#crs solution
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Power Platform Solutions for Agile Business Transformation
In the digital-first world, agility is no longer a competitive advantageâit's a business necessity. Companies must be able to respond to change rapidly, whether itâs shifting customer expectations, market dynamics, or internal operations. Enter Microsoft Power Platform Solutions: a comprehensive suite of low-code tools designed to drive business agility, empower users, and accelerate transformation.
In this blog, weâll explore what the Power Platform is, how it supports agile development, and why businesses are adopting it as a core part of their digital transformation strategy.
What is Microsoft Power Platform?
Microsoft Power Platform is a powerful low-code platform that enables organizations to build custom apps, automate workflows, analyze data, and create virtual agents.
Core Components:
Power Apps: Rapid app development for web and mobile
Power Automate: Workflow automation and process orchestration
Power BI: Business intelligence and real-time analytics
Power Virtual Agents: AI-powered chatbots with no coding required
All components are tightly integrated with Microsoft 365, Dynamics 365, Azure, and hundreds of third-party services.
The Agile Advantage of Power Platform
1. Rapid Prototyping & Iteration
Use drag-and-drop interfaces to create MVPs and refine them through feedback loops.
2. Empowering Citizen Developers
Enable non-technical users to solve business problems without waiting for IT.
3. Integrated DevOps Support
Built-in ALM tools allow version control, testing, and CI/CD for enterprise-grade deployment.
4. Data-Driven Decision Making
Seamless integration with Power BI helps teams act on insights in real-time.
5. Cross-Platform Workflow Automation
Connect disparate systems and automate repetitive processes effortlessly.
Use Cases That Showcase Business Agility
â HR Onboarding App
Developed in Power Apps to automate onboarding checklists, asset allocation, and welcome workflows.
â Sales Pipeline Automation
Power Automate workflows triggered from CRM to streamline lead qualification and follow-ups.
â Real-Time Dashboards for Operations
Power BI integrated with ERP to monitor KPIs like inventory turnover and fulfillment time.
â Virtual Agent for Customer Service
Power Virtual Agents answering FAQs, capturing tickets, and escalating complex cases.
Integration Across the Microsoft Stack
Microsoft Power Platform integrates natively with:
Microsoft 365: Excel, Teams, SharePoint, Outlook
Dynamics 365: CRM, ERP, Finance, Supply Chain
Azure Services: AI Builder, API Management, Cognitive Services
Dataverse: Centralized data layer for secure storage and modeling
This tight integration ensures smooth user experiences and high adaptability across business functions.
How Acumant Helps You Succeed with Power Platform
At Acumant, we help businesses design and deploy tailored Power Platform solutions that address real-world challenges with speed and scale.
â Solution Design & Governance
Define goals, governance policies, and user roles to ensure long-term success.
â End-to-End Implementation
Build, integrate, and test Power Apps and workflows with enterprise-grade precision.
â Training & Adoption
Onboard users, build internal expertise, and foster a culture of innovation.
â Support & Optimization
Continuous performance tuning and support for apps, flows, and dashboards.
Case Study: Automating Quality Checks in Manufacturing
Problem: Manual quality control processes caused delays and inconsistencies.
Solution: Acumant implemented a Power App to capture defect data on tablets. Automated flows triggered alerts and Power BI dashboards visualized compliance in real-time.
Results:
80% reduction in quality check processing time
Real-time visibility for QA managers
Improved compliance with internal standards
Power Platform + Low-Code = A Future-Ready Enterprise
Combining Power Platform with a low-code strategy helps businesses:
Launch digital products faster
Improve agility and scalability
Reduce dependency on custom development
Empower business teams to innovate
Conclusion
Microsoft Power Platform Solutions give businesses the agility, speed, and intelligence required to thrive in a changing world. Whether you're looking to automate processes, build custom apps, or unlock insights from your data, Power Platform delivers.
Accelerate your digital transformation with Acumantâs low-code experts and unlock business agility today.
