.*𖦹🎃 Thunderfam Trick or Treat 🎃𖦹*.
So a lot of people liked the idea I proposed so I thought I'd make a separate post about it.
Concept:
On the 31st of October, Halloween.
Someone sends an ask: (Trick or treat) and you reply with something Thunderbirds themed.
Writers could reply with a snippet of a WIP they're working on, share a link to a previous fic they wrote and want to show off or (if they're up for it) write a short drabble.
Artists could reply with a WIP, share a link to a past piece they made or (again if they're up for it) make a little doodle.
If none of that is for you you could reply with your favourite episode screenshots, favourite headcanons, favourite pieces of music from the show(s) ect, ect, anything Thunderbirds related really. You could also recommend a piece of art or a fic to read. (Make sure to link the pieces you're recommending and not repost them)
Reblog to let others know that you're in, and have fun.🎃🍂
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fav part of sw era is that we're playing as just Some Guy in each game. Smth i rlly dislike about old fnaf is the idea that everyone is Michael. I don't actually like Mike schmidt being Michael Afton! I don't like Jeremy Fitzgerald being Michael Afton! I don't like Fritz Smith being Michael Afton! Because the funny part about fnaf 1 and 2 is that you are just Some Guy with a shitty job!
in help wanted you are just an unfortunate employee with a shitty life
in security breach you're a kid who got dragged into this somehow
in ruin you're a little girl looking for her friend LIEK. COME ON.
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Aspect of Order: Primordial & Present-Day
One of the first deities, part of what is known as the Primordial Triad. It created the planes alongside the Aspects of Chaos and the In-Between and held dominion over the Material Plane. It embodied order in the way nature has order: the life cycle, gravity, the tides, the surety that the seasons will change, the patterns that appear in flora and fauna alike, the symmetry of pinecones and butterflies. It was associated with the night as a time of quiet preparation where the world rests, and when one can see the remains of creation in the darkened sky. It is said that the two moons of the Material Plane are its eyes, watching over its creations.
All three members of the Primordial Triad are referred to with "it", so ancient and unfathomable that applying a mortal, transient concept of gender to them seemed almost blasphemous.
Almost.
The modern-day conception of Order is quite different. Though she still reigns over the night and natural laws, her followers have placed her at the forefront of the creation process, reducing the In-Between's role and rejecting Chaos altogether. Though most present-day cultures think of her in this way, many of them do not emphasize her: she is an invisible Over-God, keeping the other deities and forces in line and maintaining cosmic balance from behind the scenes. In places where she is worshipped heavily, however, she is placed at the forefront of the pantheon. In those cases, worship of deities with overlapping domains is either illegal (ex local gods of justice) or considered secondary to her (ex the god of the Wilds). The worship of smaller, local deities is usually discouraged or suppressed over-all in these areas in order to encourage a more structured, uniform religious practice. While both aspects of Order championed paladins, Primordial Order also championed druids and rangers while Modern Order champions clerics.
Ancient theologians debated whether or not Order and Chaos were two aspects of the same being (ironically, there was no question that the In-Between was its own separate force). However, following the iconoclasm that effectively forced Chaos out of the pantheon and created the modern conception of Order, such lines of thought were considered heretical, and then blasphemous.
The iconoclasm did have an unintended consequence, however. Crying motifs appeared in some art of Primordial Order around that time, particularly in the areas that resisted the iconoclasts more intensely. Some scholars believe that it may have been a direct reaction to the event: Order mourning the loss of its counterpart. Others have argued, however, that the lack of such motifs (or equivalents) in depictions of the In-Between prove this wrong. After all, why would it not also be grieving?
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