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Literature

Arches fanfic: the Death of the echoes

To kill a god, one kills the belief. Slowly and deliberately, Cameron and Devon amassed a group. They did not went public, they stayed exactly as big as necessary. And Echo was stormed. The empty ruins, then the mines. What resided put up a fight, rising like flames to stoke the minds of the assaulters. But they did not flinch. Quartz by quartz, it was broken. Quartz by quartz, the echoes disippated. Quartz by quartz, Sam was freed, Sydney was freed. Quartz by quartz, an ancient breaf laid silent. Cameron and Devon kissed. Things would never be the same, truly.

Literature

The Drama of the Moon

The Drama of the Moon (Lugu Kava in Werer, Andai Bathala Kisotosy in Atratra) is one of the world’s oldest texts, found in ornamental script in building bases as early as 7,000 BCE, during the mid Sprout Era. Though some later editions have occured, the overall corpus of the story remains surprisingly consistent since its inception, in large part thanks to these building inscriptions. It’s antiquity, combined with its preservation, remains an important text not only to Lemurian identity as a whole but also the indigenous religions. In particular, it is pivotal to the debate on whereas pre-Austronesian lemurians had an organised religion, as the text identifies multiple personifications of animals and natural phenomena as well as possible rituals. The Actual Story Old Moon(1) appointed the Sun Goddess as the ruler of the world. However, he had a soft spot for Prince Kisotosy(2), and as such granted him ownership over the waters. This infuriated Ningal(3), who was given ownership of the

Literature

Echo Fanfic: At the lake's edge

A bird girl's story at Echo's edge, centuries before the mines were opened. (Note's: Jenna ending allusion that most of Echo was underwater. Also MC's name is Zapotec because indigenous peoples in the southwest traded with Mesoamericans) *** Xena stared at the water, black with orange tinges as the sun set. She wasn't supposed to be here. It was an awful place, covered by water as to contain the evil within. The mountains looked like jagged spines and claws, as it tearing at the sky and the dying sun, as if some remnant of the ancient water monsters slain by Pitao Cocijo still remained. But then again, she wasn't supposed to be in her tribe, either. Her people were maize farmers to the south, and while her new life as a nomad had its freedoms, it just wasn't home. Her new people were warm like their hearths, but still it wasn't the same. They even taught her their secrets, their traditions guarded against enemies, and she was grateful for that trust, a trust she'd never break. But it

Literature

The Balto Success Timeline

In one timeline's 1995, Balto flopped at the box office. The exact reasons are unclear but this is mostly attributed to competition with Toy Story, which not only was a damn good movie but a visual novelty at the time. This had a negative chain reaction that would result in the closing of Amblimation Studios, the rise and fall of Dreamworks Animation, and ultimately the dominance of CGI in the western movie industry. Balto would have two direct to video sequels, but in the end its clear which movie is the household name. But what if this did not happen? Invision a winter 1995 where Balto is a financial success. Whereas Toy Story is or not is irrelevant; there is approximately a window of a month for either movie to amass its budget back. Pixar may or may not be born, but Amblimation Studios does not die. This results in the following: - Cats the animated musical finalises production. Riding on the coattails of Balto, it does reasonably well enough for itself. A crisis is

Literature

Prehistoric Planet episode ranking

So Prehistoric Planet is out and about. As predicted, it is the most scientifically accurate and visually stunning dinosaur documentary done to date. There’s honestly not much to add that hasn’t been said before, though I will note how I like how the animals are “perfect but not perfect”. They’re not skinwrapped, but not embubbled as some pop paleoart depictions go either. The crew has maintained an amazing attention to detail on how real life animals works, and as such were it not for the CGI frame pacing I could easily mistake any of the animals seen for real, breathing creatures. Still shots alone fully sell the illusion. Hence, a review of the episodes: Coasts Easily the best, which kinda makes it sad the series is downhill from here. It did the impossible and made T. rex genuinely interesting by showing it displaying atypical behaviours like swimming, an image well deserving of its reputation as the series’ signature scene. Soon after that we get extended segments on North