Internal Links:
CRM Solutions
ERP Solutions
Data & AI Services
QA & Operations
0 notes
Text
Bells Hells: *have a problem*
Bells Hells:

#critical role#critrole memes#cr3#cr c3#critrole#bells hells#bell's hells#the hole#go to solution#cr spoilers#< just in case#cr memes#cr shitpost#courtesy of me#cr campaign three#crit role#critrole meme#1k
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
While I have Many Thoughts on the plan to convince the gods to go mortal, most of which others have already addressed at length (mainly how the fuck is this going to work in practice in both the long and short run, and also really cool idea but couldâve been set up better), I havenât seen anyone bring up how this particular solution may actually bring a chance at change and growth for the gods that has so far been withheld from them.
Because, until now, the pantheon as a whole has been sort of - stuck. They went from beings of endless possibility in Tengar to being distillied and calcified through trauma into a single trait, the domains of which they became gods. The primes and betrayers aren't different sides of a war but a family locked in a struggle that will never be resolved because neither side will ever relent, nor are they either truly willing or capable of (being immortal) killing each other. They seem incapable of truly changing, and several of them (notably the Arch Heart and the Raven Queen) have expressed simply being tired. They donât necessarily want to die, but they recognize a need for change, just that they themselves can't be the instigators of it.
The god debate hasnât really taken this into account, though the overhanging shadow of it has been growing heavier since downfall. The kill-all-gods side obviously has no reason to care whether the gods are locked in endless misery (other than using it as an additional excuse for murder), but the save-all-gods side isn't any more helpful when it comes to this particular issue. Saving the gods wonât heal them.
Maybe becoming mortal (however many, many issues that brings with it) could actually allow them to become whole as people the way mortals are, no longer as strictly tied to their domains. Now that the entirety of Exandria no longer rests on them playing nice, maybe they can find a way to resolve their family feud (through blood or reconciliation). Perhaps, as mortals, they can even eventually even find a way to live a full, final life and find rest at the end of it.
#nella talks cr#critical role#cr3 spoilers#cr3#like yeah i have SO many issues with how this will work in practice#(how will they keep from going mad with endless reincarnations the way the bright queen slowly is?)#(what happens to their power - will there still be clerics and paladins or will exandria lose that line of defense?)#(what of demigods like ukotoa - will they now be more powerful than their makers?)#(what's stopping the betrayers from immediately going full god while the primes are mortal and quickly finishing the calamity?)#much of which couldâve been resolved if there was more set up#but i also think it's the only solution so far that might actually deliver the gods from a despair which has been evident since tengar
157 notes
·
View notes
Text
listen. there are a number of aspects in which c3 and divergence are not comparable and fundamentally work differently (namely the difference in construction between a long-form campaign and 4-part mini-series), but thematically? not only are they comparable, they are designed to be. divergence is being aired directly after the conclusion of c3 in order to further explore concepts introduced in its conclusion. a world with less connection to the gods, the effect of that on the faithful, how the average exandrian approaches the concept of faith in general (in multiple aspects), the connection between the divine and their mortal children, burgeoning hope from post-war darkness, etc. these are concepts we're being asked to compare with the finale of c3. so if someone says that divergence's handling of faith and exploration of the gods blows c3's out of the water, that's valid. if we were meant to be avoiding comparisons, a) they wouldn't have aired this immediately after c3, b) there wouldn't be so many overlapping concepts, and c) they wouldn't be holding off on having the wrap-up until divergence is over. divergence is in conversation with c3, actively and intentionally, and it puts a stark contrast on how poorly faith was handled in c3, but also things like. understanding character motivation. which yes, is going to shine more strongly in short-form content because you have to get the information out quickly, but is a valid thing to discuss if you genuinely feel you understand a short-form campaign character's goals better than you do a character you spent 4 years watching. it's the difference between a woman who has never been shown to seriously engage with the gods at all stating "i don't know if i want to save gods that don't love me" and the moonweaver saying "if the love is true, it will pass through the barrier" and us knowing that divine magic will continue to be granted to mortals, by the sheer love the primes hold for their children, complex as that love might be. and, fundamentally, divergence is an exploration of consequences. the consequences of the calamity on mortals and the gods and the earth itself, decimated as it is. so when people compare it to c3, when a major complaint of the campaign was lack of follow-through and exploration of consequences, divergence shines for being about exactly what a lot of people felt c3 was missing.
