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Tobitaka Seiya Analysis

FINALLY I was able to finish this character analysis for my dear @gracyfangirl2020! sorry it took so long but summer is a very busy period with almost zero wifi ugh.  ANyway I hope you’ll like this!

I’ll start right away by saying that Tobitaka is one of the most courageous character in the series. Why? Let’s find out!

As we are shown during a flashback, Tobitaka used to be some sort of gang leader 

but the first important thing we have to notice is that he never once picked out a fight, never started anything violent even if provoked directly and always ever acted as a last resort OR if someone else was in danger. He saved a complete stranger for no other reason than the knowledge in his heart that that was the right thing to do. Helping others, as we will see further on, is kinda his thing after all.

So, despite his look and reputation, he wasn’t even remotely a bad guy. And that showed, somehow, his empathy and gentle soul that helped him better understand other’s needs were the reasons why the Coach decided to make him an offer.

And here we reach the first major turning point of my thesis:

Hibiki gave him the opportunity to change his course of action, to dedicate his power to something constructive like soccer rather than destructive like fighting. He offered him the chance to be reborn to new life. And just how much courage must someone has inside themselves to take a risk so big in life? To abandon everything they know, everything that defined them as individuals, throw it all in the garbage and restart inside an alien world? Tobitaka knew nothing of soccer, of teamplay, of relying on others instead of being relied on, and yet

He leapt. He could’ve fallen, He could’ve hurt himself, But he did it anyway. He trusted a man he just met because deep down he didn’t like who he was. He didn’t see the good in himself, the only visible thing to his eyes were his mistakes, his fights and how much he wished for redemption and a new start.

He’s so focused on being a new, better version of himself, that he doesn’t care for that soccer really is about, he doesn’t wish to make any friends. He down right avoids all the member of Inazuma Japan when and if possible,

coming out as a bit rude down his way for atonement. But the only important thing is the final goal.

He even pushed aside his old friend, thinking that every tie to his past self must’ve been severed.

Coach Hibiki didn’t tell him how soccer would’ve been able to save him, and he gets increasingly frustrated for the lack of positive results on his part. He isn’t doing any progress and how can soccer save him if he’s not even able to play?

He’s alone, wants to be alone with his life choices, thinking solitude as the only possible way to a better change. But in reality, he just lost himself in the process. He had the courage but lacked the knowledge to pursue his dream, he leapt but didn’t fly. Even when Endou arrives in his life to help him out,

he doesn’t completely grow out of his bad habits. Yes, he now knows what is like to rely on the help of others instead of doing everything on his own, but only when it comes to training, as soon as the dark side of his past comes to the surface he’s immediately brought back.

He thinks of himself as expendable, he has the courage to stand up and fight for others, but alone once again, disregarding his own dreams when the ones of other’s are at risk.

And here, in this moment, he’s confronted for the first time by both his bad past and his good past. Fights and Friends.

Here someone says to him, for the first time, that what he wants his important to, that he has friends that want him to shine instead of making them shine, just for once.

Realizing that he doesn’t have to reject all of his past, that there has always been good in him, he can now finally be his true self without the need of putting on a mask to maintain appearances.

After all, he has always been a kind-hearted guy and now he can share this trait of his personality with everyone else on the team,

putting into practice what he has learned over the years thanks also to a keen eye.

In fact, he can always see right through people,

grasping immediately what’s bothering them

and he knows exactly what to say to help.

He’s now a concentrate of courage to change, knowledge of importance of his own self and kindness towards other. And he will fight, yes, but not alone anymore. He knows he can rely and being relied on at the same time, he can be of help

while also being helped

helped and he will not be defeated now that he’s complete.

Growing older increases his wisdom. In GO he still provides good pieces of advice

and is able to put some sense back into Kidou.

So yeah, Tobitaka is brave, kind and the perfect adviser, he’d go out of his way to help someone and if that isn’t the best kind of friend there is…

Yamamoto Takeshi and Gokudera Hayato’s relationship

One of the most misunderstood factors in KHR (of which there are…………..many) is the dynamic between Yamamoto and Gokudera. I don’t think a lot of people actually pay attention to Yamamoto, because he’s not as emotionally volatile like the rest of the cast, but there is very clearly a structured dynamic between them. 

