amaltheaelanor--disqus
AmaltheaElanor
amaltheaelanor--disqus

I've been getting further into Nier: Automata. I've been kind of worried that it won't live up to the hype for me (I've just seen so much gushing praise; also, it's pretty much what happened to me with The Last of Us) but it's been growing on me. I finished my first playthrough got ending A, and am now going through

Definitely not. At the top of the season, I would've guessed maybe Radcliffe, or someone connected to Ghost Rider.

And it wouldn't be out of character for this show to have Caitlin fridge her own love interest.

Thank you for that image.

That was my primary issue - that it really came across as "Barry's happy! He must be stopped."

"Well, I'm sorry Barry - I'm not as emotionally healthy as you."

I completely agree.

I can kind of see it both ways. I was disappointed when they turned him flat out eeeeevil - but at the same time, they were running out of reasons to keep him around after Ziyal died.

I'd really like him to train with Oliver as well, so Oliver can shoot him in the back again.

That makes me sad. I quite like Tom Felton on the show.

Gah, I keep making that mistake. Thanks for pointing that out.

That awkward grin was the most I've ever liked Wally.

While we're at it, let's talk about how Eddie killing himself in season 1 should've unraveled the entire timeline. Because then Eobard never would've been born, so he never would've gone back in time to kill Barry's mother, and so on and so forth.

That opening monologue made by Evil Barry really should've been something they showed a few episodes back, so we could see it all play out, and better understand the context of how he was created and how his relationship with Team Flash led him down this path.

That is a question I will never be able to answer for myself: Picard or Sisko.

That is one of the big reasons why I can't seem to care about Inhumans.

Until a Supergirl alien kills her…

*Aida puts on a gas mask and starts asking everyone if they're her "mummy"*

It's because female characters don't tend to get that much depth from the writers - they make her evil because it's comics mandated, but they don't give her a choice or really even explore that descent into villainy.

Actually, writing things out on a chalkboard to explain everything is a staple of time travel stories.