I've not seen True Blood but that was simply amazing.Kitsune Hunter said:I would pick Wallace from Scott Pilgrim, I love that guy, but I would say Lafayette from True Blood would be my main choice, the guy doesn't give or take any shit about what others think about him, just take this scene for example
The actor actually stated that he wanted the character to be omni-sexual but once parents saw how he acted towards Bashir...they toned it down to keep ratings. The crew and everyone had no problems with it...but again early 90's after the debauchery of the past thirty years made us unable to cope with an openly sexual alien?tselski said:While I did only watch the series this year, I did watch it all in order. I sort of got the impression that he was attracted to her but never really acted on it on account of the age difference and the whole her being Dukat's daughter thing.Wereduck said:Were you a latecomer to the show? Although I saw her as attracted to him I always felt he had a more paternal attitude toward her - I wonder whether that's just because I'd already seen several seasons of him flirting with Bashir when she joined the cast.tselski said:I don't really get this one either, he totally had the hots for Dukat's daughter.Wereduck said:From Deep Space 9; Elim Garak, the bad-assingest cardassian in explored space.
Looking at the Star Trek wiki though, apparently the actor who played Garak originally played the character as gay and wanted him to be gay, but the writers eventually shoehorned in that romance to appease the network or something.
I love Nowaki.Benjamin Kavanagh-Salguero said:so anyone going to go for our loveable Rainbow Dash? xD
but Nowaki & Hiro from Junjo Romantica(Egoist) pretty much take my vote =P
Hmm, it's a turn-based JRPG and perhaps a bit grindy too. Each weapon has a unique skill and you acquire skills randomly when you attack. Might be a little dated now. The world is big and often there's no hint of where to go next.Bara_no_Hime said:Huh. So it was the American translators who took out the lesbian text! I didn't realize.Sack of Cheese said:Yeah I know. I just wanna point out the direction the screenwriter took was deliberate. It's noteworthy to point out during the conversation between Serah and Vanille, Serah used the term "大切な人" (significant other) when referring to Fang's relationship with Vanille. For the English version however, they used "friend", well it could work but feels not as strong as Japanese version.
Let's hope theirsubtext won't be toned down in FFXIII-3.
Also... is Saga Frontier worth playing for Asellus? You caught my interest with your mention that she had the same writers as Vanille.
I'd have to find it used or on PSN or something, and I'm not entirely certain what kind of RPG Saga Frontier is.
that was epic. i might just watch that whole show now because of that.Kitsune Hunter said:I would pick Wallace from Scott Pilgrim, I love that guy, but I would say Lafayette from True Blood would be my main choice, the guy doesn't give or take any shit about what others think about him, just take this scene for example
Interesting - well, since you watched it in order and didn't get the same vibe on the whole Garak/Bashir/Ziyal triangle I guess that screws up my theory. Still, regardless of whether Garak was chasing Bashir or not it's good to know the actor was playing him gay so I didn't just imagine that part.tselski said:While I did only watch the series this year, I did watch it all in order. I sort of got the impression that he was attracted to her but never really acted on it on account of the age difference and the whole her being Dukat's daughter thing.Wereduck said:Were you a latecomer to the show? Although I saw her as attracted to him I always felt he had a more paternal attitude toward her - I wonder whether that's just because I'd already seen several seasons of him flirting with Bashir when she joined the cast.tselski said:I don't really get this one either, he totally had the hots for Dukat's daughter.Wereduck said:From Deep Space 9; Elim Garak, the bad-assingest cardassian in explored space.
Looking at the Star Trek wiki though, apparently the actor who played Garak originally played the character as gay and wanted him to be gay, but the writers eventually shoehorned in that romance to appease the network or something.
Rainbow Dash and Fluttershy are a commonly shipped couple. They sort of fit the standard, stereotypical pairing; loud, vibrant and athletic paired with shy, quiet and pretty. I doubt Hasbro is going to confirm it any time soon, but they're a natural pair. Think Red Oni / Blue Oni.Wereduck said:Wait up; Rainbow Dash is gay?Benjamin Kavanagh-Salguero said:so anyone going to go for our loveable Rainbow Dash? xD
Awesome if true but you're not just saying this because she...A female shouldn't have to be a lesbian to kick ass after all. That's the only real reason I'd like to see the new Lara Croft not be gay.killed Starscream?
I'm going to agree with this. Though Torchwood was just really . . . terrible is the word that comes to mind. The mashup of X-Files and Melrose Place just didn't work for me even slightly.Aralaas said:Strictly homosexuals, or are bisexuals also acceptable?
Because if so, Jack Harkness from Doctor Who.
He was the first lead villain in Bond to be gay but not the first villain(s):GundamSentinel said:Raoul Silva from Skyfall. He's just so casually and contently out of the closet. Being a villain makes it better.
**currently replaying Final Fantasy 7 - has unlocked all current party member limit breaks - not yet to Nibelheim - level 40**Sack of Cheese said:Hmm, it's a turn-based JRPG and perhaps a bit grindy too. Each weapon has a unique skill and you acquire skills randomly when you attack. Might be a little dated now. The world is big and often there's no hint of where to go next.
Own and played Persona 3 Portable (and the original as well). Loved it.Sack of Cheese said:If you wanna play JRPGs with subtexts, I highly recommend Atelier Totori and Atelier Meruru. They're one part RPG, one part time management, one part alchemy and one part dating sim. Think Persona, but set in a fantasy world and focus more on time-management.
Atelier Rorona's (the first game of the trilogy) gameplay is not as polished as its two sequels, skippable. Persona 3 Portable is a good one too, since you can play as a chick in the Portable version and some routes remain unchanged.