And that dynamic is a complete disgust with each other’s core personality

Why Utsuro was the perfect Gintama villain.

(Taken from reddit, with permission from the poster. Posting it here because more Gintama fans need to see it).

Warning: This won’t have any manga spoilers, but inevitably, a lot of anime spoilers.

So while most things in Gintama are universally loved by the fans, by comparison, Utsuro seems to be slightly more contraversial. He isn’t hated by any means and most Gintama fans still like him, but there are a few who think he is just a generic overpowered final boss that the show didn’t need. I want to explain why Utsuro is not only great, but the perfect villain for this show. For this I will have to talk about two characters: Utsuro himself of course, and the main character, Sakata Gintoki. Brace yourselves, because we are going to go deep here.

Before I start though let’s just quickly summarize what Utsuro is on the surface though. He is the most powerful being in Gintama. He is the biggest threat that the show had so far. He is an immortal being who is so hard to kill that even he himself has trouble killing himself. On that regard you could compare him to characters like Madara Uchiha from Naruto, or Aizen from Bleach. But that is far from everything that there is to Utsuro as a character. And most of it is because of what Gintoki is as a character.

Sakata Gintoki is one of the strongest main characters you can find. I’m not talking about “blowing up planets” or “cutting through dimensions”. I’m talking about the fact that Gintoki has such a strong personality, beliefs and conviction that almost nothing can shake him. This is partly because of his personality, because of all the suffering he went through (more than anyone else) and of course, Shoyo’s teachings. In a normal Shounen, “Death” is the biggest threat a character can face. But like it was pointed out in Rakuyo arc “Death and Breakfast are equally close to Gintoki”. Gintoki doesn’t fear death. For him it isn’t just “I would sacrifice my life” type of thing like most others. He literally doesn’t fear death. After seeing so much of it death is just another part of life for him. For a man like him, it doesn’t matter how strong a foe is. The worst they can do is kill him, which doesn’t scare him. The only thing that shakes Gintoki is when people around him get hurt, but even then, after overcoming everything in his life, Gintoki now believes that he can protect them no matter what. Even during the few times Gin loses control (like with Jirocho or Oboro) he recovers quiet quickly.

There is something Kamui says to Gintoki in Rakuyo: “You don’t see me when you fight. With Housen and with Shinsuke too. You aren’t fighting the one in front of you. Who is it that you are fighting?” This is the main point of where I’m coming from. No villain, not even his closest friend can shake Gintoki, because when he fights, he fights himself and his own weaknesses, not the opponent in front of him. There can be a lot more that can be said about it but I’m sure most of you know this part so I’m going to keep it brief. So why is Gintoki’s character so strong? Because the “foundation” of his beliefs are so strong that no attack on them can even shake them. So the only way to even shake Gintoki would be to attack that “foundation” itself.

There is a saying that a hero is only as good as their villain. Which is true in most cases, but there is also the opposite: A villain can only be strong if he confronts a strong hero. Otherwise, your audience might start finding the hero they were supposed to root for annoying and start agreeing with the villain, which is the last thing you would want as a storyteller. Now as we established, Gintoki is really strong as a character. He can emphatize with everyones suffering, because he suffered more than any of them. He knows people can come out as a better person after all sufferings because he himself managed it after far worse. That is where Utsuro comes in.