#there's something to be said about divergence being used as a method to explore c3's consequences outside the context of c3#and like. not positively. because it betrays bh's ignorance of history and lack of curiosity in actually exploring either the gods'#or the common people's opinions. the moonweaver declares that the divine gate will protect exandria from any god touching it#ever again#and bh made it so that they ALL would touch exandria again. divergence shows how mortaldom could be a major boon for the gods#but also betrays how dangerous it inevitably will be for common mortals to live in a world with direct divine intervention again#by drawing comparisons it kind of feels like c3 has undone the protections put in place here. hence casting them in a negative light#and sure turning the gods mortal is the best solution that bh had at the time sure. but it is UNFORGETTABLE#that there was a way to outright kill predathos that was never so much as alluded to in the text of the campaign#unforgettable. jesus.#cr spoilers#also imo if you're like 'you can have an opinion just don't state it like a fact' you are stupid and have never read an opinion before ig#stated like a fact. well it is in fact my opinion so i'm going to state it like a fact. because it is to me#anyway#cr tag
333 notes
·
View notes
Text
I feel like every condemnation of the gods of Exandria, in-world or out, comes from someone who, when posed with the Trolley Problem, was like "well I would simply ensure I was not in that situation" and just generally I think the first time you say that in your life someone must give you a patient, gentle, and throrough explanation of the concept of a thought experiment. they should also give you a healthy snack. every time after that though it's purge rules.
#wHy DiD tHe PrImEs LeT tHiS hApPeN tell me what they should have done if you're so smart. tell me the solution that saves everyone#tell me how you know how to do things so that only the people who really deserve to die do so and tell me how you decided who deserves it#cr spoilers#you cannot walk into a scenario with a premise that is objectively on the table and be like well i hate this premise so i shall ignore it#i mean you can. but it means your opinion is meaningless and worthless bc you've rejected the reality of the situation
203 notes
·
View notes
Text
Honestly I think that the village in Issylra arc only weakened the thematic content of the god story bc itâs really not about what the people who believe in the gods do in their name. Like this story really doesnât work if you think itâs talking about our worldâs conception of religion. Itâs not about faith, itâs about power.
The gods are real and powerful in Exandria. The threat of them is not cultural but existential. It doesnât come up often but Exandria is a post apocalyptic setting, just 800 years on. And that apocalypse was the gods fault (with a slight assist from the Ring of Brass, thanks guys).
While they are sympathetic in Downfall, theyâre also incredibly hypocritical, cowardly, and as the whole mechanic of that last battle is constructed to showcase, too powerful. For all of Aeorâs flaws, why should the gods be allowed to indiscriminately lay destruction down on mortals as collateral damage, but an attempt to gain any leverage is calls to level an entire city? Why do Reilorans gets trapped on a piece of orbiting rock only dreaming about the real world bc the gods were afraid of some big monster and threw a whole population into the sky?
I donât hate the gods of Exandria. I think their motivations are understandable. I think none of this justifies Ludinusâs actions. I love moments in previous campaigns with the Everlight and the Wildmother. I find the Matron so compelling as a character. The Divine Gate was a good system, but as weâre seeing right now, they will drop it the second they feel threatened, even knowing they could cause a second Calamity. Nothing is allowed to pose an existential threat to them. They are allowed to destroy anything to protect themselves.
Thatâs really the problem. When the gods are afraid, they are powered by that fear, they will let that fear destroy any amount of mortals or other creatures, who are not given any recourse, who are not allowed to defend themselves in the same way. Mortals must accept their own death at the hands of those more powerful than them, but the gods refuse to.
