I think the death of the Viper is supposed to be about the futility of seeking revenge and how blood feuds between families ruin lives generations later
It's not like that doesn't happen in all the Season finales and openers where the stakes are high.Commander_PonyShep said:For me, it's the fight between Twilight and Tirek in MLP's S4 finale. It reduces Twilight's friends to complete states of uselessness and powerlessness on the level of Goku's friends, while making Twilight an overpowered monstrosity on the level of Goku himself.
Hell, as I keep beating into everyone's heads, the fight might as well extend to all of Season Five up until its own finale, and end with Twilight's friends brutally murdered, all of ponykind going extinct, and Equestria blown up, all because of the genocidal Tirek. After all, if you're going to rip-off certain aspects of DBZ, why not go all the way?
Korra's struggle with airbending in the first book could've also been an intriguing discussion of her personality and why she had this specific mental block. Instead, it's just set up as a reason for Korra to grow frustrated with Tenzin. Then she suddenly learns how to airbend at just the right time to save the day, for no reason at all. And there's no explanation for why it suddenly came to her! It just did, she can do it now, and fuck you if you want to know why.Grenge Di Origin said:Aang's spirit showing up with zero explanation to just energybend Korra's bending back,
conveniently having Korra learning absolutely nothing from her experiences in Book 1, reflected by her complete and utter lack of humility and sense of consequence in Book 2.
That's one take on it... I personally interpreted it as a pretty clumsy bit of foreshadowing, seeing as he ends the game with his hair pretty much entirely bleached white. It'd be the game suggesting that if DmC ever gets its own sequels, New Dante would let his hair grow 'cause the look suddenly fits, ergo No More Disappointed Classic DMC Look Fans.MysticSlayer said:The DmC: Devil May Cry mop hair. You can't really get a more obvious "fuck you" than that. If it hadn't been for the controversy surrounding the new Dante and the way Ninja Theory responded, it might have been a humorous reference to the older games. But given the context surrounding the scene, I really can't help but feel that Ninja tried, and failed, to get a rather childish last laugh.
I think this may be intentional. In Mass Effect 3 The Illusive Man is indoctrinated and it's implied that a lot of the members of Cerberus are as well including the higher ups. Which is consistent with Mass Effect 2 what with all the reaper tech they're working with. So it makes sense that their leadership would change to be more directly controlled seeing as the Reapers love direct control so much. Convincing the Illusive Man with full Paragon or Renegade during the final confrontation does imply that he realises that he's being indoctrinated and isn't acting in sync with his original plans/ideals.Notshauna said:I don't know I kind of like the idea of Cerberus as an ally in Mass Effect 2, but probably not as they are shown in the game. I know that Cerberus performed numerous poorly planned or implemented experiments during Mass Effect 1, but I've always felt that Cerberus is far more hands off than the Alliance, and the adversarial members of Cerberus are working to a goal but The Illusive Man (TIM) never specifies how to get that done and simply funds them as long as they get results. Think of an incredibly unclear and rarely followed power hierarchy combined with all of the cloak and dagger secrecy common in spy flicks, I honestly believe in Mass Effect 2 you should of had no non-textual contact with TIM with Miranda being a liaison and you should also have conflicts with other Cerberus cells to give the feeling that Cerberus is really an insane spy agency that's gone rogue. Similarly I feel that in Mass Effect 3 Cerberus was very, directed, which I feel is too close to how the Alliance does things, making them feel like a evil version of the Alliance.
couldn't we just hand wave all of this in aying "that was naother booker/elizabeth somewhere?" or soemthing?Dominic Bounds said:snip.
First rule of Fight Club: don't talk about the shite ending of Fight Club. Seriously, I just wanted to forget about it.Sarah Kerrigan said:Am I allowed to say the ending of Fight Club? I recently watched the movie and had no idea the twist was coming until it did. Granted a few things leading up to it worried me a bit, but other than that I wasn't expecting it and never yelled fuck you at my TV hard enough.