Every aspect of Utsuro’s character is specifically created to challenge Gintoki. His very existence, ideas, his past, his actions… everything about Utsuro is an antithesis for Gintoki. Let me explain what I mean by that because there are a few reasons. First being of course, that he is Yoshida Freaking Shoyo. The man who made Gintoki who he is. Everything Gin is started with this man. While what happened to Shoyo was one of biggest regrets in Gintoki’s life, he still overcame that and mostly made peace with it. He finally accepted (not over night btw. You can literally see it happen throughout the show) that he could forgive himself. That he did his best. That Shoyo would be proud of what he did and does. That was because he knew who Shoyo was. Thanks to his teachings, Gintoki learned to forgive people, people like Takasugi, or himself. But then Utsuro appeared. An embodiment of all of Gintoki’s fears and regrets. For Gintoki, Utsuro was created by one of the biggest regrets in his life. He was literally a walking talking version of everything Gin tried to overcame. Not only that, but Utsuro’s existence also shook one of Gintoki’s core beliefs as a person. That you don’t have to be empty. That you can overcome any pain. Gintoki was baseing those beliefs on his own experience and Shoyo, and throughout the show, he always challenged people who run from pain (like Jiraia, or Takasugi). But now Utsuro’s existence on its own meant that he could be wrong. That the only reason he wasn’t empty was because he didn’t suffer enough. Because even the person he trusted the most could be broken and become empty with enough pain. That is what Utsuro’s existence meant. Everything that gave strength to Gintoki was suddenly shaken by Utsuro’s very existence. It also meant that Gin himself still wasn’t safe. He suddenly started fearing that with enough suffering, he too can become empty again. Become like Utsuro.

If you think that I’m overanalyzing this I want to remind you of the first things Utsuro does when he appears: Literally, before he even appears on screen, the first thing he does is throw a sword at Kagura. Something that would have at least fatally wounded her if Nobume hadn’t pushed her out of the way. Later, he almost stabs Shinpachi on the forehead, who was saved by Sougo at the last second. Then in Silver Soul arc, he almost kills Sadaharu. This is not a coincidence. Who are Kagura, Shinpachi and Sadaharu to Gintoki? They are the Yorozuya. As in, they are the embodiment of everything Gintoki build since he started overcoming his weaknesses. Symbolically and physically, Utsuro was trying to destroy Gintoki from the very beginning.

I also want to give you a few examples on that. First, remember what Sougo says to Gintoki in Silver Soul: “When you confront that man, you lose control and see nothing but that guy. You don’t act like yourself”. Indeed, throughout the show, especially in Silver Soul arc, Utsuro is constantly making Gintoki lose control. There are 3 instances in the show where Gintoki almost “gives up”. First being when he loses his memories, which obviously doesn’t count. Second being in 4 Devas, which was just an act to keep the kids out of trouble. So the only time Gintoki falls into despair and almost gives up is in Silver Soul, when he thinks about how he didn’t make progress even now, right before the Shinsengumi shows up. Again, all these is just shows how much Utsuro gets to him. More than anyone else in the show ever could.

Because Utsuro is not only Shoyo, not only is he everything Gintoki fought to overcome before, but he is a product of the humanity Gintoki always wanted to believe in. He is the monster Gintoki was scared of becoming. Noone can deny the fact that Utsuro has one of the worst pasts in the show. He was tortured again and again. People killed him again and again and no matter how much he wished for it, they didn’t manage to kill him. Which made them fear him even more, which made them hurt him even more. For decades, he was killed, tortured, went through pain that would easily kill anyone else, but he wasn’t even granted the escape that was death. He was stuck in a prison that was the world that didn’t want him. That he didn’t want to be in. Yet he couldn’t escape. The monster that was Utsuro was created by humans. He became Utsuro (Hollow) because of them. And Gintoki understood that. That is why he couldn’t ignore his stance like the other two. For Katsura, Shoyo was dead and he made peace with it, and Utsuro was just a villain threatening his new life. For Takasugi, Utsuro was the one who killed Shoyo. He hated him, but he was just another target for his revenge. But Gintoki understood what Shoyo and Utsuro were more than anyone, and that is why he was affected more than anyone else.

So what does all this have to do with Utsuro? Well as I said, a great villain, especially a final villain, should be able to challenge the hero on every aspect, not just at swinging swords. And Utsuro stood against everything Gintoki stood for. I’m not going to give manga spoilers here, so just going to say that Gintoki has to overcome all his weaknesses, fears and traumas if he wants to truly defeat Utsuro. And Gintoki’s beliefs are important because they make up the core of Gintama’s ideology. Every villain in some way challenges that ideology: Even the likes of Takasugi and Isaburo. However, none of them go against it as clearly as Utsuro does.

