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Heavy Metal Pins & Needles
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I think the way I consume video game media makes it hard for me to associate games with any particular season. I know certain games are announced and come out at specific times of the year, but because they tend to be pretty expensive there's always the debate of whether or not I should buy the game right away or wait

Been in the series since Asylum, but never as a sidekick.

That information was not necessarily eagerly presented or well known. Obviously the marketing behind SU is trying to garner as much viewership as possible, that's a given, but I learned about the Steven bomb from the show's tumblr page (not the "Keep Beach City Weird" one) and it was made to seem like this Steven bomb

This wasn't a bad series of episodes by any stretch, but am I only the one who thought there'd be a bigger bang at the end of it? Maybe my expectations were far too influenced by Adventure Time's high stakes ending. Really liked the episode though.

Totally agree with everything here. I think there's something to be said about her obsessive nature giving way to extremism too. It was a little extreme when she willingly endangered herself and Steven when they built that rocket in attempts to go to space. It was a little extreme when we were shown Pearl dying

Yeah, I thought this episode was a little incomplete that way -not necessarily that it didn't have its own arc and story but really that it was trying to highlight that "We Need To Talk" was the start of something (with more episodes to come covering that 'something'). Greg says resignedly: "In the end, we never

Not even sure if I'd ever even achieve the depth's of Pearl's frustration:

I think Lapis' manner of imprisoning Jasper was more poetic than anything else. She has to be apart of Jasper's imprisoning process because Lapis as a character represents the lack of freedom/autonomy. She's a tragic character that way.

I think the negativity Ronaldo generates is indirectly due to his status as a comic relief character. His character is at least a little bit deeper than "mouthpiece for crazed conspiracy-theory jokes," but not by much. He has no idea how wrong he is about generally everything, but we do, and so we laugh at the

Its definitely Rose's sword. With the heavy layering of Steven and Connie achieving maximum jam-budhood in this episode, the implication of Stevonnie returning while wielding Rose's (lions?) sword and Steven's shield is almost too much for me.

"Not my Lord Commander" - Ollie

Seriously looks like they passed up some very obvious names. Patronus Jet is just trash. They could have easily called it The Nimbus 2000, Buckbeak, or even Ron's Dad's Blue Car That Rides and Flies

There we go. Fight fire with fire.

In order to truly prove it you need a message that similarly pops onto the screen -only this is from the top- while the AV Club ad pops up from the bottom, allowing the average viewer to only see half of the page while the rest of it looks like its covered in some strange, abstract internet bikini.

You don't like that ad? PROVE IT.

I might be interpreting your sentence wrong, but pretty sure Marcy was turned before she met Simon.

Don't forget Finn's dream (taking a photo with baby Lich and Martin), which I think was pretty much resolved this episode too, if you think about the symbolism.

Well, its always been ambiguous with Gunter -especially because Ice King is insane- but Gunter did lay an egg at one point so…

Probably Martin. I'm saying there's a strong possibility that he might actually be a literal dillweed now.

I agree with the others above me, but Martin is such a delusional dude and AT has such a propensity for tragic figures that it wouldn't be too surprising if Martin initially wanted to go back for Finn and then convinced himself that not doing so was the best thing to do down the line, and over time, just eroded into