2013-01-07, 11:47 | Link #882 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Flying in the Air
Age: 36
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Pudding's back for Kizu I think, so don't worry. Last edited by Lantern; 2013-01-11 at 19:09. |
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2013-01-25, 10:17 | Link #886 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Flying in the Air
Age: 36
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2013-01-27, 11:15 | Link #889 |
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Join Date: Oct 2012
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They should also make the "true" yochi random into a book. But yochi random has some things pretty close to yume random. Looking in to the future to help others or looking at dreams to help others pretty similar.
Now that i've been thinking, whether its a coincidence or not for the openings to show a rainbow in the anime version, 7 colours equal 7 people? maybe its not finished yet Last edited by skullheart; 2013-01-27 at 14:03. |
2013-01-28, 18:07 | Link #890 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Flying in the Air
Age: 36
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Quote:
On another note, I don't think Yochi and Yume are at all similar. Yochi only shows CRC their own future (in fact this mechanic is dissected and explained in the common route), while Yume shows explicitly other people's dream. The themes are completely two different things: Yochi pressures your mental security with knowledge of a possible outcome. Yume confronts your ideology and choice whether or not to intervene with other people's lives. |
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2013-01-28, 21:01 | Link #892 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Flying in the Air
Age: 36
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Quote:
The whole mess in Yume arc escalated because Taichi and Yui are intervening other people's lives that they are not part of. Nothing out of ordinary would happen if they choose to not intervene. Both parties would go on about their lives as usual. The core soul searching question in that arc is: Why do they want to intervene? What is their will? However, in Yochi's case and in this example, Inaba, her decision affects either Taichi/Iori, or Inaba herself. She's involved in it, and there's no getting away from it. She isn't trying to rewrite the tale of those who are not involved. She isn't dealing with "Why she chose to do that" or "What was she thinking when she made that choice" either; these aren't important in Yochi. She's confronting the consequence of her choice in search of her personal growth. I personally don't really see a "real" theme in Yochi, since everyone's arc are so different. But if anything, it's more about how to act with that knowledge of the future and its consequence than about whether or not and why one should change the future, and that "how/why" really depends on which character's perspective you're on, and doesn't stand up much on its own as a theme. |
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2013-02-02, 15:16 | Link #896 |
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Join Date: Oct 2012
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No, Kizu is more involved in the physical actions and are forced to do it. But michi tells everybody your thoughts and feelings. The difference is in the novel and the anime in michi where the anime doesn't show the characters actually feeling the other person's emotions.
Been re-reading kako random raw and noticed something interesting, are they actually allowed to write f**k you in japanese books? Last edited by skullheart; 2013-02-02 at 15:36. |
2013-02-11, 20:49 | Link #897 | |
Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Hong Kong
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I've seen the use of strong language in English publications, which in most cases are abuses, in which the writer only wanted to use them to flaunt their talent in combining and revitalising cliche swear swords and the likes. |
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2013-02-14, 15:10 | Link #899 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Flying in the Air
Age: 36
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Quote:
Did they in Kako? I don't remember seeing the F word except that one single time in Michi, and it was all in her head too. Last edited by Lantern; 2013-02-14 at 23:02. |
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romance, shounen |
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