So where does Utsuro himself stand in all this: Some people don’t understand his motivation. Saying that it is weird that he would say that he wants to die but then fight people who want to kill him, but while this isn’t the point of the post I’m going to briefly explain that first to avoid misunderstandings:

Utsuro isn’t just an immortal being who wants to die. He also wants to get revenge on everyone. Not just because for the sake of it, but because he wants to proof himself right. He more than anyone knows how deep humanity can go. So if Gintoki fights to proof that humanity is worth saving, Utsuro fights for the opposite. He wants to proof that despair can overcome anyone. That humanity will abondan everything, their believes, their loves, their ideals when they are confronted with a fear that they can’t overcome. Utsuro doesn’t just want to die. He wants to end the humanity that he sees as a curse on everything.

So in the final battle of the war, when he is about to cut Nobume but hesitates, that was the main conflict coming back at him. It wasn’t Shoyo literally coming back as a seperate entity to hold him back. That was symbolizm. He hesitated because everything those people who he was fighting did at that moment, was going against all his core beliefs. They didn’t despair. They didn’t give up. They didn’t leave each other. Even when everything was hopeless, they kept getting back up. If Utsuro was an antithesis for Gin, then Gintoki himself was the same for Utsuro. Utsuro believed that enough suffering could make anyone “hollow”. Yet no matter how much suffering that boy (Gintoki) when through, he didn’t break. He didn’t become hollow. While the story isn’t done yet, this was the main confrontation of Gin and Utsuro’s ideals and this was the first time since FS where Gintoki cleared his mind and truly fought like he always does, fighting for himself instead of fighting to escape, while Utsuro for the first time, lost that secure belief he always had. This was the true triumph for Gintoki over Utsuro. However, after that Utsuro decided to jump into the Altana, because he refused to accept what Gin said. He denied what he was seeing. He still defended that the humanity would destroy himself. That’s why he jumped. He wanted to win that final argument. He wanted to show that with him out of the picture, the humanity would still destroy themselves on their own. And he wasn’t completely wrong either. As in the next two years, people tried to revive him, gain his power and overall almost started another war. It comes down to Gintoki and the others to win that final gamble Utsuro made.

So yeah, I could probably write more but this is way too long already. Basically, Utsuro is not only a powerful, charismatic villain with an amazing voice, but he is the perfect villain to represent the opposite of everything Gintama stands for. He has such a strong backstory, that you can’t help but understand even the worst of his actions. And most importantly, unlike most final villains in other Shounens, he is connected to the main character more than anyone else. He isn’t just a random powerful guy. He is the only person who was closer to Gintoki than Takasugi was. He was the only villain the show could possibly get after Takasugi. That personal connection to Gin and the others is what makes it so compelling too.

I hope this will give some light on what Utsuro represent as a character. This might have been a bit of a mess, and I apologize for that, it was tougher than I expected. Thanks for reading.

Jackie, Tom and why I love them

I know that the fandom is a little up in the air with Starco being canon and some people are angry with Jackie and Tom being used as ‘relationship fillers’ but hear me out!

I adore Jackie and Tom and I love that they were part of Marco and Star’s lives. I also love that they were the ones to break up with their respective other.

Remember, Jackie broke up with Marco and Tom broke up with Star.

Marco and Star were the dumpees, not the other way round.

I love that Jackie is quick to call out Marco when he came back from Mewni. He says “You’re my best friend.” And she immediately counters with a laugh, “Oh Marco, we both know that’s no true. Stay amazing.”

She knows that Marco cares about Star, and after seeing him with the Mewni cape on, she knows that he wants to be with her. She is hurting when she breaks up with him but she does it anyway! BECAUSE SHE’S BADASS AND KNOWS THEIR RELATIONSHIP.

And when Jackie and Marco reunite, she has moved on and tells him to move on and try with Star.

With Tom, it took him a lot longer and I don’t blame him. He hardly saw Star when she was on Earth and he still had his anger issues to deal with. But when he saw how she was acting and delaying their trip, he went on their trip alone and gave their relationship a whole lot of thought.

