VI + PROTECTING AND FIGHTING FOR HER FAMILY
“Vi was strong because she was afraid. Her fear of losing us is what made her fight so hard.”
Because I like to multi-task, I've finished Scavenger's Reign while drawing my cringe hotd fan art. Beautiful. Delicious. Finally some good fucking creature design.
Also something about the animated body horror is sooo..
I Am Not Your Asian American Doll: a comic for AAPI Heritage Month 2023
I usually spend a lot of time editing and fine-tuning my comics so that they come across as polite and inoffensive. But honestly, I’m really tired of the way Asian cultures and countries are treated / talked about while Asian people themselves are excluded, and thought it was about time I really let my rage out lol.
id in alt
#hope you are doing well #sincerely, fellow glasses wearer
FUCK i underestimated how much an eye exam + new glasses cost
FUCK THIS COUNTRY
I’m definitely not a blubbering mess thinking about Jinx believing she’s this actual curse on people’s lives, an actual literal jinx. That if Silco and Isha hadn’t found her then their lives would’ve been so much better. That she ruined their lives. That without her, they would still be alive and all that shit.
Because that’s not true.
She was this bright, colorful splatter of paint that made both of their lives so much better and neither one of them would’ve traded the time they had with her for anything, because they loved her so goddamn much.
Even though she wasn’t Powder to them and only Jinx – she was in a no way a jinx to them or their lives.
Look, I know in pt 3., they'll probably give more justification to his actions but....
Jayce when I get my fucking hands on you.
“why does this character who has done terrible things deserve a happy ending, how can you be okay with that, why do they deserve anything nice”
well see it’s because the entire concept of what people “deserve” is a messy ethical quagmire that has really troubling implications no matter how you use it
but also it’s because i like fictional miserable little assholes and i do what i want
[...] the mother, says about her son, "You got his sweet ways" when she sees the same kindness in her son that his father had.
— "Beloved" by Toni Morrison