CrimsonCyanide
CrimsonCyanide
CrimsonCyanide

Very interesting perspective!

I must confess, I actually root for him to be more popular. I want him to be able to branch out beyond simply doing renditions of other works and do his own.

It's just, as you mentioned, when you get brow beaten so much with "DID YOU KNOW?" or "HAY! LISTEN!" that I find myself unable

I...what?

Heya, I'm just doing my civil duty as a member of the internet to let everyone know that I don't like thing!

Seriously though, it is a shame because this man is immensely talented and deserves and publicity he can get. I would be shocked if his Youtube channel didn't take him to bigger places.

Can you find me something in red?

Blue just isn't an attractive color on me.

Sorry to make you put more work in despite all that you've done so far!

Indeed, but through the mysterious power of the internet it generally will always be a truthful statement.

So long as there is some force of difference of opinion or opposition, there will always be a resistance to it in some manner or another.

Though I must confess I didn't create this for drama but rather to see if

Dearest Fuck you,

NO!

Pretty soon a Fedora is going to find its way onto my head and I'm going to start buying Laserdiscs again to be that level of ironic.

What have you done?!

Sincerely speaking, I only did this to see if anyone else felt like I did.

Boy, let me tell you now that I've touched the electric fence I know what to do in the future.

Touch it again!

You hit the nail straight on the head.

If there was ever an individual that needed his name shouted from rooftops, it's Smooth.

I question if he's even a human, considering the sheer level of creativity and talent he possesses alongside the amount of content he produces. I'd be genuinely curious to know his timetable

Exactly the oppposite of what I was getting at.

I figured the internet needed one more opinion that nobody absolutely cared about, so I thought I should be the one to do so.

I do thank you for taking the time to reply to something that nobody needed, because I feel loved.

Kotaku has been awesome to publish this guy several times before his FF 7 Battle Theme, I believe. He deserves it too because he's immensely talented.

I probably shouldn't say hate, but given the nature of my post I guess it could be more accurate to say.

I equate it to burnout syndrome almost. and you described it perfectly why. When you hear about something enough, or hear it long enough even the best of songs/movies/one-liners/etc become incredibly tiresome and

Chemical Plant Zone sealed my initial obession with him.

I'm sorry, I'm just ruining the party for everyone.

If only it was my own party, then I could cry if I wanted to.

It becomes un-nervingly frustrating when you hear about it from a variety of mediums as well. I mentioned to another individual on here that with his previous one, FF 7 Battle Theme, I ended up hearing about it on Facebook, Real Life, Online Communities, and Gaming Websites. By the time the week was done, I was so

After the Final Fantasy 7 Battle theme, I've been trying to.

The day it came out, I ended up hearing about it from my good friends back home on Facebook, from my classmates at school, and from my online friends. Then I browse around only to find more of it.

By the end of it all, I'm so Smooth McGrooved out that I

I don't get how you got that from my message.

I sincerely can't express enough the exact opposite. I'm a huge fan of Smooth McGroove.

The problem is, between my online and offline life, I get bombarded constantly by whenever he puts out something new.

I sincerely can't express enough that my comment wasn't meant to

I have a terrible confession to make.

I'm starting to hate Smooth McGroove.

Rather, I'm starting to hate that I always seem to see his stuff whenever I come on. I enjoy listening to him, but it almost feels like anyone I talk to, or any gaming website I go to I hear about something new that Mr. McGroove has done. Call

Gotta admit, I was really surprised by that too. Considering the sheer amount of brand recognition the WWF had gotten around the 80s and 90s, they could of easily beat the rap.