Tom didn’t want to break up with Star and you can see how much he’s hurting when he does. THIS BOY IS IN TEARS WHEN HE BREAKS UP WITH HER. He knows that it’s going to hurt but he knows that it’s for the best. He’s seen how strong Marco and Star’s bond is and even after the Blood Moon curse has been lifted, he knows there’s still feelings there.

The freaking day after Tom and Star’s break up, Tom tells Marco that if he and Star were to date, he would be fine with it. Tom is still hurting but he can see Marco and Star together. 

It also shows how Star and Marco would’ve stayed with Jackie and Tom if neither of them intervened. Marco and Star both didn’t want the break up to happen but they know that deep down, they do have feelings for their best friends. 

The reason I love Jackie and Tom is because the way they handled it, it was so mature. They put their feelings first and avoided more hurt, even though it must’ve hurt to break up with their s/o at the time. It’s difficult and it sucks but they were really well written characters and pushed Marco and Star to be their true selves.

People can can complain all they want with ‘TOM AND JACKIE WERE ONLY THERE TO PUSH STARCO/BLOCK STARCO/ ONLY TO BE LOVE INTERESTS! SHAME ON THE WRITERS.’

But these two characters are so fucking important, I cannot stress that more.

They are the reason Marco and Star are together. They had to make a really difficult decision and hurt through it but they held strong. 

Marco would never have gone for Star while she was dating Tom and he says that he was sorry for kissing her in the photo booth. (and Marco tells Tom that he kissed Star because Tom is one of his closest friends. IF THAT’S NOT TRUST AND FRIENDSHIP THEN I DON’T KNOW WHAT IS) and the same thing goes for Star. We see that at the Love Sentence concert she is conflicted and sad but she still leaves so that Marco and Jackie can be happy.

My point is, that even though they are secondary characters and can be viewed as relationship blockers/fillers/ what ever people call them, they are still amazing characters and had a driving force in the show. They hurt, they cry but they still put their feelings first and made a decision. 

And that’s why I love Jackie and Tom.

Kaito isn’t a pointless character in Zexal II. The entire ending episodes of Zexal I are literally about Kaito coming to terms with the fact he doesn’t have to duel specifically for Haruto’s sake anymore and that he can find something else worthwhile now, including himself. This is exactly what he does with Mizael and their duels. These initially start out as duels to see who’s the better of the two, but turns into an attempt from Kaito to understand Mizael. They come to a mutual understanding of each other throughout episodes 134 and 135, as well as Mizael’s acceptance as to what his, and the other barian’s, over-hundred number is. Not only that, but Kaito is the one who investigates the legend of Numeron Dragon at Jinlon/Mizael’s ruin, and the moon duel results in its re-creation, and it’s a vital part of the Numeron Code that Astral is attempting to find. 

This biggest issue people seem to have with Kaito in ZXII is that he doesn’t show up as frequently and that he has little to do with Haruto in this part of the series. Now, I’m sad that Haruto isn’t in ZXII more than he is as well but again, the end of ZXI is literally about Kaito realizing that dueling for Haruto’s sake isn’t necessary anymore now that he’s safe. Kaito’s arc isn’t about keeping Haruto safe in ZXII and that isn’t a bad thing. As for Kaito not making as frequent appearances in the second part of the series, ZXII, for better or worse, has a larger cast of plot relevant characters it needs to develop, so character’s appearances being reduced to compensate isn’t surprising.

Nothing Kaito does in ZXII is without merit, or even out of character and his interactions with Mizael are genuinely one of the better developed parts of this half of Zexal. His actions shouldn’t be disregarded because Haruto isn’t part of his arc anymore.

Yugioh may not be good at writing females, they’re pretty downright terrible and a lot of female characters that show a lot of potential and promise (Akiza, Rio, Yuzu, Aoi, etc.) end up either getting their character destroyed or fall short anyways.

There are very few girls that manage to stay solid throughout the whole series. I’d say Asuka remains the best of all the girls not only due to having the most wins in duels, but she also beat her brother in a duel (something Rio was never allowed to achieve) that and she remains well relevant in the plot and they don’t write her off as they do with other girls.

