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#nobu headers
heyiwrotesomethings · 2 years
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i need your header edited with more shinobus jk
You say jk, but if I can find my original file maybe I’ll add one clone for fun so we can always remember Shi and Nobu. Not that I think anyone will forget any time soon : )
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yu2ki · 3 years
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☆ :: shin + nobu layouts 🎋 ↻ / ♡ if u use
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silvaer-a · 7 years
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i literally love me dfbdhmjn
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daeva-agas · 5 years
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Hi Daeva :) First of I love your blog, I'd donate you money just to take history lessons from you :p I am curious about your insight about Ieyasu. What's your general view of him in SLBP/ other games and as a historical person? I know that it is a trigger for you when people ignore Hideyoshi 's role in the unification and I understand your anger. I don't and can't argue about Hideyoshi's role, I read a lot about both of them but personally I like Yasu a bit more.. :) but that's just me :)
There’s a ko-fi link on my header, if you want to send me Starbucks pocket money XD
Whew, this is long, because you asked a “general” opinion. I’ve been around a lot of Sengoku stuff.
I don’t dislike Yasu. I’m never mad at the character/person of Ieyasu, I get mad at the writers/creators who make a big fuss over him. That’s understandable, because the Edo shogunate’s lasting effect would naturally result in very nice things being said about him, but still. If Nobunaga started the unification, and Ieyasu “successfully completed it”, then that makes Hideyoshi in the middle seem very useless. Also it’s factually incorrect in the first place, because Hideyoshi already did finish the unification, and I disapprove of misinformation. 
I think Sengoku fiction in general is in an odd crossroads. They’re trying to bring something new, but at the same time, they’re unable to let go of old traditions because of various reasons (fear of backlash, risk of unpopularity, mistaken assumption that [x] is true fact, etc). Also, because Sengoku in general is trending something big in Japan, there’s a dozen different titles that coincidentally have the same “new” idea. So while it’s technically “different” from, say, titles released 5 years ago, it’s also… not entirely unique if you look at the character interpretation across Sengoku media in general (movies, manga, novels). 
(more under cut)
So, like, SLBP Ieyasu is a very drastic reaction against the “typical” super nice super soft Ieyasu. Make him a nasty, scheming brat for shock value. It’s new for otome game, but it’s been done in other media, such as manga or RPG. 
SLBP and Ikesen is the very tangible example of “accidentally having similar ideas”. Since they released with only about 6 months gap between each other, they can’t possibly be copycats, and yet there’s similarity in a number of plot threads. Nobunaga and MC butting heads over how horrible war is, for example. Both Ieyasu are also vaguely similar, because they’re somewhat antisocial and has this desire to be strong due to unhappy experience during his hostage days. Ikesen Yasu is not as extreme as SLBP is, though. Ikesen’s “hot take” is instead making Mitsunari fawn all over Ieyasu instead of being antagonistic (the long-held tradition because of Sekigahara).
For a long time I’ve theorized that SLBP Yasu is that way because during the JP app’s production the manga series “Wolf Girl and Black Prince” is trending. The love interest has this “pretends to be nice but is actually nasty” (haraguro/black belly) type of character, and people seem to like it somehow, so I thought they went that route because of the manga’s influence.
The historical Ieyasu is oddly both overrated and underrated. While people make a big fuss about how amazing he is, they seem to be centered around very few events. 
If you’ve played SLBP for 1-2 years, you’ll notice that we’ve done the Mikatagahara (Tokugawa VS Takeda) battle MAYBE 10 times. That’s because for some reason nobody seems to know what it is that Ieyasu was doing over there in Mikawa when Nobu is not involved, and nobody bothered to try and find out. Mikatagahara is the only solo Ieyasu expedition that people are familiar with. Other than that, he’s mostly Nobunaga’s tag-along. 
The info is out there, it’s just under-utilized in fiction and pop culture, so the general public don’t know about them. For example, everyone knows that Nobunaga don’t like Kennyo and his Ikko bunch, but nobody ever talks about how much Ieyasu don’t like them. That one time the Tokugawa almost disintegrated because the Ikko somehow got Tokugawa vassals to join them in their rebellion. After surviving that, Ieyasu was so mad he banned the Jodo Shinshu denomination. All Buddhist temples in Mikawa have to convert to other denominations, or face punishment/expulsion. 
Ieyasu had a brief alliance with Shingen, and he did something that made Shingen so angry. Realizing this is no good, Yasu ran off to try make friends with Kenshin instead. Ever heard about that? Not really. That was mentioned in Wikipedia though, and should’ve been easily accessible. Even if it turns out this is also unreliable fluff, it would still make a good story line in fiction. 
So... TL;DR. I’m the kind of person who easily gets tired of repetition, and I do look at movies and manga and sometimes novels, so I’m at the point where my reaction is just “Oh, it’s that again. Seen it 10 times already, zzzzzzz”. I have a handful of specific triggers, but other than that I’m kind of deadpan.
Thanks for asking/reading. Feel free to take a look at the Sengoku pretty boys catalogue haha.
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Un marcado sabor oriental
El nuevo restaurante Pujol, en Ciudad de México, reinterpreta el taco desde la perspectiva del omakase, que viene a ser la versión japonesa de la taquería
El restaurante Nobu, en la Ciudad de México.
La reapertura de Pujol es el acontecimiento gastronómico de la temporada en Ciudad de México. El restaurante de Enrique Olvera cambió el viejo local por otro más amplio y luminoso, a pocas cuadras de allí. La novedad es una barra de tacos con 10 asientos. Lo cuenta David Marcial Pérez en este diario y aunque habla de otros cambios, es el que llama la atención general. Más por el concepto que por la barra o los tacos en sí mismos.
