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#four nations
quordleona03 · 4 months
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The four nations
England: I have a game! Let's all pick a national animal! I'll go first; LION!
Scotland: Unicorn.
England: Oh come on, unicorns aren't even REAL.
Scotland: You just don't have enough virgins.
England: Oh shut up. C'mon, Ireland, what do you want?
Ireland: Harp.
England: Harp... seal?
Ireland: Harp. The sort you make music on. I like music.
England: Harps aren't even alive! This is the national animal game! Pick something alive!
Ireland: Oh okay - shamrock.
Scotland: Seems legit.
England: You guys are no fun, I'm going to play with Wales. Wales, what do you pick?
Wales: DRAGON.
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Characters from The Last of Us that would be benders, what element they would bend, why I think they would bend that element and what their sub-bending element would be, Part 1:
I've had this little idea in my head for awhile now, and wanted to talk about it lol.
Joel Miller: Firebender. As brutal, ruthless and cold as he is, deep down, there is warmth to him that he shows towards others that he does care about. His sub-element would be Lightning.
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Theresa/Tess Servopoulos: Earthbender. She's very headstrong, stubborn, persistent, blunt, brutal, no-bullshit and straight to the point. Very strong and intimidating, so it would make so much sense for her to be an Earthbender. Her sub-element would be Metalbending.
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Tommy Miller: Honestly? He would be a non-bender. I can't really explain why. He could be a Kyoshi warrior or a Chi-blocker? But, I don't know. I don't see him bending anything!
Marlene, Leader of the Fireflies: Earthbender. She's strong-willed, tough, stubborn, it just makes much sense for her to Earthbend. I can't explain much, but that element suits her. I don't think she would have a sub-element, to be honest.
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Ellie Williams: Earthbender. I don't even have to explain why I think so, it is so obvious, she's an Earthbender, straight-up. She's stubborn, strong-willed, tough as nails - fuck, she's kind of the Toph of TLOU in a way lol. As for her sub-element, she would be a Lavabender.
Riley Abel: Non-Bender. Sorry, just like Tommy, I don't see her bending anything.
Maria Miller: Waterbender. She's caring, empathetic, strong-willed, compassionate. This is her element right here. As for her sub-element, she would be a Bloodbender, but only for medical purposes.
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violetbumblebea · 2 years
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I love it when Sokka and Zuko are BOTH idiots but in different ways. I need Stupid Genius Sokka and Oblivious Stoic Zuko.
Like Sokka is the type to to be convinced that you can totally find a way to talk loud enough that people from different nations can hear you and then invent the telephone two years later
Zuko is the type to be Not Bothered™ by the recent assassination attempt because he thought they were just being nice and he thinks attacking people is like normal social interaction (growing up with Azula will do that to a person)
Together? They know both nothing and everything at the same time
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jupitersseas-viy · 1 year
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Did a little doodle of Somo (belonging to @notmymusicdisc ) and Inali (belonging to me)! they're out 4 nations characters and i adore them :]
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here's some Wip shots and a dumb doodle i did while drawing!
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if you would like to hear about them (especially Inali) let me know i will not shut up about them if you ask me about them.
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dragomer · 1 year
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Hi! Any updates on the avatar harem game you’re working on?
Yeah, right now the artist and coder are working on making the build for next update, everything should be finished so it's just a matter of actually coding and putting everything into the actual game.
I guess I was unofficially in charge of communication but once I was done with the writing I just didn't have much to update people on so I assume I just suck at it.
Thanks for the ask ^^
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silver-1eaves · 2 months
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can i stand in your light just for a while?
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boba-online · 3 months
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yellowcrowindustry · 10 months
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Based on this that I found on Pinterest
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bakcyl · 1 month
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“You said you could steal anything, right?”🎈🌟
AU - Phantom Thief/Romeo (怪ロミ)
source of the quote - "Endless" by Calculatrice: https://archiveofourown.org/works/43347676
close-ups (hopefully in better quality):
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bunabi · 6 days
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This whole Taylor thing has made me realize I haven't really enjoyed radio pop since 2010 and whatever happens to the genre now is none of my business
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“All year, I was critiqued about who I was. I don’t fit the narrative. I’m too hood, I’m too ghetto. This is for the girls that looked like me. It was bigger than me tonight. I’m happy. I felt I helped grow women’s basketball.”
- Angel Reese @angelreese10
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spicyclematis · 8 months
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Message from #Jin 💌 pt. 1 for @cordiallyfuturedwight
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badolmen · 2 years
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RIP to all of the British people who have to deal with the BBC/national officials shutting the country down the next few weeks that’s gonna be rough.
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muffinlance · 1 year
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Prompt: Azula joins Zuko on his Avatar hunt instead of Iroh. I don't know why, I don't know how, but I'm certain to be entertained by whatever follows.
