This is the trans pride flag, so the character is a (trans) girl, not NB. Nonbinary has its own flags. "1other" is meant for characters with an unclear gender or no gender at all.
This is the trans pride flag, so the character is a (trans) girl, not NB. Nonbinary has its own flags. "1other" is meant for characters with an unclear gender or no gender at all.
Pas has so far specifically used "they/them" pronouns for this character, so I say the 1other tag should remain.
Pas has so far specifically used "they/them" pronouns for this character, so I say the 1other tag should remain.
I know the conversation's dead, but I felt like throwing in my two cents- as a transwoman, I see this and initially assume "transwoman" (and that's still probably how I'm gonna file this in my brain), but Pas never actually said they were a transwoman. And as for the "That's the transgender flag" thing- keep in mind that it wouldn't be that unusual for some groups to have multiple flags that can apply to them. For instance, there's a general gay flag... but there's also a more specific lesbian flag. As a lesbian, I generally feel free to use either one, since you could consider lesbian to be a subset of gay. Similarly, this character could use the trans flag in addition to the enbie one, since you could consider enbie to be a subset of trans. EDIT: Oh, and I completely forgot- but I actually read recently that the white line in the middle of the trans flag is actually supposed to represent enbie people in the first place. So, it's definitely always been a flag that was intended to be shared with them.
I know the conversation's dead, but I felt like throwing in my two cents- as a transwoman, I see this and initially assume "transwoman" (and that's still probably how I'm gonna file this in my brain), but Pas never actually said they were a transwoman. And as for the "That's the transgender flag" thing- keep in mind that it wouldn't be that unusual for some groups to have multiple flags that can apply to them. For instance, there's a general gay flag... but there's also a more specific lesbian flag. As a lesbian, I generally feel free to use either one, since you could consider lesbian to be a subset of gay. Similarly, this character could use the trans flag in addition to the enbie one, since you could consider enbie to be a subset of trans. EDIT: Oh, and I completely forgot- but I actually read recently that the white line in the middle of the trans flag is actually supposed to represent enbie people in the first place. So, it's definitely always been a flag that was intended to be shared with them.
So your a guy whos lesbian? So just straight then??
Cuteness aside, thatโs pretty sad if you think about it. Imagine being unable to hug someone out of fear of hurting someone with your raw strength :/
Makes sense, we grow up as people, and then demand the franchises we liked as kids keep up with us. Sometimes we should just let go of things that no longer appeal to us, instead of insisting and carrying on while fed up with them.
They've shown they can do real challenge, though, and most players remember specifically those moments fondly. Everyone remembers being terrorized by Cynthia's competitive level Garchomp, everyone remembers that one hiker with three explosion using geodudes especially the nuzlockers. No one remembers the hundreds of practically nameless trainers that get sweeped in five seconds in-between gyms. I don't think it's asking a lot that the important battles actually have a difficulty appropriate to their importance, even if it still ended up being relatively child friendly.
The real problem with SV is that they didn't even bother to account for players not doing things in the "intended" order, despite the fact it's an open world game. On top of an untogglable EXP share further cutting any challenge that might exist. You're either fighting a trainer well above your level without warning, or you're fighting a trainer with lv10 pokemon because you're doing an "early game" area last without meaning to.
This is by far the most corporate looking Patreon watermark I've ever seen. I'm honestly impressed.
I happened across the same logo (less prominent) at the end of post #6794913, but with different individuals involved. I guess the Patreon (and the Twitter account this is from) belongs to artist Merryweather, who seems to be a writer collaborating with (or commissioning?) other artists.
And beyond learning the basics of combat and how element, type of skills and damage vs hit works. Is it really a challenge for a child?
Even with Kanto dificulty curve with a rock gym first and the electricity gym next, the challenge is just grinding and keep fighting your way up. Unless the later Pokemon games got a serious AI upgrade or tracking your team to counter it's attacks, even a first timer will begin to stomp the game after the third gym.
I guess the Patreon (and the Twitter account this is from) belongs to artist Merryweather, who seems to be a writer collaborating with (or commissioning?) other artists.