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fanart of him fucking subzero isnt lore

@scalproie

Dam // 26 // any pronouns // The Blue Guy Enjoyer // 💙❄️💙 //🧍‍♂️Bājiru // "Bro. Why wouldn't I be in a bad mood, I'm TRYing to open the gates to Hell and IT'S NOT WORKING."
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speaking of sdt dante! i reposted these onto twitter yesterday and i tried to post them here too but tumblr just didnt want to work for some reason smh

i played dmc5 again last night while my bf watched and we ended up talking abt sdt dante and so i got reminded of these :) i still like them a lot

Me and my friend were playing DMC 5 together through a mod, and I got some gifs that I really liked :)

The running joke is that Dante had his chicken nuggets stolen, so he went to Vergil to help him find the guy and get his nuggets back - Vergil begrudgingly agrees, and V is just there to troll Vergil

Mods Used:

Just wanted to clear this thing up

Friendly reminder that if I haven’t answered your ask the same day, it means either: 

  • I want to treasure that ask forever
  • I dont feel up to social interaction
  • I didnt have time, and ended up forgetting about it

What it does NOT mean:

  • I dont like getting asks
  • You’re bothering me by sending asks

SAME APPLIES FOR UNANSWERED TAG GAMES!

I hate how the booktokification of the “unhinged woman” genre has completely reduced the concept of female rage to just “girlboss” without taking seriously how important it is to unequivocally portray female rage.

Throughout the history of literature, we’ve been given countless instances of women in despair and in sadness but save for a few writers (take Euripides, for example), we’ve rarely ever been given angry women who aren’t the villains or the foil for the perfect poised passive princess. Female rage has constantly been subdued and erased or warped into “she’s just batshit crazy” in pretty much every society.

And now that publishing and media marketing has reduced women showing rage in books to the “white hypersexual girlboss with a knife”, instead of uplifting the way women are allowed to have more dimension and sympathy in their visible anger than ever in literature, the media still isn’t taking this subgenre seriously.