MÁS INFORMACIÓN
Pujol: el mejor restaurante de México vuelve a empezar
El nuevo espacio reinterpreta el taco desde la perspectiva del omakase, que viene a ser la versión japonesa de la taquería. Allí es una oblea de pasta de arroz la que ocupa el lugar de la tortilla y el relleno es tan variado como de esta parte, aunque encarna la sofisticación oriental. Priman los detalles y los matices por encima del volumen y la expresividad. No sé como serán los nuevos tacos de Pujol —el restaurante abrió al público el pasado lunes, pero retrasó el arranque de la barra hasta la próxima semana—, pero vienen a insistir en el peso y la influencia de la cocina oriental en las nuevas tendencias de nuestro tiempo. Sucede desde los ochenta, cuando empezaron a definirse los movimientos que cambiarían las cocinas europeas. La presencia de lo japonés se dejó notar en lo formal y lo conceptual casi desde el tercer día. Hasta el punto de impulsar el nacimiento de propuestas que mezclan técnicas y condimentos japoneses con la despensa y las formas culinarias locales. Sucedió con fuerza en Madrid, consolidándose a partir de Kabuki y luego del trabajo de Alberto Chicote en Nodo. En Ciudad de México abundan las cocinas japonesas. Algunas nacidas en la fusión, como Nobu, cuyos precios no han sido obstáculo para que consolide dos locales, en Polanco y en Lomas de Vista Hermosa. La ortodoxia está representada por Rokai, la enseña del grupo Edo Kobayashi, con otros cinco locales diferentes en la ciudad. La Tachinomi Desu, en Cuauhtémoc, es el más chico y se ha convertido en local de moda. Se ajusta al concepto del tachinomi-ya: tragos —sakes, ginebras y mezcales—, comida informal de pie y, ahora, mucha fusión. Tomás Bermúdez acaba de abrir el Juni-ko en Guadalajara. La abundancia de Ciudad de México se transforma en escasez hacia el sur. El Makoto, en Ciudad de Panamá —la cocina es buena pero los precios acaban ocultándola—, es la única referencia reseñable hasta llegar a Lima. Lo del Perú es diferente. Los japoneses llegaron hace más de un siglo, formaron una nutrida colonia y trajeron su cocina. Siempre estuvo ahí, aunque no se dejara notar hasta hace cosa de 20 años. Del proceso de adaptación a la ausencia de ingredientes tradicionales nace la cocina nikkei, representada por el tiradito, un plato que ha dado la vuelta al mundo. Viene a ser el usuzukuri interpretado desde una despensa diferente. El encuentro de lo japonés y lo peruano empezó a tomar nuevas formas hace una década, para consolidarse con el trabajo de Mitsuharu Tsumura en Maido. Encarna la exaltación de la despensa y las técnicas peruanas a través de lo japonés y su cocina brilla hasta el punto llegar a ser, de largo, la propuesta culinaria más avanzada, lograda y atractiva de Lima. La noticia es que Maido se desdobla este año para abrir una segunda propuesta en Santiago de Chile. Será a partir de mayo y ocupará el espacio del Hotel W, en Las Condes, que hasta ahora alojaba la cocina de Ciro Watanabe, otro adelantado que opera como responsable de Osaka. Forma parte de una cadena nacida en Lima que tiene su estrella de referencia en Santiago de Chile. La apertura de Maido coincidirá prácticamente con la del nuevo Osaka, en un local anexo al Hotel Noi, en Vitacura. Dos nikkei de relumbrón en una ciudad en la que las propuestas japonesas convencionales apenas ocupan lugar. São Paulo es el paraíso de la cocina japonesa tradicional en América Latina. Las referencias se multiplican y el debate no se cierra nunca. La preferencia puede estar en la fusión culinaria y la elegancia del Jun Sakamoto, la ortodoxia del pequeño Kan Suke, o el trabajo más abierto de Kiroshita o Hutu.
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daeva-agas · 5 years
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The navigation header placement in my custom layout was messed up
I don’t remember touching this part of the layout while editing things. I just copied-pasted new batches of code for the raining Nobus
For some reason some random things have been commented out, and the text alignment have changed from center to left. 
Thankfully I knew enough about coding logic to fix it. I think Tumblr was the one who screwed up the layout. Once or twice I noticed that my custom pictures got erased and some functions crapped out. I just reuploaded the pics and thought nothing of it. 
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daeva-agas · 6 years
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BOW YE DOWN TO KING NOBUNAGA
Nobu and his throne, my goodness. He always does this.
The Koi Ran Banquet event website has been updated with a new header, merchandize, and some 3D mock-up of the seating placement.
They have acrylic standees, pins, and “slide mirrors”. More merch will be uploaded at a later date. 
This is what “slide mirror” is, don’t know if there’s a more appropriate English name for it:
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http://koi-game.voltage.co.jp/fantasy/koiranlb/summerfes2018/
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daeva-agas · 6 years
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Since we already have this AMAZING Wonderland Battle, we won't be having any doge-themed New Year Battle for Tenka. Instead, we get to BUY our doggy lords by buying these fabulous item sets!!
Set A (pictured in ss), the one right under the header, gives you: Nobu, Akechi, Yukkin, Inu, Kenshin, and Yasu doge. The rest of the lords is in the Set B (the one also costing 40 pearls). The cheapo set does not contain any doge.
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