Ozai and Ursa were already dead by the time Iroh arrived home. He stepped from his ship into the palanquin, and rode past the places of their execution, holding the urn of his son’s ashes. 
He had no time to entrust them to the Fire Sages before his father summoned him. He brought them along, because this was an easier thing than setting them down. And perhaps Lu Ten’s grandfather would like to see him once more, outside of the family shrine. Iroh would have given anything—
He placed the urn on the floor next to him. It did not kneel when he did. Fire Lord Azulon surveyed him from behind the flames.
“Rise, my son. It is good to have you home.”
They did not speak of Lu Ten. His father had always been a man to look to the flames of the future, rather than the ashes of the past.
* * *
They hanged Ursa, as befitted her attempted crime, and her past station.
They burned Ozai, as befitted his. A child of Agni should always return to the flames.
The children of the traitors had been stricken from the family line. Had been placed in the capital prison; bait for the trap. Azulon was keeping close eye on those who expressed concern for the offspring of regicides. Ozai had expected support for his position; it would be Iroh’s second task to sift through the court, and discard the chaff. 
His first task was a more practical resowing. Azulon had already selected a handful of candidates: women of suitable birth and known loyalties. The wedding date had been set, pending selection of the bride.
“Thank you, father,” Iroh said. 
Lu Ten held his silence.
* * * 
Azula had never liked the servants who’d fussed at her hair and clothes, who’d pulled and tugged until she was perfect, like perfect was a thing outside of her for others to bestow. She only had to look at Zuko to know how far tailored robes and well-oiled hair could take one.
She couldn’t see Zuzu from her cell. Her robes were too cold against the stone and every tug to wrap them tighter just made them worse, she could see it in the guards’ faces, the way they’d stared when she’d first arrived and looked a few days after and now they barely even saw. No one would talk to her, no matter her demands. They didn’t even stop their own conversations anymore; just slid in her food and kept walking and batted away her fires and it was cold here.
There were things crawling in her hair that her nails couldn’t dig out. Sometimes she thought she heard Zuzu yelling, but she couldn’t be sure. And it would have been undignified to yell back. She was a princess. She was fifth in line for the dragon throne. 
Fourth, now that Lu Ten was dead.
Third, because father was, too. 
He’d yelled and then he’d screamed and it hadn’t done anything but make the crowd jeer. Fire Lord Azulon had been silent. Poised. In control. She was his namesake and she would be too. 
She was nine.
* * *
Zuko yelled until his throat burned. The guards didn’t care, they didn’t listen to him, which was nothing new. He shouted and shouted and his own ears hurt. Maybe that’s why he never heard Azula calling back.
Grandfather had made them watch when he’d killed father and, and—
If grandfather had Azula killed, he would have made Zuko watch that, too. Azula was probably just better at being a prisoner than he was. Maybe the guards even talked to her.
He was eleven.
* * *
Iroh’s new wife was a third his age. A flower just coming to bloom. She looked like his first wife; Azulon knew his preferences. She was young enough to be Lu Ten’s sister. She smiled and laughed each day with the other court wives, and came to his room with lists of possible dissenters to discuss in their marital bed. It was not the pillow talk he was used to, but it was charming, in its way. She liked to lay on her stomach and kick her feet above her as they traced the web of treachery with his dead brother at its center. She was here to have his children—a task at which she worked with admirable diligence—and to be the acting Fire Lady. She had not had to struggle and flaunt herself for his affections; she had been picked from a line-up, her expectations realistic, her motives aligned with his. It was the least romantic relationship Iroh had ever been part of. It was… refreshing.
On the day the palace doctor confirmed their newly budded line of succession, the Fire Lord called them both in for congratulations. And for pruning.
* * *
Zuko had turned twelve, but had not realized it. Azula had turned ten. She’d counted the days.
Iroh had not been able to visit them in prison; only to inquire as to their treatment. Individual cells, regular meals of reasonable quality, no abuses. He’d moved his own people into position to ensure the last. 
Azulon had moved them back, after a delay for his soft-hearted son’s conscience. They could not waste loyal men on cuckoo-vipers. And Iroh could not waste his father’s good will. Not when it would be needed in the future, for the most important request.
* * * 
“And your wife agrees to this?” asked the Fire Lord, behind his flames. 
Iroh’s wife had not been directly addressed, and so did not reply. She sat in polite and perfect seiza, her head raised, as befitted the woman currently running her half of the court. Azulon had never seen fit to replace his own wife, after all.
“She does,” Iroh spoke for her. “We have spoken on the issue at length, and believe it best. Our family is small, and cannot afford to be smaller. The children are young; too young to have been in their parents’ confidences. With proper guidance—”
“And how would they place in the line of succession?” Azulon asked. “How would they chafe, how would they plot, with a decade’s experience over your eldest?”
Lu Ten’s own connections at court had been built while his cousins were still in diapers. But he was no longer Iroh’s eldest.