Until now. It took a while to get to this point of clarity but I do think Bellâs Hells solution is perfect because it tells the gods that they are not allowed to behave this way. It doesnât demand they die out of twisted revenge. It simply says, you have to face this, you cannot cling to being all-powerful forever at the cost of everyone and everything else. It says you are actually like us, process that how you will.
And I think itâs perfect that this decision is being assisted by the Matron. Who better to guide her siblings through acceptance of mortality that her, the goddess of death, the former mortal.
#critical role#critical role spoilers#cr spoilers#idk I tend to be on the side of stories#and willing to hear them out#I think the narrative is there and it works#but that certain readings are using the wrong lens#and I think the solution is great and fitting
92 notes
·
View notes
Text
do not take this as a criticism of the scene, which is absolutely perfect and I would not change anything in the world about it, this is just an observation, but I am OBSESSED with how the scene set-up for the Ishta affair posits that Orym just sleeps with his swords still directly strapped to his back, it's so funny to me for some reason
#as opposed to like within arm's reach or any other more comfortable solution#ETA: This is not an angst this. This is really funny to me.#CR spoilers#Critical Role things#Critical Role
132 notes
·
View notes
Text
More Prune Juice!!
Yeah, i draw 3 different Prune Juice..
Take me to therapy pls /hj
Alt!Prune by @eternydeloo ! I don't own this AU or design!
My telegram channel!
#prune juice crk#altprune#prune juice cookie#solution prune juice#solution au#art#didgital art#artists on tumblr#cookie run#cookie run kingdom#small artist#cr kingdom#crk#crk fanart
42 notes
·
View notes
Text
I feel like every time I hear "Bells Hells broke their word", there's this omission or forgetfulness (and I get it; this campaign feels like it took forever and it's easy to tune out conversations that feel circular and unending) that Bells Hells knows that if the Raven Queen and the Arch Heart were forced to comply by the rest of their family, the Divine Gate would be rent asunder and there would be a second Calamity in order to wrench things back to the status quo â that being the gods are all safe and protected and no one knows about Predathos.
The only reason it didn't happen already was the gods had hope Bells Hells would kill Ludinus (which they did); if Ludinus had defeated Bells Hells then the Gods would have immediately busted down the Gate and commit another Calamity in order to stop him... but the Raven Queen and the Arch Heart made it sound like the Second Calamity would happen regardless of who won, and all because the knowledge of Predathos the GodEater, their most feared predator, was out there.
But, Ludinus disseminated that information across all of Exandria, and there's been information exchange between Ruidians and Exandrians. The only way to take that information back would be to kill all the Ruidians AND kill every single Exandrian, just to be sure. Wipe the slate clean. Start over. Destroy every magical and non-magical record, including the people.
There would be no bargaining with the gods without Predathos, for they are too strong and would have no reason to listen. Any parley of "can you Gods leave forever, or can we leave the Hallowed Cage alone or have Vasselheim turn Kreviris into a military-religious controlled state colony" (that's a Bad Thing) would be met with "or we just kill the entire planet and moon so the information is guaranteed to be lost and there can be no more attempts at freeing Predathos". The Prime Dieties would grumble about it, but they would still go through with eradicating the mortals they love because they prioritize themselves and their Betrayer siblings more than mortals. We have proof of that.
I feel like the Gods broke the social contract first. If we want to point fingers at someone breaking their word, they should be included as well.
