a reader
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a reader
@davedevadave
https://t.co/MJzgbtrLiw | mode: idontreallyknowifihavetofinishworkstufforletitpileupforwritingmystories
Kingdom of Herbern เข้าร่วม Aralık 2009
997 กำลังติดตาม118 ผู้ติดตาม
ทวีตที่ปักหมุด

what can i say? 😔

Anime Updates@animeupdates
'86: EIGHTY-SIX' has been removed from Crunchyroll in multiple regions
English

@fuedalreese but i wouldn't be surprised either if shirahama made it eldritch-like weaponry. it sounds like something she would do to show how mad it had been, and witches before the pact feels like they had insane imagination anyway
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@fuedalreese considering that the post-pact setting is kinda medieval, i imagine pre-pact weaponry would be kinda like our modern-ish weaponry (i personally think of something like a railgun)
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#whaanimespoilers raincleaver being an example of a LEGAL weapon in whaverse and it has the ability to split rivers apart...you really have to think about what kind of weapons witches before the pact were drawing up 😭

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this, ladies and gentlemen, is the epitome of "depressing"
aya 𝜗𝜚 ྀི@lvl999akane
MY HEART JUST BROKE 💔
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this is the one part in the story that grinds my gears a bit, because it honestly makes me question the pointed caps' logic. it still falls onto the parents to teach children to distinguish real flame from faux flame
it rather makes sense that it subtly stems from
🍉 🇧🇷 | Noa – WHA Spoilers!@NoasTea
Still in chapter 43, Agott questions: It'd all be solved if the adults taught the danger of "fire" and the difference between fake flames and real ones to kids. It's an easy solution for which Olly has a perfect reply to: What if the teachings diverge?
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like, they're still two different flames. this panel alone says a lot:
the kid knows that fire is hot, and therefore, dangerous. she can tell the heat through the feeling on her fingers. like, "oh, it's hot. if i approach it closer, i can hurt myself." but the moment

a reader@davedevadave
this is the one part in the story that grinds my gears a bit, because it honestly makes me question the pointed caps' logic. it still falls onto the parents to teach children to distinguish real flame from faux flame it rather makes sense that it subtly stems from
English