I’d also say Anna was pretty solid for what she is (We may not see her win any duels but I’ll give her this, her cards weren’t just a bunch of fetishized woman dressed as monsters like most females get stuck with) and Droite stayed pretty solid (Even after that slip up episode where the show decided that a female must have a crush on a guy because she’s female, and it came off as uncomfortable and awkward, but at least she recovered afterward and she was back to her badass self. I especially loved her tag duel with Yuma)

Akiza and Rio had a great start, Akiza even more so. But they just fell apart once the show decided they were done with them. Rio’s character got destroyed beyond repair (and I guess you could say her VA is a bit to blame since she caused trouble, much like Carly, the VA had a big part to play in getting rid of their characters. She was condemned to not only be perceived as weak despite her strong start, but she also lost to her brother who did nothing but insult her during the whole duel, went into a bullshit coma when she could have served the SAME DAMN PURPOSE while being awake, didn’t even let her be present to conclude her plot with IV, and then made her a little follower for her brother, painting herself as a helpless victim and overall useless.)

Kotori isn’t even part of the question since she’s not allowed to duel anyways. She just has to stand there and yell Yuma’s name.

And I don’t even know much about Aoi other than people were really looking forward to seeing her become a strong character only for her to not win any duels.

But I gotta say, the worst treatment of females I’ve seen outta any series, has to be A/rc-v.

Yuzu had a strong start as well. From what I saw she was really involved in the plot (up to a certain point) and seemed to be a pretty competent duelist too, same with Selena…The other two girls not so much. In fact, they spend the entire series kidnapped, then not long after they escape, they get captured and die along with Yuzu and Selena, and 3 of those 4 girls don’t come back.

Eventually, the plot decided that since Yuzu is a girl she should be kidnapped and Yuya should save her oNLY FOR HER TO BE KIDNAPPED AGAIN AND FOR YUYA TO SAVE HER AND THAT’S THAT.

I loved Rin and Ruri’s designs, but they weren’t taken advantage of. The show didn’t want to. They exist only to further the plot by being kidnapped and making the men who love them motivated to do something. They’re barely characters themselves and rather just props.

And I feel upset not only for fans of those characters but fans of that show in general because that’s a shitty way to conclude their non-existent character arcs.

It really makes me wish that there was someone who could actually write female characters as their own people, not just someone who follows the main boy around, someone who is a duelist that doesn’t fall short or become useless. In the end, all we really have are the headcanons we perceive ourselves and the characters we create to fill the void

ok ye i seriously doubt i’ll do anything else for ship week, so here’s something i found in my dump folder that fits (the word im using is weak bc i am weak)

this exact scene is what made keyshipping my otp and im still crying

Zexal Month Day 4: Favorite Moments from Anime/Manga
My Top 3 Vector Moments

Vector is truly one of the gems of Zexal.  He never fails to make me smile or laugh with his insane voice, words, body language and facial expressions.  I wasn’t able to pick a top moment for Vector, but my favorites definitely involve all four of those aspects of his personality brought together.  I decided to pull out and sub my favorite moments because I feel that just making a gifset or screencapping these scenes would not do them justice, because his voice is a huge factor on what makes these memorable and hilarious.

okay so i was thinking about the arclights, and each of their individual biggest strengths and weaknesses

for Michael, his biggest strength is his kindness and loyalty. He’s soft, he’s caring, and he’ll protect the people he loves. Obviously he’s not WEAK, since he fights viciously against Yuma and he’s pretty darn serious when he fights that bug guy and Mizael in Zexal II. but for as strong as he is, he always fights for reasons he believes in- for the people he cares about. but sadly, this is also his biggest downfall. he’s so trusting, he’s so loyal, he’s easily manipulated. He was possibly the hardest of the brothers for Tron to manipulate, because of his resistance to doing bad things, but once he had him, that was it. during the duel with Yuma he had so many chances to back down before the end, and each time he resisted. He refused to do what felt to him like betraying his family. This also goes in line with his deck, a deck of artifacts, which symbolize how he’s stuck in an idealistic past.