#critical role#cr spoilers#critical role spoilers#c3e120#bells hells#exandrian pantheon#it's almost as if there's nuance to this#I love the Pantheon but they are a hot mess#I love Bells Hells but they are a hot mess#âThey Broke Their Wordâ but it's the Spider-Man pointing meme#âThey'll kill hundreds of thousands through their actionsâ but it's the Spider-Man pointing meme#sometimes there is no perfect solution#sometimes you get to the end of a videogame and the ending isn't what you wanted#Bells Hells are either not villains#or they are villains fighting multiple other villains including the Weavemind the Ruby Vanguard and the Exandrian Pantheon#pick your poison#I can be very frustrated by BH when they dive face-first into something with zero plan and none thoughts#but it's also their most charming quality#I'm glad the gods at least have a chance of sticking around now#I'd have missed them if they were dead or gone forever#and I do not think what BH did is what Ludinus wanted#Ludinus didn't want the gods to have a choice or a chance at all#crusty old elf got too addicted to revenge
45 notes
·
View notes
Text
Part of the reason I am so jazzed about the conversation with the Arch Heart is because it has removed the illusion of this being an easy choice. As Orym said, and as he has been operating on the assumption of, the people of Exandria are like ants to something like Predathos, likely to be crushed underfoot. Correct, yeah. But the point of the Arch Heart's responses was that the same is true of the gods. The world is faced with a scenario where one way or another, some power is very likely going to be unleashed and put quite a lot of people in danger. Unless they can somehow very quickly quell the gods' fear*, either the gods or Predathos will be freed and stomping ants.
That refocuses the question. People are going to die. The question is, how long will the danger go on? And what kind of world will be left, after?
Juicy!
#*this is it's own problem too#even if they succeed in buying themselves time to handle the Predathos situation without the gods breaking the Divine Gate#it is pretty fucked that they would essentially need to beg for the lives of how many people died in the calamity? 2/3 the population?#they would have to beg for the lives of 2/3 of the population to even get a chance to save the gods#I have always been team third solution and team they might not have to die but things need to change#so i am very excited to have the narrative more aggressively pointing that out now#things are fucked! there are no easy answers! you have to choose anyway!#tasty#critical role#cr spoilers#cr meta#i guess
42 notes
·
View notes
Text
A really underrated aspect to Ludinus plan is the exploitation of the godâs suppression of knowledge. The the thing that made sealing Predathos in the moon work so well the 1st time was the ignorance and superstition around it for so long, which lasted well beyond the divergence. We saw Judicators coming after the Grim Verity in this campaign! However, because of this, Ludinus had the upper hand the entire time because everyone was just scrambling to catch up to figure out shit he knew ages ago.Â
Itâs a big reason why keeping it sealed now would likely not work very well, to say nothing of re-containing it having some horrible implications (it took the titans and a chunk of Exandria to do it last time!). Knowledge of it simply creates a much more unstable environment on Exandria, even if kept in Ruidius.
Really, Bell's Hells downfall here (and everyone's, even on a meta level) was getting so caught up in Ludinus' motives, not his means. Finding out the answers to the risks and possibilities with Predathos would've helped formulate a plan or give them more ideas on how to approach this instead of having to wait till the 11th hour once it was upon them.
Anyway, a quick fix would've been to ditch Keyleth and hang with Ebenold Kai more.
#critical role#cr3#cr spoilers#to be clear I am neutral on keeping it sealed- it could've been a fine solution#it just didn't get explored well in game#idk its like ignorance makes problem solving hard#harder to solve a problem too when you are not even being asked about the ACTUAL problem constantly
20 notes
·
View notes
Text
Prefacing that, again time zones, I've only been able to glean the latest CR episode and that I do not agree with their in-character opinions on the gods, I'd like to remind fans to try and not get super ugly about their criticism of Ashton Greymoore.
I'll be the first to throw my hands up and say they're among my favourite C3 characters so there may be bias, but I've been getting flashes of the Shard Incident from reactions towards their recent and vocal disdain for the gods. Disagree with them all you want, Taliesin knows that the gods can't simply leave since they're the one who said that the Wildmother would die if she left, but understand that it's a character flaw and if you recall the hardships of their backstory, the unanswered prayers, and that their only exchanges with the gods have required them to do something or, with the Dawnfather Angel, have been met with cold disregard, it's understandable how they got to feeling that way. Ashton has lived alone and been told they don't matter for a lot of their life; no gods, no family, no nurturing presence to guide them, they've been abandoned, used, and - with additional influence by the Dominox accusing them of wanting FCG to die - are currently between blaming themselves and the Changebringer for their closest friend's death.
