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Gris's experience ( All 61 )

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Gris 22 01,2024
Are people just painfully straight and/or oblivious to not get any queer subtext on characters in any media or something? It's crazy to ignore all of the implications just for the sake of normality. It has to be implied because of those people who were already in denial and would definitely explode their shit the moment it gets explicitly stated. D......   1 reply
22 01,2024
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Gris 31 12,2023
It hurts me to see that authors don't put a lot of effort on writing their soft female characters, so those characters ended up being one dimensional when they're not. The image of a strong female character, and well written too while you're at it, is a cold, ruthless, violent characters. Which is not bad, but that is not the only thing women is ca......   1 reply
31 12,2023
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Yey
Gris 26 12,2023
My first digital art ft. Mao Mao. I still have a lot to learn lmao.   2 reply
26 12,2023
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Wow
Gris 25 12,2023
Tried digital painting for the first time and woah, it's easier than I thought. I can't believe I avoided doing digital art because I've been a traditional artist in my entire life and I was afraid I'll never be good at it.   1 reply
25 12,2023
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Gris 27 11,2023
I like how the artist portayed crying and running out of breath at the same time. So beautiful.   2 reply
27 11,2023

Gris's answer ( All 743 )

I feel like it's another "cringy" thing that people would like to misinterpret as something bad, so no, I don't particularly care about it. I could argue it's another trait of neurodivergent people that neurotypical people would like to make fun of.   reply
1 days
I'm just gonna say my favorites— Kusuriya no Hitorigoto Mystery to Iunakare Kyokou Suiri ~ Invented Inference   reply
8 days
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Her, obviously   3 reply
20 days
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Gris 21 days
It just comes with media literacy honestly. They refuse to acknowledge subtexts that goes against their view and/or blatantly ignoring them. One primary example I can think of is queer subtexts/implications between two characters but because it's a subtext, not directly or stating it on a media, they might come to the conclusion that they are just ......   reply
21 days
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I'm convinced that some people take all they consume on face value and incapable of analyzing media and have to be shown explicit scenes to get the message through them. Implications and subtexts doesn't exist to them (heavily leaning towards queer subtexts in media here).   1 reply
21 days

Gris's question ( All 6 )

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(Prepared for a long essay)

A manga called "In the clear moonlight dusk" is somewhat a diversion from typical gender expression you can see on media. Yoi, a high school girl, looks extremely androgynous. To the point that if it weren't for binary division of gendered school dress codes, she would be completely mistaken for a guy and no will question it. A part that I like from this manga is that, Yoi is confident with her gender expression. For starters, she wears her hair short, she's taller than the average girl, and her voice is more lower than usual. Masculine traits that she inherited from both parents, her wardrobe consists of huge t-shirts and pants, and coupled to the fact that she can fight against wrongdoings. This is something that you wouldn't typically think of as traditional feminity. However, she desires to be seen as a normal woman attending highschool rather than a handsome, "princely" man. She disliked being called a "prince" and wants to be seen as a woman with no desire to change her appearance just to adhere to the standards of feminity and girlhood. She likes the way she dresses and looks, but not the way society views her because of this. She doesn't fit the societal standards of what girls should look like and so, they mock her for looking more like a man than a woman. She doesn't think badly of feminity either, in fact she acts like a typical high school girl, with the only difference is that she's extremely androgynous. This is a breath of fresh air for me from a character like Yoi.


A problem though is that, the manga's art style is recently leaning towards a more feminine look on Yoi. Which defeats the whole purpose of her character at all. She doesn't need to be feminine to be seen as a woman because of societal standards and yet, the vibe I got from the recent chapters is that she's becoming more feminine because of a male love interest and she's in love. Which is...kinda disappointing but expected. I stopped reading it because of that and I felt like I'm the only one who notices such a thing. Which seems pretty sad that you need to be conforming to the societal standards of gender identity to be seen as a normal person.
18 days
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What is a "strong female character" for you? The most used and applied definition; female characters who can physically, and/or mentally, fight against her oppressors. Whether she would be cunning and smart, strong and athletic, or preferably, both. But I wonder, what is everyone else's own definition apart from the definition I provided?
19 days
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Gris 28 06,2021
Tell me the worst takes you've ever seen in Mangago. Let's see :)
28 06,2021
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Gris 27 06,2021
Go to google images and search "Coldest place in the universe" and take a look at the second photo.
27 06,2021
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Gris 27 05,2021
Can all of you treat this question like a search engine. Orginal idea by https://twitter.com/B_puppers/status/1397989788985135105?s=20
27 05,2021