gotten! Oh, Estelle. Iām s-sorry I didnāt get to watch you grow up. Iām sorry I wasnāt there to protect you. I-I-Iām so sorry.ā
And when she heard those words, Estelle wept openly for the first time in years. Wailing and howling like a little child, she instinctively brought her trembling hands to her face, but quickly realized that the dome protecting her head prevented her from masking her pain. She had to show him; reveal her anguish in its full, ugly glory.
āItās okay, itās okay. Donāt c-c-cry ā His robotic voice echoed through the empty plain. Its tilt was artificial, but the regret in his words was as alive and organic as she was.Ā
āI-Iām trying.ā Estelle gasped, her own voice raw and broken. āIām trying dad, but I canāt seem to stop.ā
A heavy mechanical groan thundered and snapped Estelleās attention forward. She watched, and her heart fell to her stomach as her fatherās vessel fought with all his might to lift his hand and reach out to her.Ā
But he couldnātā¦despite her finally being close enough to touch, he couldnāt reach her.Ā
āEs-s-s-telle.ā
The cosmic irony was not lost on her.
Heād named her after a star after all.Ā