Make no mistake Ashton is wrong, I think the self-confessed hypocrite with also self-confessed poor morality knows that deep down, or at least knows that they're not the kind of person who should be in charge. Vassalheim is a difficult place for a titan vessel to be in so it is unsure what they will do from here; perhaps investigate the Earth Titan? Commune with the Emperor and Empress? Or maybe be brought to the gods and be able to vent or reconcile with them (and maybe get some closure with FCG, speak with his spirit as like a mediator between the Hells and the Gods)? But it feels like Taliesin is being vocal for a reason, and it's either to invite Matt to challenge it (I've said in other comments but I would love if Ashton found some comfort, not worship or a pact but maybe just a dialogue, in the Everlight: a goddess of healing, temperance and redemption - all of which would help Ashton mentally - as unlikely as it'd be) or find another maybe primordial route to give Ashton a narrative tether towards stopping Predathos.
Let's just, not be cruel about the character, they are more than just their bad trauma and grief-led opinion on gods remember?
#critical role#cr spoilers#c3#c3 spoilers#c3e103#ashton greymoore#taliesin jaffe#I really am hoping that Tal is putting Ashton on a path of at least tolerating the gods - accepting that people need them#their views are very 'but they didn't do anything for me' I agree but that feels like their survival instinct at play#I just don't like that Ashton's views are treated with more vitriol than Dorian and Braius' opinions#Dorian has lost yes and Lolth mocked him for it but Ashton lost too and Dominox targeted them for it#And Braius is fun and silly but that still doesn't mean that Asmodeus won't kill everyone if put in charge#let's not forget how much Ashton cares for their friends too - and that they was the one who suggested anchoring Delilah#I love them all but Ashton Chet and Fearne often suffer in silence because Orym Imogen and Laudna had the big sad that needs attention#even here Essek gave Laudna more catharsis and solutions than Ashton (no hate on Essek it was time to seal Delilah away for sure!)#it frustrates me too because I want to see Ashton grow but growth takes time - they can't just flick a switch and suddenly like the gods#the Hells collectively should spend a few days here to recover - balance themselves and enhance their equipment...and some relationships~#also if the primordials helped seal predathos surely that means that the god eater has the taste for primordial energy too right?
52 notes
·
View notes
Text
Following on from the latest post I reblogged and my thoughts in general , the solution to ship wars are simply polyamoury . Dorym ? Ashrym ? Callowmoore ? Why not all 3 , hm ?
Orym is dating Dorian and Ashton , who is also dating Fearne . Everyone wins !
They can still all hold hands , and imagine that cuddle pile ??? hello ??? it's perfect idk why people wouldn't like this solution
#polyamory#the solution to (almost) every ship war#ashrym#callowmoore#dorym#fearne x ashton x orym#fearne x ashton x orym x dorian#critical role#cr 3#fearne calloway#ashton greymoore#orym of the air ashari#dorian storm
190 notes
·
View notes
Text
A collective effort was needed â§ â¶ â· âž âč
.
Bonus:
#krist perawat#events#200124#singto prachaya#poon mitpakdee#compilation#source vid âž is engsubbed#//the solution really is 'not informing perawat of any news/projects too far in advance' đ
#icyww: pebaca concert was later confirmed by singto & krist to have been green-lit ^^#cr: celebritism#cr: pikkykiki
86 notes
·
View notes
Text
It was said by a mutual of mine before as well that there's certain lack of engagement with Shadow Milk's character outside of his situationship with Pure Vanilla, and even the dynamic is being what it seems verrrrry flanderized . aND I think if you really want to angst Shadow Milk its like. YOU CAN do that and i dont know if anyone is doing it right cuz im too scared to look. but like
u have to understand that if there' anything shadow milk feels remorseful, or regretful about, is that he doesn't. its too early i think to say for sure where his character is going, but i think it is safe to say he does not regret anything, does not feel bad about anything he's done or going to do, and probably has never felt bad about it at all.
what makes his character so compelling as a villain AND a personality, is how unabashedly shamelessly sadistic and despicable he is. he thrives in others suffering. there's a chance he spent all his divine self in solitude, aware of everything everywhere all the time. because to know is to constantly find yourself in isolation when people dont want to face the truth. and what he's doing is twisting it the way he wants, lying to the point of willing it into reality.