“We believe—”
“No,” his father interrupted again. “I will not allow their adoption. Not by you, where they could smother your own babe in the cradle, and certainly not by someone I trust less.”
Which was everyone, since the night his daughter-in-law had served him tea sent by his son.
“Father,” Iroh began, and his wife shifted her elbow just so, the only indication that she wished to dig it into his ribcage. “They are young, and innocent. They are my beloved nephew and niece. Your grandchildren. We cannot in good conscience—”
‘Good conscience’ had never factored into his father’s policies. Iroh had… begun to realize that, of late. His wife let out a small sigh, deliberately audible only to the man next to her. She had cautioned very strongly against a—how had she put it?—a feelings-based approach to this situation. Feelings rarely factored into her own decisions. She had been hand-selected by his father, after all. 
His wife went into a half-bow, her head lowered. “May I speak, my lord?” 
The flames crackled. The shadow of his father inclined its head, just slightly. 
“To kill the children is wise, and I admit, would set my mind at ease for my own child’s sake. But my husband feels strongly on this matter, and so I support him, for his happiness is my own. May I suggest a compromise? To place them outside the court, where they cannot build influence, nor harm your son’s heirs. A position from which you can judge their characters and value to the nation as they grow.”
“You suggest banishment,” the Fire Lord said.
“Not unstructured, of course. To leave them roaming freely would invite those that would take them in. Perhaps a military commission? As they are commoners, they should begin from a rank befitting their station, of course. Let them prove their worth on their own merit.”
Iroh could not see through the flames, but he knew his wife’s small smile was reflected on his father’s face. 
“A naval position,” the Fire Lord said. “On a ship that does not frequently make port. The frontlines would be the best place for them to prove themselves, wouldn’t you agree?”
Iroh closed his eyes.
“Father,” he said. “Please,” and he could feel his wife willing him to stop talking. The Fire Lord had already agreed to spare their lives. A banishment could be undone, so long as he and the children both outlived the man before them. “I… thank you for your wisdom in this ruling. But perhaps, if they complete some feat worthy of our line, they could be allowed to return?”
The flames were hot against his face. His new wife was still and silent against his side. His father… his father laughed, a low exhalation, the wheeze of a humorless old man.
“Let them bring me the Avatar,” Fire Lord Azulon said, “and I will welcome them home with honor.”
* * *
Zuko didn’t know why they’d pulled him from his cell or scrubbed him down or taken his old clothes. They’d been dirty but they could have been cleaned. His new clothes were scratchy, and too big, and they looked like a common soldier’s, and… and—
And they’d shaved his hair. 
* * * 
It had gotten rid of the bugs, Azula admitted, in the privacy of her own mind. Still. She memorized the faces of the woman who’d held her down and the man who’d shorn her. For future reference.
They hadn’t bothered sizing her new outfit for a child. Azula noted the quartermaster’s face, as well.
* * *
They were put on a ship. It was the first time they’d seen each other in nearly a year.
Zuzu looked at her head, and wisely said nothing.
She raised an eyebrow at his, and graciously granted him the same.
It was hard to tell them apart. They had their mother’s face. And their father’s.
* * *
Their captain’s name was Zhao. He invited them to dinner in his private quarters, once the Fire Nation was behind them. Zuko fidgeted. Azula didn’t.
The captain spoke on how much potential he saw in them, under a commander who saw their true value. 
Together, they could go far. Very far, indeed.
Azula smiled and said all the things she thought father would have said. Zuko scowled. 
Zhao brushed over their arms with his own while reaching for things. He served them more when they said they were already full. He squeezed their shoulders when he brought them back to their rooms, which were next to his, even though the rest of the lower crewmen slept together in the same big cabin. Zuko scowled harder. 
Azula was invited back. Zuko wasn’t.
* * *
Zhao was… Zhao wasn’t a good person.
“I know that, dum-dum. But do you want to stay banished forever?” 
“Uncle said—”
“Uncle’s going to change his mind, when he has his own heir and a spare. We’re threats, Zuzu. And Zhao knows father’s old friends. He’s one of the smart ones.”
The dumb ones had already been executed. 
“I… I think he wants to—to tie himself to the royal line.”
“Eww,” she said. “I’m ten. If he wants to get engaged, I’ll just break it when we’ve got the throne. It will be too late for him to retract his support, then.”
They’d barely left port before Zhao had made his first move. He didn’t seem like a man who waited. 
Azula was ten, but Zuko was twelve. Being twelve was almost thirteen, which was almost a teenager, which was almost an adult, and adults understood things that ten year olds didn’t.
They had to get off this ship. They had to go home.
Zuko had to find the Avatar.
* * *
(This ficlet is now posted on AO3.)
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astrozure · 11 months
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laundry day night 🌃
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dantebt · 1 month
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collection of my recent sketchbook pages
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