now onto the biggest mess in history, Thomas Arclight. His faults are pretty obvious right from the get-go. he’s arrogant, he’s antagonistic, he’s sadistic and cruel and rude and just an all-around jerk. Except… he’s not really any of those things, I don’t think. I mean, yeah, he’s a jerk, but there’s so much more to him than that too. he might seem selfish, but when you think about it, he does everything he does out of love for his family too. most of all, his desire for attention. He’s the type of person who wants to be the center of attention all the time, but the thing is, no one gives it to him. Tron is a manipulative hearless father and Chris is too cold and distant to give it to him. there are only two people who ever come remotely close to acknowledging him: Michael, which is likely why they seem to be somewhat close (as seen by the tag duel), and Ryoga. Ryoga gives IV negative, antagonistic attention, but he loves it. He feeds off that and keeps being worse and worse and acting up so that someone shows him that he exists at all. he’s been ignored, and the most crushing blow is losing Tron’s trust. when he finds out he was manipulated and used, his heart breaks. he did so much for Tron because he thought that for once he was FINALLY being acknowledged, SOMEone cared enough about him to ask for his help, so he did it wholeheartedly. to see Tron toss him aside just demolishes him, and so he willingly submits to losing to Ryoga without even putting up much of a fight. Again, this is why his deck fits him perfectly- he plays puppets because that’s all he ends up being, with Tron pulling the strings

And then there’s my beloved Christopher Arclight, the oldest of the kids and the one who probably felt the most complex emotions when his father left. There’s a lot of apparent good and bad with him: he’s calm-headed and tactical, but he’s also cold and uncaring, even cruel enough to dismiss his brothers’ suffering. But there’s so much more when you look deeper at the same time. Chris acts as Tron’s right hand, always right next to him, always just calmly watching as things happen. He’s the closest one to Tron. i’ve always thought that on some level, Chris knows how terrible Tron is and that it’s not the man his father used to be. But he doesn’t want to believe it, because if he does, then everything he is becomes irrelevant. he practically threw away all of his meaningful relationships when Tron left, trying to get revenge and take out this anger. But the problem is, he knows his motives are hollow. He knows the story of what happened to Tron, but he doesn’t truly blame Kaito. Maybe he did at one point, but during their duel it becomes apparent that Chris isn’t into this. He gets angry because Kaito keeps dragging it out, forcing him to face the reality of what he’s sat idly by and allow to develop. He doesn’t mind that Kaito antagonizes him because I’m pretty sure he antagonizes himself more. By the time both of his brothers are gone, he’s glad to lose to Kaito so that he can just die (or enter a comatose state, whatever) along with them. But when he comes back in Zexal II I love him so much because of how he’s changed. he’s become a leader now, his own kind of leader. he’s distanced himself from Tron and he’s no longer just quietly acting as his servant- he’s a cool-headed and intelligent leader who will protect his brothers at any cost. the amount of internalized emotion in his character is what really gets me- the guilt, the depression, the self-antagonism are all coded, but they’re there for sure. and it reflects in his deck: a space deck to reflect his cold and distant personality, and an ace monster that’s a satellite, just like he’s a satellite to Tron (thanks to @yugiohlesbian for making me think of that one). But at the same time, his number card, Dyson Sphere, is based on an actual concept which is the idea of harnessing a star’s energy to power a colony. And if you look at Number 9, that’s just what it is- it has buildings and cities on the panels. he may have once been cold and distant, but now he’s able to use his talent to bring life to the people around him. he’s still surrounded by the coldness of space, but he’ll keep the important people close to him alive

and Tron plays Heraldic Beasts because he’s a herald who brings the news of what a shitty person he is everywhere (jk)

I ran into 10 slides pretty fast but i still have  a lot to say HAH

Anyway here’s me throwing out some lesser-known aspects of zexal that I find really cool. Zexal is an amazing show, and I used to be skeptical about watching it, but honestly it made my life so much better. Hope you give it a watch, or at least learn something cool!!

In summary:

  • incredible symbolism/allusions/references, LORE AF
  • characters are amazing (i could write 10 essays but we’ll leave it there)
  • plot is incredible and consistent as hell
  • music is gorgeous
  • plot twists that will blow your mind, especially in retrospect
  • really gay
  • both the lighthearted and heartbreaking, handled well and given appropriate weight

Yugioh Zexal is really good, this has been a PSA