and how can you angst it? its his lonely realization of the truth he's hiding from, that will never make him able to connect with anyone. its knowing that your beliefs in something greater, something innocent, were false, and you will be destined to be the only one to Know. his perfect world is of lies and hatred, because he's so full of it himself, where suffering and bliss is one as are truths and lies. he's a deeply sad individual and not in a sympathetic, understandable way (unlike burning spice who shows active signs of remorse and suicide ideation as he's struggling with his failures). his conclusion makes him feel comfortable in inflicting and subjecting people to unspeakable psychological pain.
i cant tell you what to do if you want to feel sympathy for shadow milk, but i really think there are far more complex and interesting things you could do with his own failures. he thinks the only way to null his own hatred for the cruel reality is to make others suffer, to make it where he's constantly comfortable and entertained. he thinks if he tries hard enough and torments people enough, it will make, ultimately, a better world of chaos and, I THINK, a world where knowing the truth will equal to nothing.
thats where his entire conflict with pure vanilla is coming from. he THINKS he knows everything, and he THINKS that in seeing pure vanilla so naively believing in truth to be something that prevails, he can make a show of the ultimate proof that all of pure vanilla's beliefs are rubbish, by breaking him. by turning pure vanilla Into him. by isolating him and making him suffer the way shadow milk did, in everpresent and everaware solitude.
tldr he's lonely for the fact that he's an all knowing entity and thus is hateful towards the world and people so he inflicts it upon others in a manner of manipulation and constructing the narrative the way he wants it to be for personal entertainment and comfort. and he loves it. he uses pure vanilla to prove his point. you shouldnt feel bad for him and in fact you should be beating him with sticks every day every minute every second and his angst is nothing but selfish spiral he has no desire to get out of because he enjoys it and uses to justify his actions.
#cr posting#cookie run#being a god is of itself kind of a lonely experience but hes not just a god hes a nearly omniscient one#a running theme amongst the beasts so far is failure in understanding mortality and what makes someone human (cookie)#hes uncomfortable with truths because for him it seems no one listens to them#cookies will always lie#there will always be conflict#and knowing that is incredibly daunting#so he fell into an extreme where solution is the world where none of it matters because everything is a lie#everything is just a show and a scenario#nothing is real#the way we saw mystic flour falling into her extreme thru cookies' greed and violence#the way we saw burning spice falling into his extreme thru his inability to handle constant change and loss#and i suppose we will be seeing a little more of how shadow milk fell to his extreme#all of it is more of my speculation based on presented material in the end of the day#but my strong guess is that he's simply unable to cope with reality as it is knowing how horrible the truth can be#hes not just the corrupting force hes the force that was corrupted by his own virtue
22 notes
·
View notes
Text
One weird take I've seen after downfall is that the solution to the whole gods issue could be tying the divine gate to the cage around Predathos. That if the gods break through to Exandria, they are dooming themselves.
Now, this seems okay on a surface level. But its actually just as insane as going "we should just release predathos and kill all the gods". Because, like, this is just mutually assured destruction, ya'll. And that doesn't work???? There's a reason why nuclear disarmarment is an important thing in real life.
If the gods come to Exandria and wreck the place, then at least there's a chance of coming back from it. We've seen this with calamity! Exandria lived through it! If Predathos is released, Exandria isn't gonna live through it! It's done. It's over. We're screwed.
Like, lets say the divine gate is tied to predathos' cage. What if the Betrayers managed some way to break it down and were just like "actually we do want to die." What would happen then??? Predathos just gets to eat up everybody???
Mutually assured destruction doesn't work!!! More nukes doesn't stop people from nuking each other! It just makes the end of the world more likely! Please think people.
#please lets not do MAD actually#there has to be a better solution then that#cr meta#cr downfall#cr3#cr spoilers#critical role spoilers#critical role#cr discourse#cr gods#predathos
32 notes
·
View notes